Re: [PATCH v2 7/7] drm/virtio: implement userptr: add interval tree

From: Huang, Honglei1
Date: Wed Apr 02 2025 - 23:29:05 EST



Hi Dmitry:

Really sorry for missed this comment. Yes it can be done in UMD, actually the interval tree is used with the MMU notifier normally,
it is for preventing create same MMU notifier for overlapped areas.
Cause this version patch set doesn't have MMU notifier, removing interval tree is reasonable.

Hi Demi:
Adding interval tree can make virtio userptr has robust check, it can be done in UMD. And for AMD userptr driver, it is a SVM type driver, it has
both interval tree and MMU notifier but userptr memory is moveable in it. No interval tree for Intel i386, not sure about the Intel XE driver.

Maybe I can remove the interval tree in next version.


On 2025/4/3 2:45, Demi Marie Obenour wrote:
On 4/2/25 8:34 AM, Dmitry Osipenko wrote:
On 4/2/25 04:53, Huang, Honglei1 wrote:

On 2025/3/30 19:57, Dmitry Osipenko wrote:
If the purpose of this feature is to dedup usrptr BOs of a the single
process/application, can this can be done in userspace?

I assume it can be done in userspace, don't see why it needs to be in
kernel.

The kernel definitely does not need to be responsible for deduplication,
but is it safe to allow userspace to create overlapping BOs, especially
ones that are partially but not entirely overlapping? If the userspace
libraries ~everyone will be using refuse to create such BOs, then
overlapping BOs will be tested by ~nobody, and untested kernel code is
a good place for security vulnerabilities to linger.

If there are no legitimate use-cases for overlapping BOs, I would treat
attempts to create them as an errors and return -EINVAL, indicating that
the userspace code attempting to create them is buggy. Userspace can
deduplicate the BOs itself if necessary. Of course, there need to be
tests for userspace attempting to create overlapping BOs, including
attempting to do so concurrently from multiple threads.

That said, probably the most important part is consistency with userptr
in other (non-virtio) drivers, such as Intel and AMD. If they allow
overlapping userptr BOs, then virtio should too; if they do not, then
virtio should also forbid them.