Message ID | 20240503211129.679762-2-torvalds@linux-foundation.org (mailing list archive) |
---|---|
State | New |
Headers | show |
Series | epoll: try to be a _bit_ better about file lifetimes | expand |
On Fri, May 03, 2024 at 02:11:30PM -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote: > epoll is a mess, and does various invalid things in the name of > performance. > > Let's try to rein it in a bit. Something like this, perhaps? > +/* > + * The ffd.file pointer may be in the process of > + * being torn down due to being closed, but we > + * may not have finished eventpoll_release() yet. > + * > + * Technically, even with the atomic_long_inc_not_zero, > + * the file may have been free'd and then gotten > + * re-allocated to something else (since files are > + * not RCU-delayed, they are SLAB_TYPESAFE_BY_RCU). Can we get to ep_item_poll(epi, ...) after eventpoll_release_file() got past __ep_remove()? Because if we can, we have a worse problem - epi freed under us. If not, we couldn't possibly have reached ->release() yet, let alone freeing anything.
On Fri, 3 May 2024 at 14:24, Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk> wrote: > > Can we get to ep_item_poll(epi, ...) after eventpoll_release_file() > got past __ep_remove()? Because if we can, we have a worse problem - > epi freed under us. Look at the hack in __ep_remove(): if it is concurrent with eventpoll_release_file(), it will hit this code spin_lock(&file->f_lock); if (epi->dying && !force) { spin_unlock(&file->f_lock); return false; } and not free the epi. But as far as I can tell, almost nothing else cares about the f_lock and dying logic. And in fact, I don't think doing spin_lock(&file->f_lock); is even valid in the places that look up file through "epi->ffd.file", because the lock itself is inside the thing that you can't trust until you've taken the lock... So I agree with Kees about the use of "atomic_dec_not_zero()" kind of logic - but it also needs to be in an RCU-readlocked region, I think. I wish epoll() just took the damn file ref itself. But since it relies on the file refcount to release the data structure, that obviously can't work. Linus
On Fri, May 03, 2024 at 02:33:37PM -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote: > Look at the hack in __ep_remove(): if it is concurrent with > eventpoll_release_file(), it will hit this code > > spin_lock(&file->f_lock); > if (epi->dying && !force) { > spin_unlock(&file->f_lock); > return false; > } > > and not free the epi. What does that have to do with ep_item_poll()? eventpoll_release_file() itself calls __ep_remove(). Have that happen while ep_item_poll() is running in another thread and you've got a problem. AFAICS, exclusion is on ep->mtx. Callers of ep_item_poll() are * __ep_eventpoll_poll() - grabs ->mtx * ep_insert() - called under ->mtx * ep_modify() - calls are under ->mtx * ep_send_events() - grabs ->mtx and eventpoll_release_file() grabs ->mtx around __ep_remove(). How do you get through eventpoll_release_file() while someone has entered ep_item_poll()?
On Fri, 3 May 2024 at 14:45, Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk> wrote: > > How do you get through eventpoll_release_file() while someone > has entered ep_item_poll()? Doesn't matter. Look, it's enough that the file count has gone down to zero. You may not even have gotten to eventpoll_release_file() yet - the important part is that you're on your *way* to it. That means that the file will be released - and it means that you have violated all the refcounting rules for poll(). So I think you're barking up the wrong tree. Linus
On Fri, May 03, 2024 at 02:52:38PM -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote: > On Fri, 3 May 2024 at 14:45, Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk> wrote: > > > > How do you get through eventpoll_release_file() while someone > > has entered ep_item_poll()? > > Doesn't matter. > > Look, it's enough that the file count has gone down to zero. You may > not even have gotten to eventpoll_release_file() yet - the important > part is that you're on your *way* to it. > > That means that the file will be released - and it means that you have > violated all the refcounting rules for poll(). > > So I think you're barking up the wrong tree. IMO there are several things in that mess (aside of epoll being what it is). Trying to grab refcount as you do is fine; the comment is seriously misleading, though - we *are* guaranteed that struct file hasn't hit ->release(), let alone getting freed and reused. Having pollwait callback grab references is fine - and the callback belongs to whoever's calling ->poll(). Having ->poll() instance itself grab reference is really asking for problem, even on the boxen that have CONFIG_EPOLL turned off. select(2) is enough; it will take care of references grabbed by __pollwait(), but it doesn't know anything about the references driver has stashed hell knows where for hell knows how long.
On Fri, May 03, 2024 at 11:01:45PM +0100, Al Viro wrote: > Having ->poll() instance itself grab reference is really asking for problem, > even on the boxen that have CONFIG_EPOLL turned off. select(2) is enough; > it will take care of references grabbed by __pollwait(), but it doesn't > know anything about the references driver has stashed hell knows where for > hell knows how long. Suppose your program calls select() on a pipe and dmabuf, sees data to be read from pipe, reads it, closes both pipe and dmabuf and exits. Would you expect that dmabuf file would stick around for hell knows how long after that? I would certainly be very surprised by running into that...
On Fri, May 03, 2024 at 02:52:38PM -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote: > That means that the file will be released - and it means that you have > violated all the refcounting rules for poll(). I feel like I've been looking at this too long. I think I see another problem here, but with dmabuf even when epoll is fixed: dma_buf_poll() get_file(dmabuf->file) /* f_count + 1 */ dma_buf_poll_add_cb() dma_resv_for_each_fence ... dma_fence_add_callback(fence, ..., dma_buf_poll_cb) dma_buf_poll_cb() ... fput(dmabuf->file); /* f_count - 1 ... for each fence */ Isn't it possible to call dma_buf_poll_cb() (and therefore fput()) multiple times if there is more than 1 fence? Perhaps I've missed a place where a single struct dma_resv will only ever signal 1 fence? But looking through dma_fence_signal_timestamp_locked(), I don't see anything about resv nor somehow looking into other fence cb_list contents...
On Fri, May 03, 2024 at 03:46:25PM -0700, Kees Cook wrote: > On Fri, May 03, 2024 at 02:52:38PM -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote: > > That means that the file will be released - and it means that you have > > violated all the refcounting rules for poll(). > > I feel like I've been looking at this too long. I think I see another > problem here, but with dmabuf even when epoll is fixed: > > dma_buf_poll() > get_file(dmabuf->file) /* f_count + 1 */ > dma_buf_poll_add_cb() > dma_resv_for_each_fence ... > dma_fence_add_callback(fence, ..., dma_buf_poll_cb) > > dma_buf_poll_cb() > ... > fput(dmabuf->file); /* f_count - 1 ... for each fence */ > > Isn't it possible to call dma_buf_poll_cb() (and therefore fput()) > multiple times if there is more than 1 fence? Perhaps I've missed a > place where a single struct dma_resv will only ever signal 1 fence? But > looking through dma_fence_signal_timestamp_locked(), I don't see > anything about resv nor somehow looking into other fence cb_list > contents... At a guess, r = dma_fence_add_callback(fence, &dcb->cb, dma_buf_poll_cb); if (!r) return true; prevents that - it returns 0 on success and -E... on error; insertion into the list happens only when it's returning 0, so...
On Fri, 3 May 2024 at 15:07, Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk> wrote: > > Suppose your program calls select() on a pipe and dmabuf, sees data to be read > from pipe, reads it, closes both pipe and dmabuf and exits. > > Would you expect that dmabuf file would stick around for hell knows how long > after that? I would certainly be very surprised by running into that... Why? That's the _point_ of refcounts. They make the thing they refcount stay around until it's no longer referenced. Now, I agree that dmabuf's are a bit odd in how they use a 'struct file' *as* their refcount, but hey, it's a specialty use. Unusual perhaps, but not exactly wrong. I suspect that if you saw a dmabuf just have its own 'refcount_t' and stay around until it was done, you wouldn't bat an eye at it, and it's really just the "it uses a struct file for counting" that you are reacting to. Linus
On Sat, May 04, 2024 at 12:03:18AM +0100, Al Viro wrote: > On Fri, May 03, 2024 at 03:46:25PM -0700, Kees Cook wrote: > > On Fri, May 03, 2024 at 02:52:38PM -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote: > > > That means that the file will be released - and it means that you have > > > violated all the refcounting rules for poll(). > > > > I feel like I've been looking at this too long. I think I see another > > problem here, but with dmabuf even when epoll is fixed: > > > > dma_buf_poll() > > get_file(dmabuf->file) /* f_count + 1 */ > > dma_buf_poll_add_cb() > > dma_resv_for_each_fence ... > > dma_fence_add_callback(fence, ..., dma_buf_poll_cb) > > > > dma_buf_poll_cb() > > ... > > fput(dmabuf->file); /* f_count - 1 ... for each fence */ > > > > Isn't it possible to call dma_buf_poll_cb() (and therefore fput()) > > multiple times if there is more than 1 fence? Perhaps I've missed a > > place where a single struct dma_resv will only ever signal 1 fence? But > > looking through dma_fence_signal_timestamp_locked(), I don't see > > anything about resv nor somehow looking into other fence cb_list > > contents... > > At a guess, > r = dma_fence_add_callback(fence, &dcb->cb, dma_buf_poll_cb); > if (!r) > return true; > > prevents that - it returns 0 on success and -E... on error; > insertion into the list happens only when it's returning 0, > so... Yes; thank you. I *have* been looking at it all too long. :) The last related thing is the drivers/gpu/drm/vmwgfx/ttm_object.c case: /** * get_dma_buf_unless_doomed - get a dma_buf reference if possible. * * @dmabuf: Non-refcounted pointer to a struct dma-buf. * * Obtain a file reference from a lookup structure that doesn't refcount * the file, but synchronizes with its release method to make sure it * has * not been freed yet. See for example kref_get_unless_zero * documentation. * Returns true if refcounting succeeds, false otherwise. * * Nobody really wants this as a public API yet, so let it mature here * for some time... */ static bool __must_check get_dma_buf_unless_doomed(struct dma_buf *dmabuf) { return atomic_long_inc_not_zero(&dmabuf->file->f_count) != 0L; } If we end up adding epi_fget(), we'll have 2 cases of using "atomic_long_inc_not_zero" for f_count. Do we need some kind of blessed helper to live in file.h or something, with appropriate comments?
On Fri, May 03, 2024 at 04:16:15PM -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote: > On Fri, 3 May 2024 at 15:07, Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk> wrote: > > > > Suppose your program calls select() on a pipe and dmabuf, sees data to be read > > from pipe, reads it, closes both pipe and dmabuf and exits. > > > > Would you expect that dmabuf file would stick around for hell knows how long > > after that? I would certainly be very surprised by running into that... > > Why? > > That's the _point_ of refcounts. They make the thing they refcount > stay around until it's no longer referenced. > > Now, I agree that dmabuf's are a bit odd in how they use a 'struct > file' *as* their refcount, but hey, it's a specialty use. Unusual > perhaps, but not exactly wrong. > > I suspect that if you saw a dmabuf just have its own 'refcount_t' and > stay around until it was done, you wouldn't bat an eye at it, and it's > really just the "it uses a struct file for counting" that you are > reacting to. *IF* those files are on purely internal filesystem, that's probably OK; do that with something on something mountable (char device, sysfs file, etc.) and you have a problem with filesystem staying busy. I'm really unfamiliar with the subsystem; it might be OK with all objects that use that for ->poll(), but that's definitely not a good thing to see in ->poll() instance in general. And code gets copied, so there really should be a big fat comment about the reasons why it's OK in this particular case. Said that, it seems that a better approach might be to have their ->release() cancel callbacks and drop fence references. Note that they *do* have refcounts - on fences. The file (well, dmabuf, really) is pinned only to protect against the situation when pending callback is still around. And Kees' observation about multiple fences is also interesting - we don't get extra fput(), but only because we get events only from one fence, which does look fishy...
On Fri, 3 May 2024 at 16:23, Kees Cook <keescook@chromium.org> wrote: > > static bool __must_check get_dma_buf_unless_doomed(struct dma_buf *dmabuf) > { > return atomic_long_inc_not_zero(&dmabuf->file->f_count) != 0L; > } > > If we end up adding epi_fget(), we'll have 2 cases of using > "atomic_long_inc_not_zero" for f_count. Do we need some kind of blessed > helper to live in file.h or something, with appropriate comments? I wonder if we could try to abstract this out a bit more. These games with non-ref-counted file structures *feel* a bit like the games we play with non-ref-counted (aka "stashed") 'struct dentry' that got fairly recently cleaned up with path_from_stashed() when both nsfs and pidfs started doing the same thing. I'm not loving the TTM use of this thing, but at least the locking and logic feels a lot more straightforward (ie the atomic_long_inc_not_zero() here is clealy under the 'prime->mutex' lock IOW, the tty use looks correct to me, and it has fairly simple locking and is just catching the the race between 'fput()' decrementing the refcount and and 'file->f_op->release()' doing the actual release. You are right that it's similar to the epoll thing in that sense, it just looks a _lot_ more straightforward to me (and, unlike epoll, doesn't look actively buggy right now). Could we abstract out this kind of "stashed file pointer" so that we'd have a *common* form for this? Not just the inc_not_zero part, but the locking rule too? Linus
On Fri, 3 May 2024 at 16:39, Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk> wrote: > > *IF* those files are on purely internal filesystem, that's probably > OK; do that with something on something mountable (char device, > sysfs file, etc.) and you have a problem with filesystem staying > busy. Yeah, I agree, it's a bit annoying in general. That said, it's easy to do: stash a file descriptor in a unix domain socket, and that's basically exactly what you have: a random reference to a 'struct file' that will stay around for as long as you just keep that socket around, long after the "real" file descriptor has been closed, and entirely separately from it. And yes, that's exactly why unix domain socket transfers have caused so many problems over the years, with both refcount overflows and nasty garbage collection issues. So randomly taking references to file descriptors certainly isn't new. In fact, it's so common that I find the epoll pattern annoying, in that it does something special and *not* taking a ref - and it does that special thing to *other* ("innocent") file descriptors. Yes, dma-buf is a bit like those unix domain sockets in that it can keep random references alive for random times, but at least it does it just to its own file descriptors, not random other targets. So the dmabuf thing is very much a "I'm a special file that describes a dma buffer", and shouldn't really affect anything outside of active dmabuf uses (which admittedly is a large portion of the GPU drivers, and has been expanding from there...). I So the reason I'm annoyed at epoll in this case is that I think epoll triggered the bug in some entirely innocent subsystem. dma-buf is doing something differently odd, yes, but at least it's odd in a "I'm a specialized thing" sense, not in some "I screw over others" sense. Linus
On Fri, May 03, 2024 at 04:41:19PM -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote: > On Fri, 3 May 2024 at 16:23, Kees Cook <keescook@chromium.org> wrote: > > > > static bool __must_check get_dma_buf_unless_doomed(struct dma_buf *dmabuf) > > { > > return atomic_long_inc_not_zero(&dmabuf->file->f_count) != 0L; > > } > > > > If we end up adding epi_fget(), we'll have 2 cases of using > > "atomic_long_inc_not_zero" for f_count. Do we need some kind of blessed > > helper to live in file.h or something, with appropriate comments? > > I wonder if we could try to abstract this out a bit more. > > These games with non-ref-counted file structures *feel* a bit like the > games we play with non-ref-counted (aka "stashed") 'struct dentry' > that got fairly recently cleaned up with path_from_stashed() when both > nsfs and pidfs started doing the same thing. > > I'm not loving the TTM use of this thing, but at least the locking and > logic feels a lot more straightforward (ie the > atomic_long_inc_not_zero() here is clealy under the 'prime->mutex' > lock The TTM stuff is somewhat wild though and I've commented on that in https://lore.kernel.org/r/20240503-mitmachen-redakteur-2707ab0cacc3@brauner another thread that it can just use get_active_file(). Afaict, there's dma_buf_export() that allocates a new file and sets: file->private_data = dmabuf; dmabuf->file = file; dentry->d_fsdata = dmabuf; The file has f_op->release::dma_buf_file_release() as it's f_op->release method. When that's called the file's refcount is already zero but the file has not been freed yet. This will remove the dmabuf from some public list but it won't free it. dmabuf dentries have dma_buf_dentry_ops which use dentry->d_release::dma_buf_release() to release the actual dmabuf stashed in dentry->d_fsdata. So that ends up with: __fput() -> f_op->release::dma_buf_file_release() // handles file specific freeing -> dput() -> d_op->d_release::dma_buf_release() // handles dmabuf freeing // including the driver specific stuff. If you fput() the file then the dmabuf will be freed as well immediately after it when the dput() happens in __fput(). So that TTM thing does something else then in ttm_object_device_init(). It copies the dma_buf_ops into tdev->ops and replaces the dma_buf_ops release method with it's own ttm_prime_dmabuf_release() and stashes the old on in tdev->dma_buf_release. And it uses that to hook into the release path so that @dmabuf will still be valid for get_dma_buf_unless_doomed() under prime->mutex. But again, get_dma_buf_unless_doomed() can just be replaced with get_active_file() and then we're done with that part. > IOW, the tty use looks correct to me, and it has fairly simple locking > and is just catching the the race between 'fput()' decrementing the > refcount and and 'file->f_op->release()' doing the actual release. > > You are right that it's similar to the epoll thing in that sense, it > just looks a _lot_ more straightforward to me (and, unlike epoll, > doesn't look actively buggy right now). It's not buggy afaict. It literally can just switch to get_active_file() instead of open-coding it and we're done imho.
