On 7/18/23 11:11, Haitao Huang wrote:
On Tue, 18 Jul 2023 09:27:49 -0500, Dave Hansen dave.hansen@intel.com wrote:
On 7/17/23 13:29, Haitao Huang wrote:
Under heavy load, the SGX EPC reclaimers (current ksgxd or future EPC cgroup worker) may reclaim the SECS EPC page for an enclave and set encl->secs.epc_page to NULL. But the SECS EPC page is used for EAUG in the SGX #PF handler without checking for NULL and reloading.
Fix this by checking if SECS is loaded before EAUG and load it if it was reclaimed.
It would be nice to see a _bit_ more theory of the bug in here.
What is an SECS page and why is it special in a reclaim context? Why is this so hard to hit? What led you to discover this issue now? What is EAUG?
Let me know if this clarify things.
The SECS page holds global states of an enclave, and all reclaimable pages tracked by the SGX EPC reclaimer (ksgxd) are considered 'child' pages of the SECS page corresponding to that enclave. The reclaimer only reclaims the SECS page when all its children are reclaimed. That can happen on system under high EPC pressure where multiple large enclaves demanding much more EPC page than physically available. In a rare case, the reclaimer may reclaim all EPC pages of an enclave and it SECS page, setting encl->secs.epc_page to NULL, right before the #PF handler get the chance to handle a #PF for that enclave. In that case, if that #PF happens to require kernel to invoke the EAUG instruction to add a new EPC page for the enclave, then a NULL pointer results as current code does not check if encl->secs.epc_page is NULL before using it.
Better, but that's *REALLY* verbose and really imprecise. It doesn't _require_ "high pressure". It could literally happen at very, very low pressures over a long period of time. Please stick to the facts and it'll actually simplify the description.
The SECS page holds global enclave metadata. It can only be reclaimed when there are no other enclave pages remaining. At that point, virtually nothing can be done with the enclave until the SECS page is paged back in.
An enclave can not run nor generate page faults without without a resident SECS page. But it is still possible for a #PF for a non-SECS page to race with paging out the SECS page.
Hitting this bug requires triggering that race.
The bug is easier to reproduce with the EPC cgroup implementation when a low EPC limit is set for a group of enclave hosting processes. Without the EPC cgroup it's hard to trigger the reclaimer to reclaim all child pages of an SECS page. And it'd also require a machine configured with large RAM relative to EPC so no OOM killer triggered before this happens.
Isn't this the _normal_ case? EPC is relatively tiny compared to RAM normally.