Re: [PATCH v5 0/4] Charge loop device i/o to issuing cgroup

From: Dan Schatzberg
Date: Wed Apr 29 2020 - 10:04:06 EST


On Wed, Apr 29, 2020 at 07:47:34AM +1000, Dave Chinner wrote:
> On Tue, Apr 28, 2020 at 12:13:46PM -0400, Dan Schatzberg wrote:
> > The loop device runs all i/o to the backing file on a separate kworker
> > thread which results in all i/o being charged to the root cgroup. This
> > allows a loop device to be used to trivially bypass resource limits
> > and other policy. This patch series fixes this gap in accounting.
>
> How is this specific to the loop device? Isn't every block device
> that offloads work to a kthread or single worker thread susceptible
> to the same "exploit"?

I believe this is fairly loop device specific. The issue is that the
loop driver issues I/O by re-entering the VFS layer (resulting in
tmpfs like in my example or entering the block layer). Normally, I/O
through the VFS layer is accounted for and controlled (e.g. you can
OOM if writing to tmpfs, or get throttled by the I/O controller) but
the loop device completely side-steps the accounting.

>
> Or is the problem simply that the loop worker thread is simply not
> taking the IO's associated cgroup and submitting the IO with that
> cgroup associated with it? That seems kinda simple to fix....
>
> > Naively charging cgroups could result in priority inversions through
> > the single kworker thread in the case where multiple cgroups are
> > reading/writing to the same loop device.
>
> And that's where all the complexity and serialisation comes from,
> right?
>
> So, again: how is this unique to the loop device? Other block
> devices also offload IO to kthreads to do blocking work and IO
> submission to lower layers. Hence this seems to me like a generic
> "block device does IO submission from different task" issue that
> should be handled by generic infrastructure and not need to be
> reimplemented multiple times in every block device driver that
> offloads work to other threads...

I'm not familiar with other block device drivers that behave like
this. Could you point me at a few?

>
> > This patch series does some
> > minor modification to the loop driver so that each cgroup can make
> > forward progress independently to avoid this inversion.
> >
> > With this patch series applied, the above script triggers OOM kills
> > when writing through the loop device as expected.
>
> NACK!
>
> The IO that is disallowed should fail with ENOMEM or some similar
> error, not trigger an OOM kill that shoots some innocent bystander
> in the head. That's worse than using BUG() to report errors...

The OOM behavior is due to cgroup limit. It mirrors the behavior one
sees when writing to a too-large tmpfs.