On Fri, May 03, 2024 at 02:33:37PM -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote: > On Fri, 3 May 2024 at 14:24, Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk> wrote: > > > > Can we get to ep_item_poll(epi, ...) after eventpoll_release_file() > > got past __ep_remove()? Because if we can, we have a worse problem - > > epi freed under us. > > Look at the hack in __ep_remove(): if it is concurrent with > eventpoll_release_file(), it will hit this code > > spin_lock(&file->f_lock); > if (epi->dying && !force) { > spin_unlock(&file->f_lock); > return false; > } > > and not free the epi. > > But as far as I can tell, almost nothing else cares about the f_lock > and dying logic. > > And in fact, I don't think doing > > spin_lock(&file->f_lock); > > is even valid in the places that look up file through "epi->ffd.file", > because the lock itself is inside the thing that you can't trust until > you've taken the lock... > > So I agree with Kees about the use of "atomic_dec_not_zero()" kind of > logic - but it also needs to be in an RCU-readlocked region, I think. Why isn't it enough to just force dma_buf_poll() to use get_file_active()? Then that whole problem goes away afaict. So the fix I had yesterday before I had to step away from the computer was literally just that [1]. It currently uses two atomic incs potentially but that can probably be fixed by the dma folks to be smarter about when they actually need to take a file reference. > > I wish epoll() just took the damn file ref itself. But since it relies > on the file refcount to release the data structure, that obviously > can't work. > > Linus diff --git a/drivers/dma-buf/dma-buf.c b/drivers/dma-buf/dma-buf.c index 8fe5aa67b167..7149c45976e1 100644 --- a/drivers/dma-buf/dma-buf.c +++ b/drivers/dma-buf/dma-buf.c @@ -244,13 +244,18 @@ static __poll_t dma_buf_poll(struct file *file, poll_table *poll) if (!dmabuf || !dmabuf->resv) return EPOLLERR; + if (!get_file_active(&dmabuf->file)) + return EPOLLERR; + resv = dmabuf->resv; poll_wait(file, &dmabuf->poll, poll); events = poll_requested_events(poll) & (EPOLLIN | EPOLLOUT); - if (!events) + if (!events) { + fput(file); return 0; + } dma_resv_lock(resv, NULL); @@ -268,7 +273,6 @@ static __poll_t dma_buf_poll(struct file *file, poll_table *poll) if (events & EPOLLOUT) { /* Paired with fput in dma_buf_poll_cb */ get_file(dmabuf->file); - if (!dma_buf_poll_add_cb(resv, true, dcb)) /* No callback queued, wake up any other waiters */ dma_buf_poll_cb(NULL, &dcb->cb); @@ -301,6 +305,7 @@ static __poll_t dma_buf_poll(struct file *file, poll_table *poll) } dma_resv_unlock(resv); + fput(file); return events; }
On Sat, May 04, 2024 at 12:39:00AM +0100, Al Viro wrote: > On Fri, May 03, 2024 at 04:16:15PM -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote: > > On Fri, 3 May 2024 at 15:07, Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk> wrote: > > > > > > Suppose your program calls select() on a pipe and dmabuf, sees data to be read > > > from pipe, reads it, closes both pipe and dmabuf and exits. > > > > > > Would you expect that dmabuf file would stick around for hell knows how long > > > after that? I would certainly be very surprised by running into that... > > > > Why? > > > > That's the _point_ of refcounts. They make the thing they refcount > > stay around until it's no longer referenced. > > > > Now, I agree that dmabuf's are a bit odd in how they use a 'struct > > file' *as* their refcount, but hey, it's a specialty use. Unusual > > perhaps, but not exactly wrong. > > > > I suspect that if you saw a dmabuf just have its own 'refcount_t' and > > stay around until it was done, you wouldn't bat an eye at it, and it's > > really just the "it uses a struct file for counting" that you are > > reacting to. > > *IF* those files are on purely internal filesystem, that's probably > OK; do that with something on something mountable (char device, > sysfs file, etc.) and you have a problem with filesystem staying > busy. In this instance it is ok because dma-buf is an internal fs. I had the exact same reaction you had initially but it doesn't matter for dma-buf afaict as that thing can never be unmounted.
On Sat, 4 May 2024 at 02:37, Christian Brauner <brauner@kernel.org> wrote: > > --- a/drivers/dma-buf/dma-buf.c > +++ b/drivers/dma-buf/dma-buf.c > @@ -244,13 +244,18 @@ static __poll_t dma_buf_poll(struct file *file, poll_table *poll) > if (!dmabuf || !dmabuf->resv) > return EPOLLERR; > > + if (!get_file_active(&dmabuf->file)) > + return EPOLLERR; [...] I *really* don't think anything that touches dma-buf.c can possibly be right. This is not a dma-buf.c bug. This is purely an epoll bug. Lookie here, the fundamental issue is that epoll can call '->poll()' on a file descriptor that is being closed concurrently. That means that *ANY* driver that relies on *any* data structure that is managed by the lifetime of the 'struct file' will have problems. Look, here's sock_poll(): static __poll_t sock_poll(struct file *file, poll_table *wait) { struct socket *sock = file->private_data; and that first line looks about as innocent as it possibly can, right? Now, imagine that this is called from 'epoll' concurrently with the file being closed for the last time (but it just hasn't _quite_ reached eventpoll_release() yet). Now, imagine that the kernel is built with preemption, and the epoll thread gets preempted _just_ before it loads 'file->private_data'. Furthermore, the machine is under heavy load, and it just stays off its CPU a long time. Now, during this TOTALLY INNOCENT sock_poll(), in another thread, the file closing completes, eventpoll_release() finishes, and the preemption of the poll() thing just takes so long that you go through an RCU period too, so that the actual file has been released too. So now that totally innoced file->private_data load in the poll() is probably going to get random data. Yes, the file is allocated as SLAB_TYPESAFE_BY_RCU, so it's probably still a file. Not guaranteed, even the slab will get fully free'd in some situations. And yes, the above case is impossible to hit in practice. You have to hit quite the small race window with an operation that practically never happens in the first place. But my point is that the fact that the problem with file->f_count lifetimes happens for that dmabuf driver is not the fault of the dmabuf code. Not at all. It is *ENTIRELY* a bug in epoll, and the dmabuf code is probably just easier to hit because it has a poll() function that does things that have longer lifetimes than most things, and interacts more directly with that f_count. So I really don't understand why Al thinks this is "dmabuf does bad things with f_count". It damn well does not. dma-buf is the GOOD GUY here. It's doing things *PROPERLY*. It's taking refcounts like it damn well should. The fact that it takes ref-counts on something that the epoll code has messed up is *NOT* its fault. Linus
On Sat, 4 May 2024 at 08:32, Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> wrote: > > Now, during this TOTALLY INNOCENT sock_poll(), in another thread, the > file closing completes, eventpoll_release() finishes [..] Actually, Al is right that ep_item_poll() should be holding the ep->mtx, so eventpoll_release() -> eventpoll_release_file_file() -> mutex_lock(&ep->mtx) should block and the file doesn't actually get released. So I guess the sock_poll() issue cannot happen. It does need some poll() function that does 'fget()', and believes that it works. But because the f_count has already gone down to zero, fget() doesn't work, and doesn't keep the file around, and you have the bug. The cases that do fget() in poll() are probably race, but they aren't buggy. epoll is buggy. So my example wasn't going to work, but the argument isn't really any different, it's just a much more limited case that breaks. And maybe it's even *only* dma-buf that does that fget() in its ->poll() function. Even *then* it's not a dma-buf.c bug. Linus
On Sat, 4 May 2024 at 08:40, Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> wrote: > > And maybe it's even *only* dma-buf that does that fget() in its > ->poll() function. Even *then* it's not a dma-buf.c bug. They all do in the sense that they do poll_wait -> __pollwait -> get_file (*boom*) but the boom is very small because the poll_wait() will be undone by poll_freewait(), and normally poll/select has held the file count elevated. Except for epoll. Which leaves those pollwait entries around until it's done - but again will be held up on the ep->mtx before it does so. So everybody does some f_count games, but possibly dma-buf is the only one that ends up expecting to hold on to the f_count for longer periods. Linus
On Sat, 4 May 2024 at 08:32, Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> wrote: > > Lookie here, the fundamental issue is that epoll can call '->poll()' > on a file descriptor that is being closed concurrently. Thinking some more about this, and replying to myself... Actually, I wonder if we could *really* fix this by simply moving the eventpoll_release() to where it really belongs. If we did it in file_close_fd_locked(), it would actually make a *lot* more sense. Particularly since eventpoll actually uses this: struct epoll_filefd { struct file *file; int fd; } __packed; ie it doesn't just use the 'struct file *', it uses the 'fd' itself (for ep_find()). (Strictly speaking, it should also have a pointer to the 'struct files_struct' to make the 'int fd' be meaningful). IOW, eventpoll already considers the file _descriptor_ relevant, not just the file pointer, and that's destroyed at *close* time, not at 'fput()' time. Yeah, yeah, the locking situation in file_close_fd_locked() is a bit inconvenient, but if we can solve that, it would solve the problem in a fundamentally different way: remove the ep iterm before the file->f_count has actually been decremented, so the whole "race with fput()" would just go away entirely. I dunno. I think that would be the right thing to do, but I wouldn't be surprised if some disgusting eventpoll user then might depend on the current situation where the eventpoll thing stays around even after the close() if you have another copy of the file open. Linus
On Sat, May 04, 2024 at 08:40:25AM -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote: > On Sat, 4 May 2024 at 08:32, Linus Torvalds > <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> wrote: > > > > Now, during this TOTALLY INNOCENT sock_poll(), in another thread, the > > file closing completes, eventpoll_release() finishes [..] > > Actually, Al is right that ep_item_poll() should be holding the > ep->mtx, so eventpoll_release() -> eventpoll_release_file_file() -> > mutex_lock(&ep->mtx) should block and the file doesn't actually get > released. So I know you've seen it yourself but for my own peace of mind I've said that in the other mail and in the other thread already that all callers of ep_item_poll() do already hold the ep->mtx: do_epoll_ctl() -> epoll_mutex_lock(&ep->mtx) -> ep_insert() -> ep_item_poll() do_epoll_ctl() -> epoll_mutex_lock(&ep->mtx) -> ep_modify() -> ep_item_poll() ep_send_events() -> mutex_lock(&ep->mtx) -> ep_item_poll() /* nested; and all callers of ep_item_poll() already hold ep->mtx */ __ep_eventpoll_poll() -> mutex_lock_nested(&ep->mtx, wait) -> ep_item_poll() So it's simply not possible to end up with a UAF in f_op->poll() because eventpoll_release_file_file() serializes on ep->mtx as well: __fput() -> eventpoll_release() -> eventpoll_release_file() { // @file->f_count is zero _but file is not freed_ // so taking file->f_lock is absolutely fine spin_lock(&file->f_lock); // mark as dying // serialzed on ep->mtx mutex_lock(&ep->mtx); __ep_rmove(ep, epi); ... } -> mutex_lock(&ep->mtx) -> f_op->release() -> kfree(file) So afaict it's simply not possible to end up with a UAF in f_op->poll(). And I agree with you that for some instances it's valid to take another reference to a file from f_op->poll() but then they need to use get_file_active() imho and simply handle the case where f_count is zero. And we need to document that in Documentation/filesystems/file.rst or locking.rst. But if it's simply just dma buf that cares about that long-term reference then really we should just force them to take the reference like I suggested but don't penalize everyone else. When I took a glance at all f_op->poll() implementations I didn't spot one that did take extra references. But if you absolutely want to have epoll take the reference before it calls into f_op->poll() that's fine with me as well. But we might end up forcing epoll to do a lot of final fput()s which I'm not sure is all that desirable.
