Re: [PATCH] kernel/fork: stop playing lockless games for exe_file replacement

From: Mateusz Guzik
Date: Mon Aug 14 2023 - 04:57:14 EST


On 8/14/23, David Hildenbrand <david@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> On 14.08.23 10:21, Mateusz Guzik wrote:
>> On 8/14/23, David Hildenbrand <david@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>> On 13.08.23 14:33, Mateusz Guzik wrote:
>>>> xchg originated in 6e399cd144d8 ("prctl: avoid using mmap_sem for
>>>> exe_file serialization"). While the commit message does not explain
>>>> *why* the change, clearly the intent was to use mmap_sem less in this
>>>> codepath. I found the original submission [1] which ultimately claims
>>>> it
>>>> cleans things up.
>>>
>>> More details are apparently in v1 of that patch:
>>>
>>> https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/1424979417.10344.14.camel@xxxxxxxxxxxx/
>>>
>>> Regarding your patch: adding more mmap_write_lock() where avoidable, I'm
>>> not so sure.
>>>
>>
>> But exe_file access is already synchronized with the semaphore and
>> your own commit added a mmap_read_lock/mmap_read_unlock cycle after
>> the xchg in question to accomodate this requirement.
>
> Yes, we want to handle concurrent fork() ("Don't race with dup_mmap()"),
> thus mmap_read_lock.
>
>> Then mmap_write_lock around the replacement is the obvious thing to do.
>
> Apparently to you. :)
>
> mmap_write_lock will block more than fork. For example, concurrent page
> faults (without new VMA locking), for no apparent reason to me.
>
>>
>>> Your patch doesn't look (to me) like it is removing a lot of complexity.
>>>
>>
>> The code in the current form makes the reader ask what prompts xchg +
>> read-lock instead of mere write-locking.
>>
>> This is not a hot path either and afaics it can only cause contention
>> if userspace is trying to abuse the interface to break the kernel,
>> messing with a processs hard at work (which would be an extra argument
>> to not play games on kernel side).
>>
>> That said, no, it does not remove "a lot of complexity". It does
>> remove some though at no real downside that I can see.
>>
>> But then again, it is on people who insist on xchg to justify it.
>
> Changing it now needs good justification, why we would want to block any
> concurrent MM activity. Maybe there is good justification.
>
> In any case, this commit would have to update the documentation of
> replace_mm_exe_file, that spells out existing locking behavior.
>

Perhaps it will help if I add that the prctl thingy always had a
troubled relationship with locking.

Last time I looked at it was in 2016, where I found that it was doing
down_read to update arg_start/arg_end and others while a consumer in
procfs would read them and assert on their sanity. As only a read-lock
was held, 2 threads could be used to transiently produce a bogus state
as they race with their updates and trigger the BUG. See this commit
(but also excuse weirdly bad english ;))
https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=ddf1d398e517e660207e2c807f76a90df543a217

Moreover check out the following in prctl_set_auxv:

task_lock(current);
memcpy(mm->saved_auxv, user_auxv, len);
task_unlock(current);

any thread in the process can reach that codepath while sharing the
same mm, thus this does not lock any updates. Not only that, but a
duplicated memcpy onto the area in prctl_set_mm_map does not even take
that lock and the code to read this does not take any locks.

[Code duplication and synchronization aside, additional points
deducted for saved_auxv storing always-NULL pointers instead of adding
them on reads.]

The above exhausts my willingness to argue about this change, I'm just
a passerby. If it is NAKed, I'm dropping the subject.

I am willing to do the comment tidy ups if this can go in though, but
not before there is consensus.

--
Mateusz Guzik <mjguzik gmail.com>