Re: [RFC][PATCH 1/2] x86: Allow breakpoints to emulate call functions

From: Steven Rostedt
Date: Mon May 06 2019 - 20:11:10 EST


On Mon, 6 May 2019 15:31:57 -0700
Linus Torvalds <torvalds@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

> On Mon, May 6, 2019 at 3:06 PM Linus Torvalds
> <torvalds@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> >
> > Why are you emulating something different than what you are rewriting?
>
> Side note: I'm also finding another bug on the ftrace side, which is a
> simple race condition.
>
> In particular, the logic with 'modifying_ftrace_code' is fundamentally racy.
>
> What can happen is that on one CPU we rewrite one instruction:
>
> ftrace_update_func = ip;
> /* Make sure the breakpoints see the ftrace_update_func update */
> smp_wmb();
>
> /* See comment above by declaration of modifying_ftrace_code */
> atomic_inc(&modifying_ftrace_code);
>
> ret = ftrace_modify_code(ip, old, new);
>
> atomic_dec(&modifying_ftrace_code);
>
> but then another CPU hits the 'int3' while the modification is
> going on, and takes the fault.
>
> The fault handler does that
>
> if (unlikely(atomic_read(&modifying_ftrace_code))..
>
> and sees that "yes, it's in the middle of modifying the ftrace code",
> and calls ftrace_int3_handler(). All good and "obviously correct" so
> far, no?
>
> HOWEVER. It's actually buggy. Because in the meantime, the CPU that
> was rewriting instructions has finished, and decrements the
> modifying_ftrace_code, which doesn't hurt us (because we already saw
> that the int3 was due to the modification.

But the CPU that was rewriting instructions does a run_sync() after
removing the int3:

static void run_sync(void)
{
int enable_irqs;

/* No need to sync if there's only one CPU */
if (num_online_cpus() == 1)
return;

enable_irqs = irqs_disabled();

/* We may be called with interrupts disabled (on bootup). */
if (enable_irqs)
local_irq_enable();
on_each_cpu(do_sync_core, NULL, 1);
if (enable_irqs)
local_irq_disable();
}

Which sends an IPI to all CPUs to make sure they no longer see the int3.

>
> BUT! There are two different races here:
>
> (a) maybe the fault handling was slow, and we saw the 'int3' and took
> the fault, but the modifying CPU had already finished, so that
> atomic_read(&modifying_ftrace_code) didn't actually trigger at all.
>
> (b) maybe the int3-faulting CPU *did* see the proper value of
> modifying_ftrace_code, but the modifying CPU went on and started
> *another* modification, and has changed ftrace_update_func in the
> meantime, so now the int3 handling is looking at the wrong values!
>
> In the case of (a), we'll die with an oops due to the inexplicable
> 'int3' we hit. And in the case of (b) we'll be fixing up using the
> wrong address.
>
> Things like this is why I'm wondering how much of the problems are due
> to the entry code, and how much of it is due to simply races and
> timing differences?
>
> Again, I don't actually know the ftrace code, and maybe I'm missing
> something, but this really looks like _another_ fundamental bug.
>
> The way to handle that modifying_ftrace_code thing is most likely by
> using a sequence counter. For example, one way to actually do some
> thing like this might be
>
> ftrace_update_func = ip;
> ftrace_update_target = func;
> smp_wmb();
> atomic_inc(&modifying_ftrace_head);
>
> ret = ftrace_modify_code(ip, old, new);
>
> atomic_inc(&modifying_ftrace_tail);
> smp_wmb();
>
> and now the int3 code could do something like
>
> int head, tail;
>
> head = atomic_read(&modifying_ftrace_head);
> smp_rmb();
> tail = atomic_read(&modifying_ftrace_tail);
>
> /* Are we still in the process of modification? */
> if (unlikely(head != tail+1))
> return 0;
>
> ip = ftrace_update_func;
> func = ftrace_update_target;
> smp_rmb();
> /* Need to re-check that the above two values are consistent
> and we didn't exit */
> if (atomic_read(&modifying_ftrace_tail) != tail)
> return 0;
>
> *pregs int3_emulate_call(regs, ip, func);
> return 1;
>
> although it probably really would be better to use a seqcount instead
> of writing it out like the above.
>
> NOTE! The above only fixes the (b) race. The (a) race is probably best
> handled by actually checking if the 'int3' instruction is still there
> before dying.
>
> Again, maybe there's something I'm missing, but having looked at that
> patch now what feels like a million times, I'm finding more worrisome
> things in the ftrace code than in the kernel entry code..

I think you are missing the run_sync() which is the heavy hammer to
make sure all CPUs are in sync. And this is done at each stage:

add int3
run_sync();
update call cite outside of int3
run_sync()
remove int3
run_sync()

HPA said that the last run_sync() isn't needed, but I kept it because I
wanted to make sure. Looks like your analysis shows that it is needed.

-- Steve