On Sun, 5 May 2024 at 03:50, Christian Brauner <brauner@kernel.org> wrote: > > And I agree with you that for some instances it's valid to take another > reference to a file from f_op->poll() but then they need to use > get_file_active() imho and simply handle the case where f_count is zero. I think this is (a) practically impossible to find (since most f_count updates are in various random helpers) (b) not tenable in the first place, since *EVERYBODY* does a f_count update as part of the bog-standard pollwait So (b) means that the notion of "warn if somebody increments f_count from zero" is broken to begin with - but it's doubly broken because it wouldn't find anything *anyway*, since this never happens in any normal situation. And (a) means that any non-automatic finding of this is practically impossible. > And we need to document that in Documentation/filesystems/file.rst or > locking.rst. WHY? Why cannot you and Al just admit that the problem is in epoll. Always has been, always will be. The fact is, it's not dma-buf that is violating any rules. It's epoll. It's calling out to random driver functions with a file pointer that is no longer valid. It really is that simple. I don't see why you are arguing for "unknown number of drivers - we know at least *one* - have to be fixed for a bug that is in epoll". If it was *easy* to fix, and if it was *easy* to validate, then sure. But that just isn't the case. In contrast, in epoll it's *trivial* to fix the one case where it does a VFS call-out, and just say "you have to follow the rules". So explain to me again why you want to mess up the driver interface and everybody who has a '.poll()' function, and not just fix the ONE clearly buggy piece of code. Because dammit,. epoll is clearly buggy. It's not enough to say "the file allocation isn't going away", and claim that that means that it's not buggy - when the file IS NO LONGER VALID! Linus
On 5/3/24 3:11 PM, Linus Torvalds wrote: > epoll is a mess, and does various invalid things in the name of > performance. > > Let's try to rein it in a bit. Something like this, perhaps? > > Not-yet-signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> > --- > > This is entirely untested, thus the "Not-yet-signed-off-by". But I > think this may be kind of the right path forward. > > I suspect the ->poll() call is the main case that matters, but there are > other places where eventpoll just looks up the file pointer without then > being very careful about it. The sock_from_file(epi->ffd.file) uses in > particular should probably also use this to look up the file. > > Comments? FWIW, I agree that epoll is the odd one out and there's no reason NOT to close this gap, regardless of how safe we currently think the existing usage is. I've done some basic testing with this - both to verify it fixes the actual issue at hand (it does, crashes trivially without it), and networking/pipe based epoll usage and no ill effects observed. Also passes all ltp test cases as well, but I was less concerned about that side. Reviewed-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@kernel.dk>
On Sat, May 04, 2024 at 08:53:47AM -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote: > poll_wait > -> __pollwait > -> get_file (*boom*) > > but the boom is very small because the poll_wait() will be undone by > poll_freewait(), and normally poll/select has held the file count > elevated. Not quite. It's not that poll_wait() calls __pollwait(); it calls whatever callback that caller of ->poll() has set for it. __pollwait users (select(2) and poll(2), currently) must (and do) make sure that refcount is elevated; others (and epoll is not the only one) need to do whatever's right for their callbacks. I've no problem with having epoll grab a reference, but if we make that a universal requirement ->poll() instances can rely upon, we'd better verify that *all* vfs_poll() are OK. And that ought to go into Documentation/filesystems/porting.rst ("callers of vfs_poll() must make sure that file is pinned; ->poll() instances may rely upon that, but they'd better be very careful about grabbing extra references themselves - it's acceptable for files on internal mounts, but *NOT* for anything on mountable filesystems. Any instance that does it needs an explicit comment telling not to reuse that blindly." or something along those lines). Excluding epoll, select/poll and callers that have just done fdget() and will do fdput() after vfs_poll(), we have this: drivers/vhost/vhost.c:213: mask = vfs_poll(file, &poll->table); vhost_poll_start(). Might get interesting... Calls working with vq->kick as file seem to rely upon vq->mutex, but I'll need to refresh my memories of that code to check if that's all we need - and then there's vhost_net_enable_vq(), which also needs an audit. fs/aio.c:1738: mask = vfs_poll(req->file, &pt) & req->events; fs/aio.c:1932: mask = vfs_poll(req->file, &apt.pt) & req->events; aio_poll() and aio_poll_wake() resp. req->file here is actually ->ki_filp of iocb that contains work as iocb->req.work; it get dropped only in iocb_destroy(), which also frees iocb. Any call that might've run into req->file not pinned is already in UAF land. io_uring/poll.c:303: req->cqe.res = vfs_poll(req->file, &pt) & req->apoll_events; io_uring/poll.c:622: mask = vfs_poll(req->file, &ipt->pt) & poll->events; Should have req->file pinned, but I'll need to RTFS a bit for details. That, or ask Jens to confirm... net/9p/trans_fd.c:236: ret = vfs_poll(ts->rd, pt); net/9p/trans_fd.c:238: ret = (ret & ~EPOLLOUT) | (vfs_poll(ts->wr, pt) & ~EPOLLIN); p9_fd_poll(); ->rd and ->wr are pinned and won't get dropped until p9_fd_close(), which frees ts immediately afterwards. IOW, if we risk being called with ->rd or ->wr not pinned, we are in UAF land already. Incidentally, what the hell is this in p9_fd_open()? * It's technically possible for userspace or concurrent mounts to * modify this flag concurrently, which will likely result in a * broken filesystem. However, just having bad flags here should * not crash the kernel or cause any other sort of bug, so mark this * particular data race as intentional so that tooling (like KCSAN) * can allow it and detect further problems. */ Why not simply fix the race instead? As in spin_lock(&ts->rd->f_lock); ts->rd->f_flags |= O_NONBLOCK; spin_unlock(&ts->rd->f_lock); and similar for ts->wr? Sigh...
On Sun, 5 May 2024 at 12:46, Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk> wrote: > > I've no problem with having epoll grab a reference, but if we make that > a universal requirement ->poll() instances can rely upon, Al, we're note "making that a requirement". It always has been. Otgherwise, the docs should have shouted out DAMN LOUDLY that you can't rely on all the normal refcounting of 'struct file' THAT EVERY SINGLE NORMAL VFS FUNCTION CAN. Lookie herte: epoll is unimportant and irrelevant garbage compared to something fundamental like "read()", and what does read() do? It does this: struct fd f = fdget_pos(fd); if (f.file) { ... which is being DAMN CAREFUL to make sure that the file has the proper refcounts before it then calls "vfs_read()". There's a lot of very careful and subtle code in fdget_pos() to make this all proper, and that even if the file is closed by another thread concurrently, we *always* have a refcount to it, and it's always live over the whole 'vfs_read()' sequence. 'vfs_poll()' is NOT DIFFERENT in this regard. Not at all. Now, you have two choices that are intellectually honest: - admit that epoll() - which is a hell of a lot less important - should spend a small fraction of that effort on making its vfs_poll() use sane - say that all this fdget_pos() care is uncalled for in the read() path, and we should make all the filesystem .read() functions be aware that the file pointer they get may be garbage, and they should use get_file_active() to make sure every 'struct file *' use they have is safe? because if your choice is that "epoll can do whatever the f*&k it wants", then it's in clear violation of all the effort we go to in a MUCH MORE IMPORTANT code path, and is clearly not consistent or logical. Neither you nor Christian have explained why you think it's ok for that epoll() garbage to magically violate all our regular rules. Your claim that those regular rules are some new conditional requirement that we'd be imposing. NO. They are the rules that *anybody* who gets a 'struct file *' pointer should always be able to rely on by default: it's damn well a ref-counted thing, and the caller holds the refcount. The exceptional case is exactly the other way around: if you do random crap with unrefcounted poitners, it's *your* problem, and *you* are the one who has to be careful. Not some unrelated poor driver that didn't know about your f*&k-up. Dammit, epoll is CLEARLY BUGGY. It's passing off random kernel pointers without holding a refcount to them. THAT'S A BUG. And fixing that bug is *not* somehow changing existing rules as you are trying to claim. No. It's just fixing a bug. So stop claiming that this is some "new requirement". It is absolutely nothing of the sort. epoll() actively MISUSED file pointer, because file pointers are fundamentally refcounted (as are pretty much all sane kernel interfaces). Linus
On Sun, May 05, 2024 at 09:46:05AM -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote: > WHY? > > Why cannot you and Al just admit that the problem is in epoll. Always > has been, always will be. Nobody (well, nobody who'd ever read epoll) argues that epoll is not a problem. > The fact is, it's not dma-buf that is violating any rules. Now, that is something I've a trouble with. Use of get_file() in there actually looks rather fishy, regardless of epoll. At the very least it needs a comment discouraging other instances from blindly copying this. A reference to struct file pins down more than driver-internal objects; if nothing else, it pins down a mount and if you don't have SB_NOUSER on file_inode(file)->i_sb->s_flags, it's really not a good idea. What's more, the reason for that get_file() is, AFAICS, that nodes we put into callback queue for fence(s) in question[*] are embedded into dmabuf and we don't want them gone before the callbacks have happened. Which looks fishy - it would make more sense to cancel these callbacks and drop the fence(s) in question from ->release(). I've no problem whatsoever with fs/eventpoll.c grabbing/dropping file reference around vfs_poll() calls. And I don't believe that "try to grab" has any place in dma_buf_poll(); it's just that I'm not happy about get_file() call being there in the first place. Sure, the call of ->poll() can bloody well lead to references being grabbed - by the pollwait callback, which the caller of ->poll() is aware of. It's ->poll() instance *itself* grabbing such references with vfs_poll() caller having no idea what's going on that has potential for being unpleasant. And we can't constify 'file' argument of ->poll() because of poll_wait(), so it's hard to catch those who do that kind of thing; I've explicitly said so upthread, I believe. But similar calls of get_file() in ->poll() instances (again, not the ones that are made by pollwait callback) are something to watch out for and having the caller pin struct file does not solve the problem. [*] at most one per direction, and I've no idea whether there can be more than one signalling fence for given dmabuf)
On Sun, May 05, 2024 at 01:03:07PM -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote: > On Sun, 5 May 2024 at 12:46, Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk> wrote: > > > > I've no problem with having epoll grab a reference, but if we make that > > a universal requirement ->poll() instances can rely upon, > > Al, we're note "making that a requirement". > > It always has been. Argh. We keep talking past each other. 0. special-cased ->f_count rule for ->poll() is a wart and it's better to get rid of it. 1. fs/eventpoll.c is a steaming pile of shit and I'd be glad to see git rm taken to it. Short of that, by all means, let's grab reference in there around the call of vfs_poll() (see (0)). 2. having ->poll() instances grab extra references to file passed to them is not something that should be encouraged; there's a plenty of potential problems, and "caller has it pinned, so we are fine with grabbing extra refs" is nowhere near enough to eliminate those. 3. dma-buf uses of get_file() are probably safe (epoll shite aside), but they do look fishy. That has nothing to do with epoll.
On Sun, 5 May 2024 at 13:30, Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk> wrote: > > 0. special-cased ->f_count rule for ->poll() is a wart and it's > better to get rid of it. > > 1. fs/eventpoll.c is a steaming pile of shit and I'd be glad to see > git rm taken to it. Short of that, by all means, let's grab reference > in there around the call of vfs_poll() (see (0)). Agreed on 0/1. > 2. having ->poll() instances grab extra references to file passed > to them is not something that should be encouraged; there's a plenty > of potential problems, and "caller has it pinned, so we are fine with > grabbing extra refs" is nowhere near enough to eliminate those. So it's not clear why you hate it so much, since those extra references are totally normal in all the other VFS paths. I mean, they are perhaps not the *common* case, but we have a lot of random get_file() calls sprinkled around in various places when you end up passing a file descriptor off to some asynchronous operation thing. Yeah, I think most of them tend to be special operations (eg the tty TIOCCONS ioctl to redirect the console), but it's not like vfs_ioctl() is *that* different from vfs_poll. Different operation, not somehow "one is more special than the other". cachefiles and backing-file does it for regular IO, and drop it at IO completion - not that different from what dma-buf does. It's in ->read_iter() rather than ->poll(), but again: different operations, but not "one of them is somehow fundamentally different". > 3. dma-buf uses of get_file() are probably safe (epoll shite aside), > but they do look fishy. That has nothing to do with epoll. Now, what dma-buf basically seems to do is to avoid ref-counting its own fundamental data structure, and replaces that by refcounting the 'struct file' that *points* to it instead. And it is a bit odd, but it actually makes some amount of sense, because then what it passes around is that file pointer (and it allows passing it around from user space *as* that file). And honestly, if you look at why it then needs to add its refcount to it all, it actually makes sense. dma-bufs have this notion of "fences" that are basically completion points for the asynchronous DMA. Doing a "poll()" operation will add a note to the fence to get that wakeup when it's done. And yes, logically it takes a ref to the "struct dma_buf", but because of how the lifetime of the dma_buf is associated with the lifetime of the 'struct file', that then turns into taking a ref on the file. Unusual? Yes. But not illogical. Not obviously broken. Tying the lifetime of the dma_buf to the lifetime of a file that is passed along makes _sense_ for that use. I'm sure dma-bufs could add another level of refcounting on the 'struct dma_buf' itself, and not make it be 1:1 with the file, but it's not clear to me what the advantage would really be, or why it would be wrong to re-use a refcount that is already there. Linus
> The fact is, it's not dma-buf that is violating any rules. It's epoll.
I agree that epoll() not taking a reference on the file is at least
unexpected and contradicts the usual code patterns for the sake of
performance and that it very likely is the case that most callers of
f_op->poll() don't know this.
Note, I cleary wrote upthread that I'm ok to do it like you suggested
but raised two concerns a) there's currently only one instance of
prolonged @file lifetime in f_op->poll() afaict and b) that there's
possibly going to be some performance impact on epoll().
So it's at least worth discussing what's more important because epoll()
is very widely used and it's not that we haven't favored performance
before.
But you've already said that you aren't concerned with performance on
epoll() upthread. So afaict then there's really not a lot more to
discuss other than take the patch and see whether we get any complaints.
On Mon, May 06, 2024 at 10:45:35AM +0200, Christian Brauner wrote: > > The fact is, it's not dma-buf that is violating any rules. It's epoll. > > I agree that epoll() not taking a reference on the file is at least > unexpected and contradicts the usual code patterns for the sake of > performance and that it very likely is the case that most callers of > f_op->poll() don't know this. > > Note, I cleary wrote upthread that I'm ok to do it like you suggested > but raised two concerns a) there's currently only one instance of > prolonged @file lifetime in f_op->poll() afaict and b) that there's > possibly going to be some performance impact on epoll(). > > So it's at least worth discussing what's more important because epoll() > is very widely used and it's not that we haven't favored performance > before. > > But you've already said that you aren't concerned with performance on > epoll() upthread. So afaict then there's really not a lot more to > discuss other than take the patch and see whether we get any complaints. Two closing thoughts: (1) I wonder if this won't cause userspace regressions for the semantics of epoll because dying files are now silently ignored whereas before they'd generated events. (2) The other part is that this seems to me that epoll() will now temporarly pin filesystems opening up the possibility for spurious EBUSY errors. If you register a file descriptor in an epoll instance and then close it and umount the filesystem but epoll managed to do an fget() on that fd before that close() call then epoll will pin that filesystem. If the f_op->poll() method does something that can take a while (blocks on a shared mutex of that subsystem) that umount is very likely going to return EBUSY suddenly. Afaict, before that this wouldn't have been an issue at all and is likely more serious than performance. (One option would be to only do epi_fget() for stuff like dma-buf that's never unmounted. That'll cover nearly every driver out there. Only "real" filesystems would have to contend with @file count going to zero but honestly they also deal with dentry lookup under RCU which is way more adventurous than this.) Maybe I'm barking up the wrong tree though.
