On Mon, 2024-04-22 at 11:17 -0500, Haitao Huang wrote:
On Sun, 21 Apr 2024 19:22:27 -0500, Huang, Kai <kai.huang@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> On Fri, 2024-04-19 at 20:14 -0500, Haitao Huang wrote:
> > > > I think we can add support for "sgx_cgroup=disabled" in future if
> > indeed
> > > > needed. But just for init failure, no?
> > > >
> > >
> > > It's not about the commandline, which we can add in the future when
> > > needed. It's about we need to have a way to handle SGX cgroup being
> > > disabled at boot time nicely, because we already have a case where we
> > > need
> > > to do so.
> > >
> > > Your approach looks half-way to me, and is not future extendible. If
> > we
> > > choose to do it, do it right -- that is, we need a way to disable it
> > > completely in both kernel and userspace so that userspace won't be
> > able> to
> > > see it.
> >
> > That would need more changes in misc cgroup implementation to support
> > sgx-disable. Right now misc does not have separate files for different
> > resource types. So we can only block echo "sgx_epc..." to those
> > interfacefiles, can't really make files not visible.
>
> "won't be able to see" I mean "only for SGX EPC resource", but not the
> control files for the entire MISC cgroup.
>
> I replied at the beginning of the previous reply:
>
> "
> Given SGX EPC is just one type of MISC cgroup resources, we cannot just
> disable MISC cgroup as a whole.
> "
>
Sorry I missed this point. below.
> You just need to set the SGX EPC "capacity" to 0 to disable SGX EPC. See
> the comment of @misc_res_capacity:
>
> * Miscellaneous resources capacity for the entire machine. 0 capacity
> * means resource is not initialized or not present in the host.
>
IIUC I don't think the situation we have is either of those cases. For our
case, resource is inited and present on the host but we have allocation
error for sgx cgroup infra.
You have calculated the "capacity", but later you failed something and
then reset the "capacity" to 0, i.e., cleanup. What's wrong with that?
> And "blocking echo sgx_epc ... to those control files" is already
> sufficient for the purpose of not exposing SGX EPC to userspace, correct?
>
> E.g., if SGX cgroup is enabled, you can see below when you read "max":
>
> # cat /sys/fs/cgroup/my_group/misc.max
> # <resource1> <max1>
> sgx_epc ...
> ...
>
> Otherwise you won't be able to see "sgx_epc":
>
> # cat /sys/fs/cgroup/my_group/misc.max
> # <resource1> <max1>
> ...
>
> And when you try to write the "max" for "sgx_epc", you will hit error:
>
> # echo "sgx_epc 100" > /sys/fs/cgroup/my_group/misc.max
> # ... echo: write error: Invalid argument
>
> The above applies to all the control files. To me this is pretty much
> means "SGX EPC is disabled" or "not supported" for userspace.
>
You are right, capacity == 0 does block echoing max and users see an error
if they do that. But 1) doubt you literately wanted "SGX EPC is disabled"
and make it unsupported in this case,
I don't understand. Something failed during SGX cgroup initialization,
you _literally_ cannot continue to support it.
2) even if we accept this is "sgx
cgroup disabled" I don't see how it is much better user experience than
current solution or really helps user better.
In your way, the userspace is still able to see "sgx_epc" in control files
and is able to update them. So from userspace's perspective SGX cgroup is
enabled, but obviously updating to "max" doesn't have any impact. This
will confuse userspace.
Also to implement this approach, as you mentioned, we need workaround the
fact that misc_try_charge() fails when capacity set to zero, and adding
code to return root always?
Why this is a problem?
It's a workaround because you use the capacity==0 but it does not really mean to disable the misc cgroup for specific resource IIUC.So it seems like more workaround code to just
make it work for a failing case no one really care much and end result is
not really much better IMHO.
It's not workaround, it's the right thing to do.
The result is userspace will see it being disabled when kernel disables
it.