Le 12/01/2021 à 17:57, Peter Zijlstra a écrit :
On Tue, Jan 12, 2021 at 04:47:17PM +0100, Laurent Dufour wrote:
Le 12/01/2021 à 12:43, Vinayak Menon a écrit :
Possibility of race against other PTE modifiers
- Fork - We have seen a case of SPF racing with fork marking PTEs RO and that
is described and fixed here https://lore.kernel.org/patchwork/patch/1062672/
Right, that's exactly the kind of thing I was worried about.
- mprotect - change_protection in mprotect which does the deferred flush is
marked under vm_write_begin/vm_write_end, thus SPF bails out on faults on those VMAs.
Sure, mprotect also changes vm_flags, so it really needs that anyway.
- userfaultfd - mwriteprotect_range is not protected unlike in (2) above.
But SPF does not take UFFD faults. 4) hugetlb - hugetlb_change_protection - called from mprotect and covered by (2) above.
- Concurrent faults - SPF does not handle all faults. Only anon page faults.
What happened to shared/file-backed stuff? ISTR I had that working.
File-backed mappings are not processed in a speculative way, there were options to manage some of them depending on the underlying file system but that's still not done.
Shared anonymous mapping, are also not yet handled in a speculative way (vm_ops is not null).
Of which do_anonymous_page and do_swap_page are NONE/NON-PRESENT->PRESENT transitions without tlb flush. And I hope do_wp_page with RO->RW is fine as well.
The tricky one is demotion, specifically write to non-write.
I could not see a case where speculative path cannot see a PTE update done via a fault on another CPU.
One you didn't mention is the NUMA balancing scanning crud; although I think that's fine, loosing a PTE update there is harmless. But I've not thought overly hard on it.
That's a good point, I need to double check on that side.
You explained it fine. Indeed SPF is handling deferred TLB invalidation by marking the VMA through vm_write_begin/end(), as for the fork case you mentioned. Once the PTL is held, and the VMA's seqcount is checked, the PTE values read are valid.
That should indeed work, but are we really sure we covered them all? Should we invest in better TLBI APIs to make sure we can't get this wrong?
That may be a good option to identify deferred TLB invalidation but I've no clue on what this API would look like.