On Fri, May 03, 2024 at 04:41:19PM -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote: > On Fri, 3 May 2024 at 16:23, Kees Cook <keescook@chromium.org> wrote: > > > > static bool __must_check get_dma_buf_unless_doomed(struct dma_buf *dmabuf) > > { > > return atomic_long_inc_not_zero(&dmabuf->file->f_count) != 0L; > > } > > > > If we end up adding epi_fget(), we'll have 2 cases of using > > "atomic_long_inc_not_zero" for f_count. Do we need some kind of blessed > > helper to live in file.h or something, with appropriate comments? > > I wonder if we could try to abstract this out a bit more. > > These games with non-ref-counted file structures *feel* a bit like the > games we play with non-ref-counted (aka "stashed") 'struct dentry' > that got fairly recently cleaned up with path_from_stashed() when both > nsfs and pidfs started doing the same thing. > > I'm not loving the TTM use of this thing, but at least the locking and > logic feels a lot more straightforward (ie the > atomic_long_inc_not_zero() here is clealy under the 'prime->mutex' > lock The one the vmgfx isn't really needed (I think at least), because all other drivers that use gem or ttm use the dma_buf export cache in drm/drm_prime.c, which is protected by a bog standard mutex. vmwgfx is unfortunately special in a lot of ways due to somewhat parallel dev history. So there might be an uapi reason why the weak reference is required. I suspect because vmwgfx is reinventing a lot of its own wheels it can't play the same tricks as gem_prime.c, which hooks into a few core drm cleanup/release functions. tldr; drm really has no architectural need for a get_file_unless_doomed, and I certainly don't want to spread it it further than the vmwgfx historical special case that was added in 2013. -Sima > IOW, the tty use looks correct to me, and it has fairly simple locking > and is just catching the the race between 'fput()' decrementing the > refcount and and 'file->f_op->release()' doing the actual release. > > You are right that it's similar to the epoll thing in that sense, it > just looks a _lot_ more straightforward to me (and, unlike epoll, > doesn't look actively buggy right now). > > Could we abstract out this kind of "stashed file pointer" so that we'd > have a *common* form for this? Not just the inc_not_zero part, but the > locking rule too? > > Linus
On Sun, May 05, 2024 at 01:53:48PM -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote: > On Sun, 5 May 2024 at 13:30, Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk> wrote: > > > > 0. special-cased ->f_count rule for ->poll() is a wart and it's > > better to get rid of it. > > > > 1. fs/eventpoll.c is a steaming pile of shit and I'd be glad to see > > git rm taken to it. Short of that, by all means, let's grab reference > > in there around the call of vfs_poll() (see (0)). > > Agreed on 0/1. > > > 2. having ->poll() instances grab extra references to file passed > > to them is not something that should be encouraged; there's a plenty > > of potential problems, and "caller has it pinned, so we are fine with > > grabbing extra refs" is nowhere near enough to eliminate those. > > So it's not clear why you hate it so much, since those extra > references are totally normal in all the other VFS paths. > > I mean, they are perhaps not the *common* case, but we have a lot of > random get_file() calls sprinkled around in various places when you > end up passing a file descriptor off to some asynchronous operation > thing. > > Yeah, I think most of them tend to be special operations (eg the tty > TIOCCONS ioctl to redirect the console), but it's not like vfs_ioctl() > is *that* different from vfs_poll. Different operation, not somehow > "one is more special than the other". > > cachefiles and backing-file does it for regular IO, and drop it at IO > completion - not that different from what dma-buf does. It's in > ->read_iter() rather than ->poll(), but again: different operations, > but not "one of them is somehow fundamentally different". > > > 3. dma-buf uses of get_file() are probably safe (epoll shite aside), > > but they do look fishy. That has nothing to do with epoll. > > Now, what dma-buf basically seems to do is to avoid ref-counting its > own fundamental data structure, and replaces that by refcounting the > 'struct file' that *points* to it instead. > > And it is a bit odd, but it actually makes some amount of sense, > because then what it passes around is that file pointer (and it allows > passing it around from user space *as* that file). > > And honestly, if you look at why it then needs to add its refcount to > it all, it actually makes sense. dma-bufs have this notion of > "fences" that are basically completion points for the asynchronous > DMA. Doing a "poll()" operation will add a note to the fence to get > that wakeup when it's done. > > And yes, logically it takes a ref to the "struct dma_buf", but because > of how the lifetime of the dma_buf is associated with the lifetime of > the 'struct file', that then turns into taking a ref on the file. > > Unusual? Yes. But not illogical. Not obviously broken. Tying the > lifetime of the dma_buf to the lifetime of a file that is passed along > makes _sense_ for that use. > > I'm sure dma-bufs could add another level of refcounting on the > 'struct dma_buf' itself, and not make it be 1:1 with the file, but > it's not clear to me what the advantage would really be, or why it > would be wrong to re-use a refcount that is already there. So there is generally another refcount, because dma_buf is just the cross-driver interface to some kind of real underlying buffer object from the various graphics related subsystems we have. And since it's a pure file based api thing that ceases to serve any function once the fd/file is gone we tied all the dma_buf refcounting to the refcount struct file already maintains. But the underlying buffer object can easily outlive the dma_buf, and over the lifetime of an underlying buffer object you might actually end up creating different dma_buf api wrappers for it (but at least in drm we guarantee there's at most one, hence why vmwgfx does the atomic_inc_unless_zero trick, which I don't particularly like and isn't really needed). But we could add another refcount, it just means we have 3 of those then when only really 2 are needed. Also maybe here two: dma_fence are bounded like other disk i/o (including the option of timeouts if things go very wrong), so it's very much not forever but at most a few seconds worst case (shit hw/driver excluded, as usual). -Sima
On Mon, May 06, 2024 at 11:27:04AM +0200, Christian Brauner wrote: > On Mon, May 06, 2024 at 10:45:35AM +0200, Christian Brauner wrote: > > > The fact is, it's not dma-buf that is violating any rules. It's epoll. > > > > I agree that epoll() not taking a reference on the file is at least > > unexpected and contradicts the usual code patterns for the sake of > > performance and that it very likely is the case that most callers of > > f_op->poll() don't know this. > > > > Note, I cleary wrote upthread that I'm ok to do it like you suggested > > but raised two concerns a) there's currently only one instance of > > prolonged @file lifetime in f_op->poll() afaict and b) that there's > > possibly going to be some performance impact on epoll(). > > > > So it's at least worth discussing what's more important because epoll() > > is very widely used and it's not that we haven't favored performance > > before. > > > > But you've already said that you aren't concerned with performance on > > epoll() upthread. So afaict then there's really not a lot more to > > discuss other than take the patch and see whether we get any complaints. > > Two closing thoughts: > > (1) I wonder if this won't cause userspace regressions for the semantics > of epoll because dying files are now silently ignored whereas before > they'd generated events. > > (2) The other part is that this seems to me that epoll() will now > temporarly pin filesystems opening up the possibility for spurious > EBUSY errors. > > If you register a file descriptor in an epoll instance and then > close it and umount the filesystem but epoll managed to do an fget() > on that fd before that close() call then epoll will pin that > filesystem. > > If the f_op->poll() method does something that can take a while > (blocks on a shared mutex of that subsystem) that umount is very > likely going to return EBUSY suddenly. > > Afaict, before that this wouldn't have been an issue at all and is > likely more serious than performance. > > (One option would be to only do epi_fget() for stuff like > dma-buf that's never unmounted. That'll cover nearly every > driver out there. Only "real" filesystems would have to contend with > @file count going to zero but honestly they also deal with dentry > lookup under RCU which is way more adventurous than this.) > > Maybe I'm barking up the wrong tree though. Sorry, had to step out for an appointment. Under the assumption that I'm not entirely off with this - and I really could be ofc - then one possibility would be that we enable persistence of files from f_op->poll() for SB_NOUSER filesystems. That'll catch everything that's relying on anonymous inodes (drm and all drivers) and init_pseudo() so everything that isn't actually unmountable (pipefs, pidfs, sockfs, etc.). So something like the _completely untested_ diff on top of your proposal above: diff --git a/fs/eventpoll.c b/fs/eventpoll.c index a3f0f868adc4..95968a462544 100644 --- a/fs/eventpoll.c +++ b/fs/eventpoll.c @@ -1018,8 +1018,24 @@ static struct file *epi_fget(const struct epitem *epi) static __poll_t ep_item_poll(const struct epitem *epi, poll_table *pt, int depth) { - struct file *file = epi_fget(epi); + struct file *file = epi->ffd.file; __poll_t res; + bool unrefd = false; + + /* + * Taking a reference for anything that isn't mountable is fine + * because we don't have to worry about spurious EBUSY warnings + * from umount(). + * + * File count might go to zero in f_op->poll() for mountable + * filesystems. + */ + if (file->f_inode->i_sb->s_flags & SB_NOUSER) { + unrefd = true; + file = epi_fget(epi); + } else if (file_count(file) == 0) { + file = NULL; + } /* * We could return EPOLLERR | EPOLLHUP or something, @@ -1034,7 +1050,9 @@ static __poll_t ep_item_poll(const struct epitem *epi, poll_table *pt, res = vfs_poll(file, pt); else res = __ep_eventpoll_poll(file, pt, depth); - fput(file); + + if (unrefd) + fput(file); return res & epi->event.events; } Basically, my worry is that we end up with really annoying to debug EBUSYs caused by epoll(). I'd really like to avoid that. But again, I might be wrong and this isn't an issue.
Am 04.05.24 um 20:20 schrieb Linus Torvalds: > On Sat, 4 May 2024 at 08:32, Linus Torvalds > <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> wrote: >> Lookie here, the fundamental issue is that epoll can call '->poll()' >> on a file descriptor that is being closed concurrently. > Thinking some more about this, and replying to myself... > > Actually, I wonder if we could *really* fix this by simply moving the > eventpoll_release() to where it really belongs. > > If we did it in file_close_fd_locked(), it would actually make a > *lot* more sense. Particularly since eventpoll actually uses this: > > struct epoll_filefd { > struct file *file; > int fd; > } __packed; > > ie it doesn't just use the 'struct file *', it uses the 'fd' itself > (for ep_find()). > > (Strictly speaking, it should also have a pointer to the 'struct > files_struct' to make the 'int fd' be meaningful). While I completely agree on this I unfortunately have to ruin the idea. Before we had KCMP some people relied on the strange behavior of eventpoll to compare struct files when the fd is the same. I just recently suggested that solution to somebody at AMD as a workaround when KCMP is disabled because of security hardening and I'm pretty sure I've seen it somewhere else as well. So when we change that it would break (undocumented?) UAPI behavior. Regards, Christian. > > IOW, eventpoll already considers the file _descriptor_ relevant, not > just the file pointer, and that's destroyed at *close* time, not at > 'fput()' time. > > Yeah, yeah, the locking situation in file_close_fd_locked() is a bit > inconvenient, but if we can solve that, it would solve the problem in > a fundamentally different way: remove the ep iterm before the > file->f_count has actually been decremented, so the whole "race with > fput()" would just go away entirely. > > I dunno. I think that would be the right thing to do, but I wouldn't > be surprised if some disgusting eventpoll user then might depend on > the current situation where the eventpoll thing stays around even > after the close() if you have another copy of the file open. > > Linus > _______________________________________________ > Linaro-mm-sig mailing list -- linaro-mm-sig@lists.linaro.org > To unsubscribe send an email to linaro-mm-sig-leave@lists.linaro.org
On Mon, May 06, 2024 at 02:47:23PM +0200, Daniel Vetter wrote: > On Sun, May 05, 2024 at 01:53:48PM -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote: > > On Sun, 5 May 2024 at 13:30, Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk> wrote: > > > > > > 0. special-cased ->f_count rule for ->poll() is a wart and it's > > > better to get rid of it. > > > > > > 1. fs/eventpoll.c is a steaming pile of shit and I'd be glad to see > > > git rm taken to it. Short of that, by all means, let's grab reference > > > in there around the call of vfs_poll() (see (0)). > > > > Agreed on 0/1. > > > > > 2. having ->poll() instances grab extra references to file passed > > > to them is not something that should be encouraged; there's a plenty > > > of potential problems, and "caller has it pinned, so we are fine with > > > grabbing extra refs" is nowhere near enough to eliminate those. > > > > So it's not clear why you hate it so much, since those extra > > references are totally normal in all the other VFS paths. > > > > I mean, they are perhaps not the *common* case, but we have a lot of > > random get_file() calls sprinkled around in various places when you > > end up passing a file descriptor off to some asynchronous operation > > thing. > > > > Yeah, I think most of them tend to be special operations (eg the tty > > TIOCCONS ioctl to redirect the console), but it's not like vfs_ioctl() > > is *that* different from vfs_poll. Different operation, not somehow > > "one is more special than the other". > > > > cachefiles and backing-file does it for regular IO, and drop it at IO > > completion - not that different from what dma-buf does. It's in > > ->read_iter() rather than ->poll(), but again: different operations, > > but not "one of them is somehow fundamentally different". > > > > > 3. dma-buf uses of get_file() are probably safe (epoll shite aside), > > > but they do look fishy. That has nothing to do with epoll. > > > > Now, what dma-buf basically seems to do is to avoid ref-counting its > > own fundamental data structure, and replaces that by refcounting the > > 'struct file' that *points* to it instead. > > > > And it is a bit odd, but it actually makes some amount of sense, > > because then what it passes around is that file pointer (and it allows > > passing it around from user space *as* that file). > > > > And honestly, if you look at why it then needs to add its refcount to > > it all, it actually makes sense. dma-bufs have this notion of > > "fences" that are basically completion points for the asynchronous > > DMA. Doing a "poll()" operation will add a note to the fence to get > > that wakeup when it's done. > > > > And yes, logically it takes a ref to the "struct dma_buf", but because > > of how the lifetime of the dma_buf is associated with the lifetime of > > the 'struct file', that then turns into taking a ref on the file. > > > > Unusual? Yes. But not illogical. Not obviously broken. Tying the > > lifetime of the dma_buf to the lifetime of a file that is passed along > > makes _sense_ for that use. > > > > I'm sure dma-bufs could add another level of refcounting on the > > 'struct dma_buf' itself, and not make it be 1:1 with the file, but > > it's not clear to me what the advantage would really be, or why it > > would be wrong to re-use a refcount that is already there. > > So there is generally another refcount, because dma_buf is just the > cross-driver interface to some kind of real underlying buffer object from > the various graphics related subsystems we have. > > And since it's a pure file based api thing that ceases to serve any > function once the fd/file is gone we tied all the dma_buf refcounting to > the refcount struct file already maintains. But the underlying buffer > object can easily outlive the dma_buf, and over the lifetime of an > underlying buffer object you might actually end up creating different > dma_buf api wrappers for it (but at least in drm we guarantee there's at > most one, hence why vmwgfx does the atomic_inc_unless_zero trick, which I > don't particularly like and isn't really needed). > > But we could add another refcount, it just means we have 3 of those then > when only really 2 are needed. Fwiw, the TTM thing described upthread and in the other thread really tries hard to work around the dma_buf == file lifetime choice by hooking into the dma-buf specific release function so it can access the dmabuf and then the file. All that seems like a pretty error prone thing to me. So a separate refcount for dma_buf wouldn't be the worst as that would allow that TTM thing to benefit and remove that nasty hacking into your generic dma_buf ops. But maybe I'm the only one who sees it that way and I'm certainly not familiar enough with dma-buf.
