On Sun, Jan 29, 2023 at 10:10:35AM -0800, Eric Biggers wrote:
On Sun, Jan 29, 2023 at 12:18:51PM +0000, Matthew Wilcox (Oracle) wrote:
Both f2fs and ext4 end up passing the ciphertext page to wbc_account_cgroup_owner(). At the moment, the ciphertext page appears to belong to no cgroup, so it is accounted to the root_mem_cgroup instead of whatever cgroup the original page was in.
It's hard to say how far back this is a bug. The crypto code shared between ext4 & f2fs was created in May 2015 with commit 0b81d0779072, but neither filesystem did anything with memcg_data before then. memcg writeback accounting was added to ext4 in July 2015 in commit 001e4a8775f6 and it wasn't added to f2fs until January 2018 (commit 578c647879f7).
What is the actual effect of this bug?
The bounce pages are short-lived, so surely it doesn't really matter what memory cgroup they get charged to?
Ah, we don't want to charge the _memory_ of the bounce pages to the cgroup. We want to charge the _I/O_ to the cgroup.
Looking at the original commits, the effect will be that if you have an unencrypted filesystem, writeback will be throttled according to the cgroup's rules, but if you have an encrypted filesystem, it will escape the cgroup I/O limits.
I guess it's really more about the effect on cgroup writeback? And that's also the reason why this is a problem here but not e.g. in dm-crypt?
I haven't looked at dm-crypt at all, but my assumption is that the fs charges the I/O of the pagecache page to the cgroup, and there's no need to do it again.
diff --git a/fs/crypto/crypto.c b/fs/crypto/crypto.c index e78be66bbf01..a4e76f96f291 100644 --- a/fs/crypto/crypto.c +++ b/fs/crypto/crypto.c @@ -205,6 +205,9 @@ struct page *fscrypt_encrypt_pagecache_blocks(struct page *page, } SetPagePrivate(ciphertext_page); set_page_private(ciphertext_page, (unsigned long)page); +#ifdef CONFIG_MEMCG
- ciphertext_page->memcg_data = page->memcg_data;
+#endif return ciphertext_page; }
Nothing outside mm/ and include/linux/memcontrol.h does anything with memcg_data directly. Are you sure this is the right thing to do here?
Nope ;-) Happy to hear from people who know more about cgroups than I do. Adding some more ccs.
Also, this patch causes the following:
Oops. Clearly memcg_data needs to be set to NULL before we free it.