Am 05.05.24 um 22:53 schrieb Linus Torvalds: > On Sun, 5 May 2024 at 13:30, Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk> wrote: >> 0. special-cased ->f_count rule for ->poll() is a wart and it's >> better to get rid of it. >> >> 1. fs/eventpoll.c is a steaming pile of shit and I'd be glad to see >> git rm taken to it. Short of that, by all means, let's grab reference >> in there around the call of vfs_poll() (see (0)). > Agreed on 0/1. > >> 2. having ->poll() instances grab extra references to file passed >> to them is not something that should be encouraged; there's a plenty >> of potential problems, and "caller has it pinned, so we are fine with >> grabbing extra refs" is nowhere near enough to eliminate those. > So it's not clear why you hate it so much, since those extra > references are totally normal in all the other VFS paths. Sorry to maybe jumping into the middle of the discussion, but for DMA-buf the behavior Al doesn't want is actually desired. And I totally understand why Al is against it for file system based files, but for this case it's completely intentional. Removing the callback on close is what we used to do a long time ago, but that turned out into a locking nightmare because it meant that we need to be able to wait for driver specific locks from whatever non interrupt context fput() is called from. Regards, Christian. > > I mean, they are perhaps not the *common* case, but we have a lot of > random get_file() calls sprinkled around in various places when you > end up passing a file descriptor off to some asynchronous operation > thing. > > Yeah, I think most of them tend to be special operations (eg the tty > TIOCCONS ioctl to redirect the console), but it's not like vfs_ioctl() > is *that* different from vfs_poll. Different operation, not somehow > "one is more special than the other". > > cachefiles and backing-file does it for regular IO, and drop it at IO > completion - not that different from what dma-buf does. It's in > ->read_iter() rather than ->poll(), but again: different operations, > but not "one of them is somehow fundamentally different". > >> 3. dma-buf uses of get_file() are probably safe (epoll shite aside), >> but they do look fishy. That has nothing to do with epoll. > Now, what dma-buf basically seems to do is to avoid ref-counting its > own fundamental data structure, and replaces that by refcounting the > 'struct file' that *points* to it instead. > > And it is a bit odd, but it actually makes some amount of sense, > because then what it passes around is that file pointer (and it allows > passing it around from user space *as* that file). > > And honestly, if you look at why it then needs to add its refcount to > it all, it actually makes sense. dma-bufs have this notion of > "fences" that are basically completion points for the asynchronous > DMA. Doing a "poll()" operation will add a note to the fence to get > that wakeup when it's done. > > And yes, logically it takes a ref to the "struct dma_buf", but because > of how the lifetime of the dma_buf is associated with the lifetime of > the 'struct file', that then turns into taking a ref on the file. > > Unusual? Yes. But not illogical. Not obviously broken. Tying the > lifetime of the dma_buf to the lifetime of a file that is passed along > makes _sense_ for that use. > > I'm sure dma-bufs could add another level of refcounting on the > 'struct dma_buf' itself, and not make it be 1:1 with the file, but > it's not clear to me what the advantage would really be, or why it > would be wrong to re-use a refcount that is already there. > > Linus
On Mon, May 06, 2024 at 04:46:54PM +0200, Christian Brauner wrote: > On Mon, May 06, 2024 at 02:47:23PM +0200, Daniel Vetter wrote: > > On Sun, May 05, 2024 at 01:53:48PM -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote: > > > On Sun, 5 May 2024 at 13:30, Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk> wrote: > > > > > > > > 0. special-cased ->f_count rule for ->poll() is a wart and it's > > > > better to get rid of it. > > > > > > > > 1. fs/eventpoll.c is a steaming pile of shit and I'd be glad to see > > > > git rm taken to it. Short of that, by all means, let's grab reference > > > > in there around the call of vfs_poll() (see (0)). > > > > > > Agreed on 0/1. > > > > > > > 2. having ->poll() instances grab extra references to file passed > > > > to them is not something that should be encouraged; there's a plenty > > > > of potential problems, and "caller has it pinned, so we are fine with > > > > grabbing extra refs" is nowhere near enough to eliminate those. > > > > > > So it's not clear why you hate it so much, since those extra > > > references are totally normal in all the other VFS paths. > > > > > > I mean, they are perhaps not the *common* case, but we have a lot of > > > random get_file() calls sprinkled around in various places when you > > > end up passing a file descriptor off to some asynchronous operation > > > thing. > > > > > > Yeah, I think most of them tend to be special operations (eg the tty > > > TIOCCONS ioctl to redirect the console), but it's not like vfs_ioctl() > > > is *that* different from vfs_poll. Different operation, not somehow > > > "one is more special than the other". > > > > > > cachefiles and backing-file does it for regular IO, and drop it at IO > > > completion - not that different from what dma-buf does. It's in > > > ->read_iter() rather than ->poll(), but again: different operations, > > > but not "one of them is somehow fundamentally different". > > > > > > > 3. dma-buf uses of get_file() are probably safe (epoll shite aside), > > > > but they do look fishy. That has nothing to do with epoll. > > > > > > Now, what dma-buf basically seems to do is to avoid ref-counting its > > > own fundamental data structure, and replaces that by refcounting the > > > 'struct file' that *points* to it instead. > > > > > > And it is a bit odd, but it actually makes some amount of sense, > > > because then what it passes around is that file pointer (and it allows > > > passing it around from user space *as* that file). > > > > > > And honestly, if you look at why it then needs to add its refcount to > > > it all, it actually makes sense. dma-bufs have this notion of > > > "fences" that are basically completion points for the asynchronous > > > DMA. Doing a "poll()" operation will add a note to the fence to get > > > that wakeup when it's done. > > > > > > And yes, logically it takes a ref to the "struct dma_buf", but because > > > of how the lifetime of the dma_buf is associated with the lifetime of > > > the 'struct file', that then turns into taking a ref on the file. > > > > > > Unusual? Yes. But not illogical. Not obviously broken. Tying the > > > lifetime of the dma_buf to the lifetime of a file that is passed along > > > makes _sense_ for that use. > > > > > > I'm sure dma-bufs could add another level of refcounting on the > > > 'struct dma_buf' itself, and not make it be 1:1 with the file, but > > > it's not clear to me what the advantage would really be, or why it > > > would be wrong to re-use a refcount that is already there. > > > > So there is generally another refcount, because dma_buf is just the > > cross-driver interface to some kind of real underlying buffer object from > > the various graphics related subsystems we have. > > > > And since it's a pure file based api thing that ceases to serve any > > function once the fd/file is gone we tied all the dma_buf refcounting to > > the refcount struct file already maintains. But the underlying buffer > > object can easily outlive the dma_buf, and over the lifetime of an > > underlying buffer object you might actually end up creating different > > dma_buf api wrappers for it (but at least in drm we guarantee there's at > > most one, hence why vmwgfx does the atomic_inc_unless_zero trick, which I > > don't particularly like and isn't really needed). > > > > But we could add another refcount, it just means we have 3 of those then > > when only really 2 are needed. > > Fwiw, the TTM thing described upthread and in the other thread really > tries hard to work around the dma_buf == file lifetime choice by hooking > into the dma-buf specific release function so it can access the dmabuf > and then the file. All that seems like a pretty error prone thing to me. > So a separate refcount for dma_buf wouldn't be the worst as that would > allow that TTM thing to benefit and remove that nasty hacking into your > generic dma_buf ops. But maybe I'm the only one who sees it that way and > I'm certainly not familiar enough with dma-buf. So the tricky part is the uniqueness requirement drm has for buffer objects (and hence dma_buf wrappers), which together with the refcounting makes dma_buf quite tricky: - dma_buf needs to hold some reference onto the underlying object, or it wont work - but you're not allowed to just create a new dma_buf every time someone exports an underlying object to a dma_buf, because that would break the uniqueness requirement. Which means the underlying object must also hold some kind of reference to its dma_buf, if it exists. So that on buffer export it can just increment the refcount for that and return it, instead of creating a new one. Which would be a reference loop that never gets freed, so you need one of two tricks: - Either a weak reference, i.e. just a pointer plus atomic_inc_unless_zero trickery like ttm does. Splitting that refcount into more refcounts doesn't fundamentally solve the problem, it just adds even more refcounts. - Or you do what all other drm drivers do in drm_prime.c do and careful clean up the dma_buf re-export cache when the userspace references (but not all kernel internal ones) disappear, to unbreak that reference loop. This needs to be done with extreme care and took a lot of screaming to get right, because if you have a race you might end up breaking the uniqueness requirement and have two dma_buf floating around. So neither of these solutions really are simple, but I agree with you that the atomic_inc_unless_zero trickery is less simple. It's definitely not cool that it's done by digging around in struct file internals. -Sima
On Mon, May 06, 2024 at 04:29:44PM +0200, Christian König wrote: > Am 04.05.24 um 20:20 schrieb Linus Torvalds: > > On Sat, 4 May 2024 at 08:32, Linus Torvalds > > <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> wrote: > > > Lookie here, the fundamental issue is that epoll can call '->poll()' > > > on a file descriptor that is being closed concurrently. > > Thinking some more about this, and replying to myself... > > > > Actually, I wonder if we could *really* fix this by simply moving the > > eventpoll_release() to where it really belongs. > > > > If we did it in file_close_fd_locked(), it would actually make a > > *lot* more sense. Particularly since eventpoll actually uses this: > > > > struct epoll_filefd { > > struct file *file; > > int fd; > > } __packed; > > > > ie it doesn't just use the 'struct file *', it uses the 'fd' itself > > (for ep_find()). > > > > (Strictly speaking, it should also have a pointer to the 'struct > > files_struct' to make the 'int fd' be meaningful). > > While I completely agree on this I unfortunately have to ruin the idea. > > Before we had KCMP some people relied on the strange behavior of eventpoll > to compare struct files when the fd is the same. > > I just recently suggested that solution to somebody at AMD as a workaround > when KCMP is disabled because of security hardening and I'm pretty sure I've > seen it somewhere else as well. > > So when we change that it would break (undocumented?) UAPI behavior. Uh extremely aside, but doesn't this mean we should just enable kcmp on files unconditionally, since there's an alternative? Or a least everywhere CONFIG_EPOLL is enabled? It's really annoying that on some distros/builds we don't have that, and for gpu driver stack reasons we _really_ need to know whether a fd is the same as another, due to some messy uniqueness requirements on buffer objects various drivers have. -Sima > > Regards, > Christian. > > > > > IOW, eventpoll already considers the file _descriptor_ relevant, not > > just the file pointer, and that's destroyed at *close* time, not at > > 'fput()' time. > > > > Yeah, yeah, the locking situation in file_close_fd_locked() is a bit > > inconvenient, but if we can solve that, it would solve the problem in > > a fundamentally different way: remove the ep iterm before the > > file->f_count has actually been decremented, so the whole "race with > > fput()" would just go away entirely. > > > > I dunno. I think that would be the right thing to do, but I wouldn't > > be surprised if some disgusting eventpoll user then might depend on > > the current situation where the eventpoll thing stays around even > > after the close() if you have another copy of the file open. > > > > Linus > > _______________________________________________ > > Linaro-mm-sig mailing list -- linaro-mm-sig@lists.linaro.org > > To unsubscribe send an email to linaro-mm-sig-leave@lists.linaro.org >
On Tue, 7 May 2024 at 04:03, Daniel Vetter <daniel@ffwll.ch> wrote: > > It's really annoying that on some distros/builds we don't have that, and > for gpu driver stack reasons we _really_ need to know whether a fd is the > same as another, due to some messy uniqueness requirements on buffer > objects various drivers have. It's sad that such a simple thing would require two other horrid models (EPOLL or KCMP). There'[s a reason that KCMP is a config option - *some* of that is horrible code - but the "compare file descriptors for equality" is not that reason. Note that KCMP really is a broken mess. It's also a potential security hole, even for the simple things, because of how it ends up comparing kernel pointers (ie it doesn't just say "same file descriptor", it gives an ordering of them, so you can use KCMP to sort things in kernel space). And yes, it orders them after obfuscating the pointer, but it's still not something I would consider sane as a baseline interface. It was designed for checkpoint-restore, it's the wrong thing to use for some "are these file descriptors the same". The same argument goes for using EPOLL for that. Disgusting hack. Just what are the requirements for the GPU stack? Is one of the file descriptors "trusted", IOW, you know what kind it is? Because dammit, it's *so* easy to do. You could just add a core DRM ioctl for it. Literally just struct fd f1 = fdget(fd1); struct fd f2 = fdget(fd2); int same; same = f1.file && f1.file == f2.file; fdput(fd1); fdput(fd2); return same; where the only question is if you also woudl want to deal with O_PATH fd's, in which case the "fdget()" would be "fdget_raw()". Honestly, adding some DRM ioctl for this sounds hacky, but it sounds less hacky than relying on EPOLL or KCMP. I'd be perfectly ok with adding a generic "FISAME" VFS level ioctl too, if this is possibly a more common thing. and not just DRM wants it. Would something like that work for you? Linus
Am 07.05.24 um 18:46 schrieb Linus Torvalds: > On Tue, 7 May 2024 at 04:03, Daniel Vetter <daniel@ffwll.ch> wrote: >> It's really annoying that on some distros/builds we don't have that, and >> for gpu driver stack reasons we _really_ need to know whether a fd is the >> same as another, due to some messy uniqueness requirements on buffer >> objects various drivers have. > It's sad that such a simple thing would require two other horrid > models (EPOLL or KCMP). > > There'[s a reason that KCMP is a config option - *some* of that is > horrible code - but the "compare file descriptors for equality" is not > that reason. > > Note that KCMP really is a broken mess. It's also a potential security > hole, even for the simple things, because of how it ends up comparing > kernel pointers (ie it doesn't just say "same file descriptor", it > gives an ordering of them, so you can use KCMP to sort things in > kernel space). > > And yes, it orders them after obfuscating the pointer, but it's still > not something I would consider sane as a baseline interface. It was > designed for checkpoint-restore, it's the wrong thing to use for some > "are these file descriptors the same". > > The same argument goes for using EPOLL for that. Disgusting hack. > > Just what are the requirements for the GPU stack? Is one of the file > descriptors "trusted", IOW, you know what kind it is? > > Because dammit, it's *so* easy to do. You could just add a core DRM > ioctl for it. Literally just > > struct fd f1 = fdget(fd1); > struct fd f2 = fdget(fd2); > int same; > > same = f1.file && f1.file == f2.file; > fdput(fd1); > fdput(fd2); > return same; > > where the only question is if you also woudl want to deal with O_PATH > fd's, in which case the "fdget()" would be "fdget_raw()". > > Honestly, adding some DRM ioctl for this sounds hacky, but it sounds > less hacky than relying on EPOLL or KCMP. > > I'd be perfectly ok with adding a generic "FISAME" VFS level ioctl > too, if this is possibly a more common thing. and not just DRM wants > it. > > Would something like that work for you? Well the generic approach yes, the DRM specific one maybe. IIRC we need to be able to compare both DRM as well as DMA-buf file descriptors. The basic problem userspace tries to solve is that drivers might get the same fd through two different code paths. For example application using OpenGL/Vulkan for rendering and VA-API for video decoding/encoding at the same time. Both APIs get a fd which identifies the device to use. It can be the same, but it doesn't have to. If it's the same device driver connection (or in kernel speak underlying struct file) then you can optimize away importing and exporting of buffers for example. Additional to that it makes cgroup accounting much easier because you don't count things twice because they are shared etc... Regards, Christian. > > Linus
On Tue, May 07, 2024 at 09:46:31AM -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote: > On Tue, 7 May 2024 at 04:03, Daniel Vetter <daniel@ffwll.ch> wrote: > > > > It's really annoying that on some distros/builds we don't have that, and > > for gpu driver stack reasons we _really_ need to know whether a fd is the > > same as another, due to some messy uniqueness requirements on buffer > > objects various drivers have. > > It's sad that such a simple thing would require two other horrid > models (EPOLL or KCMP). > > There'[s a reason that KCMP is a config option - *some* of that is > horrible code - but the "compare file descriptors for equality" is not > that reason. > > Note that KCMP really is a broken mess. It's also a potential security > hole, even for the simple things, because of how it ends up comparing > kernel pointers (ie it doesn't just say "same file descriptor", it > gives an ordering of them, so you can use KCMP to sort things in > kernel space). > > And yes, it orders them after obfuscating the pointer, but it's still > not something I would consider sane as a baseline interface. It was > designed for checkpoint-restore, it's the wrong thing to use for some > "are these file descriptors the same". > > The same argument goes for using EPOLL for that. Disgusting hack. > > Just what are the requirements for the GPU stack? Is one of the file > descriptors "trusted", IOW, you know what kind it is? > > Because dammit, it's *so* easy to do. You could just add a core DRM > ioctl for it. Literally just > > struct fd f1 = fdget(fd1); > struct fd f2 = fdget(fd2); > int same; > > same = f1.file && f1.file == f2.file; > fdput(fd1); > fdput(fd2); > return same; > > where the only question is if you also woudl want to deal with O_PATH > fd's, in which case the "fdget()" would be "fdget_raw()". > > Honestly, adding some DRM ioctl for this sounds hacky, but it sounds > less hacky than relying on EPOLL or KCMP. Well, in slightly more code (because it's part of the "import this dma-buf/dma-fence/whatever fd into a driver object" ioctl) this is what we do. The issue is that there's generic userspace (like compositors) that sees these things fly by and would also like to know whether the other side they receive them from is doing nasty stuff/buggy/evil. And they don't have access to the device drm fd (since those are a handful of layers away behind the opengl/vulkan userspace drivers even if the compositor could get at them, and in some cases not even that). So if we do this in drm we'd essentially have to create a special drm_compare_files chardev, put the ioctl there and then tell everyone to make that thing world-accessible. Which is just too close to a real syscall that it's offensive, and hey kcmp does what we want already (but unfortunately also way more). So we rejected adding that to drm. But we did think about it. > I'd be perfectly ok with adding a generic "FISAME" VFS level ioctl > too, if this is possibly a more common thing. and not just DRM wants > it. > > Would something like that work for you? Yes. Adding Simon and Pekka as two of the usual suspects for this kind of stuff. Also example code (the int return value is just so that callers know when kcmp isn't available, they all only care about equality): https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/mesa/mesa/-/blob/main/src/util/os_file.c#L239 -Sima -- Daniel Vetter Software Engineer, Intel Corporation http://blog.ffwll.ch
On Tue, 7 May 2024 at 11:04, Daniel Vetter <daniel@ffwll.ch> wrote: > > On Tue, May 07, 2024 at 09:46:31AM -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote: > > > I'd be perfectly ok with adding a generic "FISAME" VFS level ioctl > > too, if this is possibly a more common thing. and not just DRM wants > > it. > > > > Would something like that work for you? > > Yes. > > Adding Simon and Pekka as two of the usual suspects for this kind of > stuff. Also example code (the int return value is just so that callers know > when kcmp isn't available, they all only care about equality): > > https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/mesa/mesa/-/blob/main/src/util/os_file.c#L239 That example thing shows that we shouldn't make it a FISAME ioctl - we should make it a fcntl() instead, and it would just be a companion to F_DUPFD. Doesn't that strike everybody as a *much* cleaner interface? I think F_ISDUP would work very naturally indeed with F_DUPFD. Yes? No? Linus
From: Christian Brauner > Sent: 06 May 2024 09:45 > > > The fact is, it's not dma-buf that is violating any rules. It's epoll. > > I agree that epoll() not taking a reference on the file is at least > unexpected and contradicts the usual code patterns for the sake of > performance and that it very likely is the case that most callers of > f_op->poll() don't know this. > > Note, I cleary wrote upthread that I'm ok to do it like you suggested > but raised two concerns a) there's currently only one instance of > prolonged @file lifetime in f_op->poll() afaict and b) that there's > possibly going to be some performance impact on epoll(). > > So it's at least worth discussing what's more important because epoll() > is very widely used and it's not that we haven't favored performance > before. > > But you've already said that you aren't concerned with performance on > epoll() upthread. So afaict then there's really not a lot more to > discuss other than take the patch and see whether we get any complaints. Surely there isn't a problem with epoll holding a reference to the file structure - it isn't really any different to a dup(). 'All' that needs to happen is that the 'magic' that makes epoll() remove files on the last fput happen when the close is done. I'm sure there are horrid locking issues it that code (separate from it calling ->poll() after ->release()) eg if you call close() concurrently with EPOLL_CTL_ADD. I'm not at all sure it would have mattered if epoll kept the file open. But it can't do that because it is documented not to. As well as poll/select holding a reference to all their fd for the duration of the system call, a successful mmap() holds a reference until the pages are all unmapped - usually by process exit. We (dayjob) have code that uses epoll() to monitor large numbers of UDP sockets. I was doing some tests (trying to) receive RTP (audio) data concurrently on 10000 sockets with typically one packet every 20ms. There are 10000 associated RCTP sockets that are usually idle. A more normal limit would be 1000 RTP sockets. All the data needs to go into a single (multithreaded) process. Just getting all the packets queued on the sockets was non-trivial. epoll is about the only way to actually read the data. (That needed multiple epoll fd so each thread could process all the events from one epoll fd then look for another unprocessed fd.) David - Registered Address Lakeside, Bramley Road, Mount Farm, Milton Keynes, MK1 1PT, UK Registration No: 1397386 (Wales)
Am 07.05.24 um 21:07 schrieb Linus Torvalds: > On Tue, 7 May 2024 at 11:04, Daniel Vetter <daniel@ffwll.ch> wrote: >> On Tue, May 07, 2024 at 09:46:31AM -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote: >> >>> I'd be perfectly ok with adding a generic "FISAME" VFS level ioctl >>> too, if this is possibly a more common thing. and not just DRM wants >>> it. >>> >>> Would something like that work for you? >> Yes. >> >> Adding Simon and Pekka as two of the usual suspects for this kind of >> stuff. Also example code (the int return value is just so that callers know >> when kcmp isn't available, they all only care about equality): >> >> https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/mesa/mesa/-/blob/main/src/util/os_file.c#L239 > That example thing shows that we shouldn't make it a FISAME ioctl - we > should make it a fcntl() instead, and it would just be a companion to > F_DUPFD. > > Doesn't that strike everybody as a *much* cleaner interface? I think > F_ISDUP would work very naturally indeed with F_DUPFD. > > Yes? No? Sounds absolutely sane to me. Christian. > > Linus
On 2024-05-07 19:45, Christian König wrote: > Am 07.05.24 um 18:46 schrieb Linus Torvalds: >> >> Just what are the requirements for the GPU stack? Is one of the file >> descriptors "trusted", IOW, you know what kind it is? >> >> Because dammit, it's *so* easy to do. You could just add a core DRM >> ioctl for it. Literally just >> >> struct fd f1 = fdget(fd1); >> struct fd f2 = fdget(fd2); >> int same; >> >> same = f1.file && f1.file == f2.file; >> fdput(fd1); >> fdput(fd2); >> return same; >> >> where the only question is if you also woudl want to deal with O_PATH >> fd's, in which case the "fdget()" would be "fdget_raw()". >> >> Honestly, adding some DRM ioctl for this sounds hacky, but it sounds >> less hacky than relying on EPOLL or KCMP. >> >> I'd be perfectly ok with adding a generic "FISAME" VFS level ioctl >> too, if this is possibly a more common thing. and not just DRM wants >> it. >> >> Would something like that work for you? > > Well the generic approach yes, the DRM specific one maybe. IIRC we need to be able to compare both DRM as well as DMA-buf file descriptors. > > The basic problem userspace tries to solve is that drivers might get the same fd through two different code paths. > > For example application using OpenGL/Vulkan for rendering and VA-API for video decoding/encoding at the same time. > > Both APIs get a fd which identifies the device to use. It can be the same, but it doesn't have to. > > If it's the same device driver connection (or in kernel speak underlying struct file) then you can optimize away importing and exporting of buffers for example. It's not just about optimization. Mesa needs to know this for correct tracking of GEM handles. If it guesses incorrectly, there can be misbehaviour.
Am 08.05.24 um 09:51 schrieb Michel Dänzer: > On 2024-05-07 19:45, Christian König wrote: >> Am 07.05.24 um 18:46 schrieb Linus Torvalds: >>> Just what are the requirements for the GPU stack? Is one of the file >>> descriptors "trusted", IOW, you know what kind it is? >>> >>> Because dammit, it's *so* easy to do. You could just add a core DRM >>> ioctl for it. Literally just >>> >>> struct fd f1 = fdget(fd1); >>> struct fd f2 = fdget(fd2); >>> int same; >>> >>> same = f1.file && f1.file == f2.file; >>> fdput(fd1); >>> fdput(fd2); >>> return same; >>> >>> where the only question is if you also woudl want to deal with O_PATH >>> fd's, in which case the "fdget()" would be "fdget_raw()". >>> >>> Honestly, adding some DRM ioctl for this sounds hacky, but it sounds >>> less hacky than relying on EPOLL or KCMP. >>> >>> I'd be perfectly ok with adding a generic "FISAME" VFS level ioctl >>> too, if this is possibly a more common thing. and not just DRM wants >>> it. >>> >>> Would something like that work for you? >> Well the generic approach yes, the DRM specific one maybe. IIRC we need to be able to compare both DRM as well as DMA-buf file descriptors. >> >> The basic problem userspace tries to solve is that drivers might get the same fd through two different code paths. >> >> For example application using OpenGL/Vulkan for rendering and VA-API for video decoding/encoding at the same time. >> >> Both APIs get a fd which identifies the device to use. It can be the same, but it doesn't have to. >> >> If it's the same device driver connection (or in kernel speak underlying struct file) then you can optimize away importing and exporting of buffers for example. > It's not just about optimization. Mesa needs to know this for correct tracking of GEM handles. If it guesses incorrectly, there can be misbehaviour. Oh, yeah good point as well. I think we can say in general that if two userspace driver libraries would mess with the state of an fd at the same time without knowing of each other bad things would happen. Regards, Christian.
On Tue, May 07, 2024 at 12:07:10PM -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote: > On Tue, 7 May 2024 at 11:04, Daniel Vetter <daniel@ffwll.ch> wrote: > > > > On Tue, May 07, 2024 at 09:46:31AM -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote: > > > > > I'd be perfectly ok with adding a generic "FISAME" VFS level ioctl > > > too, if this is possibly a more common thing. and not just DRM wants > > > it. > > > > > > Would something like that work for you? > > > > Yes. > > > > Adding Simon and Pekka as two of the usual suspects for this kind of > > stuff. Also example code (the int return value is just so that callers know > > when kcmp isn't available, they all only care about equality): > > > > https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/mesa/mesa/-/blob/main/src/util/os_file.c#L239 > > That example thing shows that we shouldn't make it a FISAME ioctl - we > should make it a fcntl() instead, and it would just be a companion to > F_DUPFD. > > Doesn't that strike everybody as a *much* cleaner interface? I think +1 See https://github.com/systemd/systemd/blob/a4f0e0da3573a10bc5404142be8799418760b1d1/src/basic/fd-util.c#L517 that's another heavy user of this kind of functionality.
On Tue, May 07, 2024 at 07:45:02PM +0200, Christian König wrote: > Am 07.05.24 um 18:46 schrieb Linus Torvalds: > > On Tue, 7 May 2024 at 04:03, Daniel Vetter <daniel@ffwll.ch> wrote: > > > It's really annoying that on some distros/builds we don't have that, and > > > for gpu driver stack reasons we _really_ need to know whether a fd is the > > > same as another, due to some messy uniqueness requirements on buffer > > > objects various drivers have. > > It's sad that such a simple thing would require two other horrid > > models (EPOLL or KCMP). > > > > There'[s a reason that KCMP is a config option - *some* of that is > > horrible code - but the "compare file descriptors for equality" is not > > that reason. > > > > Note that KCMP really is a broken mess. It's also a potential security > > hole, even for the simple things, because of how it ends up comparing > > kernel pointers (ie it doesn't just say "same file descriptor", it > > gives an ordering of them, so you can use KCMP to sort things in > > kernel space). > > > > And yes, it orders them after obfuscating the pointer, but it's still > > not something I would consider sane as a baseline interface. It was > > designed for checkpoint-restore, it's the wrong thing to use for some > > "are these file descriptors the same". > > > > The same argument goes for using EPOLL for that. Disgusting hack. > > > > Just what are the requirements for the GPU stack? Is one of the file > > descriptors "trusted", IOW, you know what kind it is? > > > > Because dammit, it's *so* easy to do. You could just add a core DRM > > ioctl for it. Literally just > > > > struct fd f1 = fdget(fd1); > > struct fd f2 = fdget(fd2); > > int same; > > > > same = f1.file && f1.file == f2.file; > > fdput(fd1); > > fdput(fd2); > > return same; > > > > where the only question is if you also woudl want to deal with O_PATH > > fd's, in which case the "fdget()" would be "fdget_raw()". > > > > Honestly, adding some DRM ioctl for this sounds hacky, but it sounds > > less hacky than relying on EPOLL or KCMP. > > > > I'd be perfectly ok with adding a generic "FISAME" VFS level ioctl > > too, if this is possibly a more common thing. and not just DRM wants > > it. > > > > Would something like that work for you? > > Well the generic approach yes, the DRM specific one maybe. IIRC we need to > be able to compare both DRM as well as DMA-buf file descriptors. > > The basic problem userspace tries to solve is that drivers might get the > same fd through two different code paths. > > For example application using OpenGL/Vulkan for rendering and VA-API for > video decoding/encoding at the same time. > > Both APIs get a fd which identifies the device to use. It can be the same, > but it doesn't have to. > > If it's the same device driver connection (or in kernel speak underlying > struct file) then you can optimize away importing and exporting of buffers > for example. > > Additional to that it makes cgroup accounting much easier because you don't > count things twice because they are shared etc... One thing to keep in mind is that a generic VFS level comparing function will only catch the obvious case where you have dup() equivalency as outlined above by Linus. That's what most people are interested in and that could easily replace most kcmp() use-cases for comparing fds. But, of course there's the case where you have two file descriptors referring to two different files that reference the same underlying object (usually stashed in file->private_data). For most cases that problem can ofc be solved by comparing the underlying inode. But that doesn't work for drivers using the generic anonymous inode infrastructure because it uses the same inode for everything or for cases where the same underlying object can even be represented by different inodes. So for such cases a driver specific ioctl() to compare two fds will be needed in addition to the generic helper.
On Wed, May 08, 2024 at 07:55:08AM +0200, Christian König wrote: > Am 07.05.24 um 21:07 schrieb Linus Torvalds: > > On Tue, 7 May 2024 at 11:04, Daniel Vetter <daniel@ffwll.ch> wrote: > > > On Tue, May 07, 2024 at 09:46:31AM -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote: > > > > > > > I'd be perfectly ok with adding a generic "FISAME" VFS level ioctl > > > > too, if this is possibly a more common thing. and not just DRM wants > > > > it. > > > > > > > > Would something like that work for you? > > > Yes. > > > > > > Adding Simon and Pekka as two of the usual suspects for this kind of > > > stuff. Also example code (the int return value is just so that callers know > > > when kcmp isn't available, they all only care about equality): > > > > > > https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/mesa/mesa/-/blob/main/src/util/os_file.c#L239 > > That example thing shows that we shouldn't make it a FISAME ioctl - we > > should make it a fcntl() instead, and it would just be a companion to > > F_DUPFD. > > > > Doesn't that strike everybody as a *much* cleaner interface? I think > > F_ISDUP would work very naturally indeed with F_DUPFD. > > > > Yes? No? > > Sounds absolutely sane to me. Yeah fcntl(fd1, F_ISDUP, fd2); sounds extremely reasonable to me too. Aside, after some irc discussions I paged a few more of the relevant info back in, and at least for dma-buf we kinda sorted this out by going away from the singleton inode in this patch: ed63bb1d1f84 ("dma-buf: give each buffer a full-fledged inode") It's uapi now so we can't ever undo that, but with hindsight just the F_ISDUP is really what we wanted. Because we have no need for that inode aside from the unique inode number that's only used to compare dma-buf fd for sameness, e.g. https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wlroots/wlroots/-/blob/master/render/vulkan/texture.c#L490 The one question I have is whether this could lead to some exploit tools, because at least the android conformance test suite verifies that kcmp isn't available to apps (which is where we need it, because even with all the binder-based isolation gpu userspace still all run in the application process due to performance reasons, any ipc at all is just too much). Otoh if we just add this to drm fd as an ioctl somewhere, then it will also be available to every android app because they all do need the gpu for rendering. So going with the full generic fcntl is probably best. -Sima
Am 08.05.24 um 10:23 schrieb Christian Brauner: > On Tue, May 07, 2024 at 07:45:02PM +0200, Christian König wrote: >> Am 07.05.24 um 18:46 schrieb Linus Torvalds: >>> On Tue, 7 May 2024 at 04:03, Daniel Vetter <daniel@ffwll.ch> wrote: >>>> It's really annoying that on some distros/builds we don't have that, and >>>> for gpu driver stack reasons we _really_ need to know whether a fd is the >>>> same as another, due to some messy uniqueness requirements on buffer >>>> objects various drivers have. >>> It's sad that such a simple thing would require two other horrid >>> models (EPOLL or KCMP). >>> >>> There'[s a reason that KCMP is a config option - *some* of that is >>> horrible code - but the "compare file descriptors for equality" is not >>> that reason. >>> >>> Note that KCMP really is a broken mess. It's also a potential security >>> hole, even for the simple things, because of how it ends up comparing >>> kernel pointers (ie it doesn't just say "same file descriptor", it >>> gives an ordering of them, so you can use KCMP to sort things in >>> kernel space). >>> >>> And yes, it orders them after obfuscating the pointer, but it's still >>> not something I would consider sane as a baseline interface. It was >>> designed for checkpoint-restore, it's the wrong thing to use for some >>> "are these file descriptors the same". >>> >>> The same argument goes for using EPOLL for that. Disgusting hack. >>> >>> Just what are the requirements for the GPU stack? Is one of the file >>> descriptors "trusted", IOW, you know what kind it is? >>> >>> Because dammit, it's *so* easy to do. You could just add a core DRM >>> ioctl for it. Literally just >>> >>> struct fd f1 = fdget(fd1); >>> struct fd f2 = fdget(fd2); >>> int same; >>> >>> same = f1.file && f1.file == f2.file; >>> fdput(fd1); >>> fdput(fd2); >>> return same; >>> >>> where the only question is if you also woudl want to deal with O_PATH >>> fd's, in which case the "fdget()" would be "fdget_raw()". >>> >>> Honestly, adding some DRM ioctl for this sounds hacky, but it sounds >>> less hacky than relying on EPOLL or KCMP. >>> >>> I'd be perfectly ok with adding a generic "FISAME" VFS level ioctl >>> too, if this is possibly a more common thing. and not just DRM wants >>> it. >>> >>> Would something like that work for you? >> Well the generic approach yes, the DRM specific one maybe. IIRC we need to >> be able to compare both DRM as well as DMA-buf file descriptors. >> >> The basic problem userspace tries to solve is that drivers might get the >> same fd through two different code paths. >> >> For example application using OpenGL/Vulkan for rendering and VA-API for >> video decoding/encoding at the same time. >> >> Both APIs get a fd which identifies the device to use. It can be the same, >> but it doesn't have to. >> >> If it's the same device driver connection (or in kernel speak underlying >> struct file) then you can optimize away importing and exporting of buffers >> for example. >> >> Additional to that it makes cgroup accounting much easier because you don't >> count things twice because they are shared etc... > One thing to keep in mind is that a generic VFS level comparing function > will only catch the obvious case where you have dup() equivalency as > outlined above by Linus. That's what most people are interested in and > that could easily replace most kcmp() use-cases for comparing fds. > > But, of course there's the case where you have two file descriptors > referring to two different files that reference the same underlying > object (usually stashed in file->private_data). > > For most cases that problem can ofc be solved by comparing the > underlying inode. But that doesn't work for drivers using the generic > anonymous inode infrastructure because it uses the same inode for > everything or for cases where the same underlying object can even be > represented by different inodes. > > So for such cases a driver specific ioctl() to compare two fds will > be needed in addition to the generic helper. At least for the DRM we already have some solution for that, see drmGetPrimaryDeviceNameFromFd() for an example. Basically the file->private_data is still something different, but we use this to figure out if we have two file descriptors (with individual struct files underneath) pointing to the same hw driver. This is important if you need to know if just importing/exporting of DMA-buf handles between the two file descriptors is enough or if you deal with two different hw devices and need to do stuff like format conversion etc... Regards, Christian.
On Mon, May 06, 2024 at 04:29:44PM +0200, Christian König wrote: > Am 04.05.24 um 20:20 schrieb Linus Torvalds: > > On Sat, 4 May 2024 at 08:32, Linus Torvalds > > <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> wrote: > > > Lookie here, the fundamental issue is that epoll can call '->poll()' > > > on a file descriptor that is being closed concurrently. > > Thinking some more about this, and replying to myself... > > > > Actually, I wonder if we could *really* fix this by simply moving the > > eventpoll_release() to where it really belongs. > > > > If we did it in file_close_fd_locked(), it would actually make a > > *lot* more sense. Particularly since eventpoll actually uses this: > > > > struct epoll_filefd { > > struct file *file; > > int fd; > > } __packed; > > > > ie it doesn't just use the 'struct file *', it uses the 'fd' itself > > (for ep_find()). > > > > (Strictly speaking, it should also have a pointer to the 'struct > > files_struct' to make the 'int fd' be meaningful). > > While I completely agree on this I unfortunately have to ruin the idea. > > Before we had KCMP some people relied on the strange behavior of eventpoll > to compare struct files when the fd is the same. > > I just recently suggested that solution to somebody at AMD as a workaround > when KCMP is disabled because of security hardening and I'm pretty sure I've > seen it somewhere else as well. > > So when we change that it would break (undocumented?) UAPI behavior. I've worked on that a bit yesterday and I learned new things about epoll and ran into some limitations. Like, what happens if process P1 has a file descriptor registered in an epoll instance and now P1 forks and creates P2. So every file that P1 maintains gets copied into a new file descriptor table for P2. And the same file descriptors refer to the same files for both P1 and P2. So there's two interesting cases here: (1) P2 explicitly removes the file descriptor from the epoll instance via epoll_ctl(EPOLL_CTL_DEL). That removal affects both P1 and P2 since the <fd, file> pair is only registered once and it isn't marked whether it belongs to P1 and P2 fdtable. So effectively fork()ing with epoll creates a weird shared state where removal of file descriptors that were registered before the fork() affects both child and parent. I found that surprising even though I've worked with epoll quite extensively in low-level userspace. (2) P2 doesn't close it's file descriptors. It just exits. Since removal of the file descriptor from the epoll instance isn't done during close() but during last fput() P1's epoll state remains unaffected by P2's sloppy exit because P1 still holds references to all files in its fdtable. (Sidenote, if one ends up adding every more duped-fds into epoll instance that one doesn't explicitly close and all of them refer to the same file wouldn't one just be allocating new epitems that are kept around for a really long time?) So if the removal of the fd would now be done during close() or during exit_files() when we call close_files() and since there's currently no way of differentiating whether P1 or P2 own that fd it would mean that (2) collapses into (1) and we'd always alter (1)'s epoll state. That would be a UAPI break. So say we record the fdtable to get ownership of that file descriptor so P2 doesn't close anything in (2) that really belongs to P1 to fix that problem. But afaict, that would break another possible use-case. Namely, where P1 creates an epoll instance and registeres fds and then fork()s to create P2. Now P1 can exit and P2 takes over the epoll loop of P1. This wouldn't work anymore because P1 would deregister all fds it owns in that epoll instance during exit. I didn't see an immediate nice way of fixing that issue. But note that taking over an epoll loop from the parent doesn't work reliably for some file descriptors. Consider man signalfd(2): epoll(7) semantics If a process adds (via epoll_ctl(2)) a signalfd file descriptor to an epoll(7) instance, then epoll_wait(2) returns events only for signals sent to that process. In particular, if the process then uses fork(2) to create a child process, then the child will be able to read(2) signals that are sent to it using the signalfd file descriptor, but epoll_wait(2) will not indicate that the signalfd file descriptor is ready. In this scenario, a possible workaround is that after the fork(2), the child process can close the signalfd file descriptor that it inherited from the parent process and then create another signalfd file descriptor and add it to the epoll instance. Alternatively, the parent and the child could delay creating their (separate) signalfd file descriptors and adding them to the epoll instance until after the call to fork(2). So effectively P1 opens a signalfd and registers it in an epoll instance. Then it fork()s and creates P2. Now both P1 and P2 call epoll_wait(). Since signalfds are always relative to the caller and P1 did call signalfd_poll() to register the callback only P1 can get events. So P2 can't take over signalfds in that epoll loop. Honestly, the inheritance semantics of epoll across fork() seem pretty wonky and it would've been better if an epoll fd inherited across would've returned ESTALE or EINVAL or something. And if that inheritance of epoll instances would really be a big use-case there'd be some explicit way to enable this.
On Wed, May 08, 2024 at 10:32:08AM +0200, Daniel Vetter wrote: > On Wed, May 08, 2024 at 07:55:08AM +0200, Christian König wrote: > > Am 07.05.24 um 21:07 schrieb Linus Torvalds: > > > On Tue, 7 May 2024 at 11:04, Daniel Vetter <daniel@ffwll.ch> wrote: > > > > On Tue, May 07, 2024 at 09:46:31AM -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote: > > > > > > > > > I'd be perfectly ok with adding a generic "FISAME" VFS level ioctl > > > > > too, if this is possibly a more common thing. and not just DRM wants > > > > > it. > > > > > > > > > > Would something like that work for you? > > > > Yes. > > > > > > > > Adding Simon and Pekka as two of the usual suspects for this kind of > > > > stuff. Also example code (the int return value is just so that callers know > > > > when kcmp isn't available, they all only care about equality): > > > > > > > > https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/mesa/mesa/-/blob/main/src/util/os_file.c#L239 > > > That example thing shows that we shouldn't make it a FISAME ioctl - we > > > should make it a fcntl() instead, and it would just be a companion to > > > F_DUPFD. > > > > > > Doesn't that strike everybody as a *much* cleaner interface? I think > > > F_ISDUP would work very naturally indeed with F_DUPFD. > > > > > > Yes? No? > > > > Sounds absolutely sane to me. > > Yeah fcntl(fd1, F_ISDUP, fd2); sounds extremely reasonable to me too. > > Aside, after some irc discussions I paged a few more of the relevant info > back in, and at least for dma-buf we kinda sorted this out by going away > from the singleton inode in this patch: ed63bb1d1f84 ("dma-buf: give each > buffer a full-fledged inode") > > It's uapi now so we can't ever undo that, but with hindsight just the > F_ISDUP is really what we wanted. Because we have no need for that inode > aside from the unique inode number that's only used to compare dma-buf fd > for sameness, e.g. > > https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wlroots/wlroots/-/blob/master/render/vulkan/texture.c#L490 > > The one question I have is whether this could lead to some exploit tools, > because at least the android conformance test suite verifies that kcmp > isn't available to apps (which is where we need it, because even with all > the binder-based isolation gpu userspace still all run in the application > process due to performance reasons, any ipc at all is just too much). > > Otoh if we just add this to drm fd as an ioctl somewhere, then it will > also be available to every android app because they all do need the gpu > for rendering. So going with the full generic fcntl is probably best. > -Sima fcntl() will call security_file_fcntl(). IIRC, Android uses selinux and I'm pretty certain they'd disallow any fcntl() operations they deems unsafe. So a kernel update for them would likely require allow-listing the new fcntl(). Or if they do allow all new fnctl()s by default they'd have to disallow it if they thought that's an issue but really I don't even think there's any issue in that. I think kcmp() is a different problem because you can use it to compare objects from different tasks. The generic fcntl() wouldn't allow that.
On Wed, May 08, 2024 at 12:08:57PM +0200, Christian Brauner wrote: > On Mon, May 06, 2024 at 04:29:44PM +0200, Christian König wrote: > > Am 04.05.24 um 20:20 schrieb Linus Torvalds: > > > On Sat, 4 May 2024 at 08:32, Linus Torvalds > > > <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> wrote: > > > > Lookie here, the fundamental issue is that epoll can call '->poll()' > > > > on a file descriptor that is being closed concurrently. > > > Thinking some more about this, and replying to myself... > > > > > > Actually, I wonder if we could *really* fix this by simply moving the > > > eventpoll_release() to where it really belongs. > > > > > > If we did it in file_close_fd_locked(), it would actually make a > > > *lot* more sense. Particularly since eventpoll actually uses this: > > > > > > struct epoll_filefd { > > > struct file *file; > > > int fd; > > > } __packed; > > > > > > ie it doesn't just use the 'struct file *', it uses the 'fd' itself > > > (for ep_find()). > > > > > > (Strictly speaking, it should also have a pointer to the 'struct > > > files_struct' to make the 'int fd' be meaningful). > > > > While I completely agree on this I unfortunately have to ruin the idea. > > > > Before we had KCMP some people relied on the strange behavior of eventpoll > > to compare struct files when the fd is the same. > > > > I just recently suggested that solution to somebody at AMD as a workaround > > when KCMP is disabled because of security hardening and I'm pretty sure I've > > seen it somewhere else as well. > > > > So when we change that it would break (undocumented?) UAPI behavior. > > I've worked on that a bit yesterday and I learned new things about epoll > and ran into some limitations. > > Like, what happens if process P1 has a file descriptor registered in an > epoll instance and now P1 forks and creates P2. So every file that P1 > maintains gets copied into a new file descriptor table for P2. And the > same file descriptors refer to the same files for both P1 and P2. So this is pretty similar to any other struct file that has resources hanging off the struct file instead of the underlying inode. Like drm chardev files, where all the buffers, gpu contexts and everything else hangs off the file and there's no other way to get at them (except when exporting to some explicitly meant-for-sharing file like dma-buf). If you fork() that it's utter hilarity, which is why absolutely everyone should set O_CLOEXEC on these. Or EPOLL_CLOEXEC for epoll_create. For the uapi issue you describe below my take would be that we should just try, and hope that everyone's been dutifully using O_CLOEXEC. But maybe I'm biased from the gpu world, where we've been hammering it in that "O_CLOEXEC or bust" mantra since well over a decade. Really the only valid use-case is something like systemd handing open files to a service, where it drops priviledges even well before the exec() call. But we can't switch around the defaults for any of these special open files with anything more than just a current seek position as state, since that breaks uapi. -Sima > > So there's two interesting cases here: > > (1) P2 explicitly removes the file descriptor from the epoll instance > via epoll_ctl(EPOLL_CTL_DEL). That removal affects both P1 and P2 > since the <fd, file> pair is only registered once and it isn't > marked whether it belongs to P1 and P2 fdtable. > > So effectively fork()ing with epoll creates a weird shared state > where removal of file descriptors that were registered before the > fork() affects both child and parent. > > I found that surprising even though I've worked with epoll quite > extensively in low-level userspace. > > (2) P2 doesn't close it's file descriptors. It just exits. Since removal > of the file descriptor from the epoll instance isn't done during > close() but during last fput() P1's epoll state remains unaffected > by P2's sloppy exit because P1 still holds references to all files > in its fdtable. > > (Sidenote, if one ends up adding every more duped-fds into epoll > instance that one doesn't explicitly close and all of them refer to > the same file wouldn't one just be allocating new epitems that > are kept around for a really long time?) > > So if the removal of the fd would now be done during close() or during > exit_files() when we call close_files() and since there's currently no > way of differentiating whether P1 or P2 own that fd it would mean that > (2) collapses into (1) and we'd always alter (1)'s epoll state. That > would be a UAPI break. > > So say we record the fdtable to get ownership of that file descriptor so > P2 doesn't close anything in (2) that really belongs to P1 to fix that > problem. > > But afaict, that would break another possible use-case. Namely, where P1 > creates an epoll instance and registeres fds and then fork()s to create > P2. Now P1 can exit and P2 takes over the epoll loop of P1. This > wouldn't work anymore because P1 would deregister all fds it owns in > that epoll instance during exit. I didn't see an immediate nice way of > fixing that issue. > > But note that taking over an epoll loop from the parent doesn't work > reliably for some file descriptors. Consider man signalfd(2): > > epoll(7) semantics > If a process adds (via epoll_ctl(2)) a signalfd file descriptor to an epoll(7) instance, > then epoll_wait(2) returns events only for signals sent to that process. In particular, > if the process then uses fork(2) to create a child process, then the child will be able > to read(2) signals that are sent to it using the signalfd file descriptor, but > epoll_wait(2) will not indicate that the signalfd file descriptor is ready. In this > scenario, a possible workaround is that after the fork(2), the child process can close > the signalfd file descriptor that it inherited from the parent process and then create > another signalfd file descriptor and add it to the epoll instance. Alternatively, the > parent and the child could delay creating their (separate) signalfd file descriptors and > adding them to the epoll instance until after the call to fork(2). > > So effectively P1 opens a signalfd and registers it in an epoll > instance. Then it fork()s and creates P2. Now both P1 and P2 call > epoll_wait(). Since signalfds are always relative to the caller and P1 > did call signalfd_poll() to register the callback only P1 can get > events. So P2 can't take over signalfds in that epoll loop. > > Honestly, the inheritance semantics of epoll across fork() seem pretty > wonky and it would've been better if an epoll fd inherited across > would've returned ESTALE or EINVAL or something. And if that inheritance > of epoll instances would really be a big use-case there'd be some > explicit way to enable this.
On Tue, 7 May 2024 at 12:07, Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> wrote: > > That example thing shows that we shouldn't make it a FISAME ioctl - we > should make it a fcntl() instead, and it would just be a companion to > F_DUPFD. > > Doesn't that strike everybody as a *much* cleaner interface? I think > F_ISDUP would work very naturally indeed with F_DUPFD. So since we already have two versions of F_DUPFD (the other being F_DUPFD_CLOEXEC) I decided that the best thing to do is to just extend on that existing naming pattern, and called it F_DUPFD_QUERY instead. I'm not married to the name, so if somebody hates it, feel free to argue otherwise. But with that, the suggested patch would end up looking something like the attached (I also re-ordered the existing "F_LINUX_SPECIFIC_BASE" users, since one of them was out of numerical order). This really feels like a very natural thing, and yes, the 'same_fd()' function in systemd that Christian also pointed at could use this very naturally. Also note that I obviously haven't tested this. Because obviously this is trivially correct and cannot possibly have any bugs. Right? RIGHT? And yes, I did check - despite the odd jump in numbers, we've never had anything between F_NOTIFY (+2) and F_CANCELLK (+5). We added F_SETLEASE (+0) , F_GETLEASE (+1) and F_NOTIFY (+2) in 2.4.0-test9 (roughly October 2000, I didn't dig deeper). And then back in 2007 we suddenly jumped to F_CANCELLK (+5) in commit 9b9d2ab4154a ("locks: add lock cancel command"). I don't know why 3/4 were shunned. After that we had 22d2b35b200f ("F_DUPFD_CLOEXEC implementation") add F_DUPFD_CLOEXEC (+6). I'd have loved to put F_DUPFD_QUERY next to it, but +5 and +7 are both used. Linus
On Wed, 8 May 2024 at 09:19, Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> wrote: > > So since we already have two versions of F_DUPFD (the other being > F_DUPFD_CLOEXEC) I decided that the best thing to do is to just extend > on that existing naming pattern, and called it F_DUPFD_QUERY instead. > > I'm not married to the name, so if somebody hates it, feel free to > argue otherwise. Side note: with this patch, doing ret = fcntl(fd1, F_DUPFD_QUERY, fd2); will result in: -1 (EBADF): 'fd1' is not a valid file descriptor -1 (EINVAL): old kernel that doesn't support F_DUPFD_QUERY 0: fd2 does not refer to the same file as fd1 1: fd2 is the same 'struct file' as fd1 and it might be worth noting a couple of things here: (a) fd2 being an invalid file descriptor does not cause EBADF, it just causes "does not match". (b) we *could* use more bits for more equality IOW, it would possibly make sense to extend the 0/1 result to be - bit #0: same file pointer - bit #1: same path - bit #2: same dentry - bit #3: same inode which are all different levels of "sameness". Does anybody care? Do we want to extend on this "sameness"? I'm not convinced, but it might be a good idea to document this as a possibly future extension, ie *if* what you care about is "same file pointer", maybe you should make sure to only look at bit #0. Linus
On Wed, May 08, 2024 at 10:14:44AM -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote: > On Wed, 8 May 2024 at 09:19, Linus Torvalds > <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> wrote: > > > > So since we already have two versions of F_DUPFD (the other being > > F_DUPFD_CLOEXEC) I decided that the best thing to do is to just extend > > on that existing naming pattern, and called it F_DUPFD_QUERY instead. > > > > I'm not married to the name, so if somebody hates it, feel free to > > argue otherwise. > > Side note: with this patch, doing > > ret = fcntl(fd1, F_DUPFD_QUERY, fd2); > > will result in: > > -1 (EBADF): 'fd1' is not a valid file descriptor > -1 (EINVAL): old kernel that doesn't support F_DUPFD_QUERY > 0: fd2 does not refer to the same file as fd1 > 1: fd2 is the same 'struct file' as fd1 > > and it might be worth noting a couple of things here: > > (a) fd2 being an invalid file descriptor does not cause EBADF, it > just causes "does not match". > > (b) we *could* use more bits for more equality > > IOW, it would possibly make sense to extend the 0/1 result to be > > - bit #0: same file pointer > - bit #1: same path > - bit #2: same dentry > - bit #3: same inode > > which are all different levels of "sameness". Not worth it without someone explaining in detail why imho. First pass should be to try and replace kcmp() in scenarios where it's obviously not needed or overkill. I've added a CLASS(fd_raw) in a preliminary patch since we'll need that anyway which means that your comparison patch becomes even simpler imho. I've also added a selftest patch: https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/vfs/vfs.git/log/?h=vfs.misc ?
On Thu, 9 May 2024 at 04:39, Christian Brauner <brauner@kernel.org> wrote: > > Not worth it without someone explaining in detail why imho. First pass > should be to try and replace kcmp() in scenarios where it's obviously > not needed or overkill. Ack. > I've added a CLASS(fd_raw) in a preliminary patch since we'll need that > anyway which means that your comparison patch becomes even simpler imho. > I've also added a selftest patch: > > https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/vfs/vfs.git/log/?h=vfs.misc LGTM. Maybe worth adding an explicit test for "open same file, but two separate opens, F_DUPFD_QUERY returns 0? Just to clarify the "it's not testing the file on the filesystem for equality, but the file pointer itself". Linus
On Thu, May 09, 2024 at 08:48:20AM -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote: > On Thu, 9 May 2024 at 04:39, Christian Brauner <brauner@kernel.org> wrote: > > > > Not worth it without someone explaining in detail why imho. First pass > > should be to try and replace kcmp() in scenarios where it's obviously > > not needed or overkill. > > Ack. > > > I've added a CLASS(fd_raw) in a preliminary patch since we'll need that > > anyway which means that your comparison patch becomes even simpler imho. > > I've also added a selftest patch: > > > > https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/vfs/vfs.git/log/?h=vfs.misc > > LGTM. > > Maybe worth adding an explicit test for "open same file, but two > separate opens, F_DUPFD_QUERY returns 0? Just to clarify the "it's not > testing the file on the filesystem for equality, but the file pointer > itself". Yep, good point. Added now.
> For the uapi issue you describe below my take would be that we should just > try, and hope that everyone's been dutifully using O_CLOEXEC. But maybe > I'm biased from the gpu world, where we've been hammering it in that > "O_CLOEXEC or bust" mantra since well over a decade. Really the only valid Oh, we're very much on the same page. All new file descriptor types that I've added over the years are O_CLOEXEC by default. IOW, you need to remove O_CLOEXEC explicitly (see pidfd as an example). And imho, any new fd type that's added should just be O_CLOEXEC by default.
From: Christian Brauner > Sent: 10 May 2024 11:55 > > > For the uapi issue you describe below my take would be that we should just > > try, and hope that everyone's been dutifully using O_CLOEXEC. But maybe > > I'm biased from the gpu world, where we've been hammering it in that > > "O_CLOEXEC or bust" mantra since well over a decade. Really the only valid > > Oh, we're very much on the same page. All new file descriptor types that > I've added over the years are O_CLOEXEC by default. IOW, you need to > remove O_CLOEXEC explicitly (see pidfd as an example). And imho, any new > fd type that's added should just be O_CLOEXEC by default. For fd a shell redirect creates you may want so be able to say 'this fd will have O_CLOEXEC set after the next exec'. Also (possibly) a flag that can't be cleared once set and that gets kept by dup() etc. But maybe that is excessive? I've certainly used: # ip netns exec ns command 3</sys/class/net in order to be able to (easily) read status for interfaces in the default namespace and a specific namespace. The would be hard if the O_CLOEXEC flag had got set by default. (Especially without a shell builtin to clear it.) David - Registered Address Lakeside, Bramley Road, Mount Farm, Milton Keynes, MK1 1PT, UK Registration No: 1397386 (Wales)
diff --git a/fs/eventpoll.c b/fs/eventpoll.c index 882b89edc52a..bffa8083ff36 100644 --- a/fs/eventpoll.c +++ b/fs/eventpoll.c @@ -285,6 +285,30 @@ static inline void free_ephead(struct epitems_head *head) kmem_cache_free(ephead_cache, head); } +/* + * The ffd.file pointer may be in the process of + * being torn down due to being closed, but we + * may not have finished eventpoll_release() yet. + * + * Technically, even with the atomic_long_inc_not_zero, + * the file may have been free'd and then gotten + * re-allocated to something else (since files are + * not RCU-delayed, they are SLAB_TYPESAFE_BY_RCU). + * + * But for epoll, we don't much care. + */ +static struct file *epi_fget(const struct epitem *epi) +{ + struct file *file; + + rcu_read_lock(); + file = epi->ffd.file; + if (!atomic_long_inc_not_zero(&file->f_count)) + file = NULL; + rcu_read_unlock(); + return file; +} + static void list_file(struct file *file) { struct epitems_head *head; @@ -987,14 +1011,18 @@ static __poll_t __ep_eventpoll_poll(struct file *file, poll_table *wait, int dep static __poll_t ep_item_poll(const struct epitem *epi, poll_table *pt, int depth) { - struct file *file = epi->ffd.file; + struct file *file = epi_fget(epi); __poll_t res; + if (!file) + return 0; + pt->_key = epi->event.events; if (!is_file_epoll(file)) res = vfs_poll(file, pt); else res = __ep_eventpoll_poll(file, pt, depth); + fput(file); return res & epi->event.events; }