Re: [RFC PATCH net-next v5 2/2] net: add netmem to skb_frag_t

From: Mina Almasry
Date: Wed Jan 17 2024 - 13:01:20 EST


On Tue, Jan 16, 2024 at 4:16 AM Jason Gunthorpe <jgg@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> On Tue, Jan 16, 2024 at 07:04:13PM +0800, Yunsheng Lin wrote:
> > On 2024/1/16 8:01, Jason Gunthorpe wrote:
> > > On Mon, Jan 15, 2024 at 03:23:33PM -0800, Mina Almasry wrote:
> > >>>> You did not answer my question that I asked here, and ignoring this
> > >>>> question is preventing us from making any forward progress on this
> > >>>> discussion. What do you expect or want skb_frag_page() to do when
> > >>>> there is no page in the frag?
> > >>>
> > >>> I would expect it to do nothing.
> > >>
> > >> I don't understand. skb_frag_page() with an empty implementation just
> > >> results in a compiler error as the function needs to return a page
> > >> pointer. Do you actually expect skb_frag_page() to unconditionally
> > >> cast frag->netmem to a page pointer? That was explained as
> > >> unacceptable over and over again by Jason and Christian as it risks
> > >> casting devmem to page; completely unacceptable and will get nacked.
> > >> Do you have a suggestion of what skb_frag_page() should do that will
> > >> not get nacked by mm?
> > >
> > > WARN_ON and return NULL seems reasonable?
> >

That's more or less what I'm thinking.

> > While I am agreed that it may be a nightmare to debug the case of passing
> > a false page into the mm system, but I am not sure what's the point of
> > returning NULL to caller if the caller is not expecting or handling
> > the
>
> You have to return something and NULL will largely reliably crash the
> thread. The WARN_ON explains in detail why your thread just crashed.
>

Agreed.

> > NULL returning[for example, most of mm API called by the networking does not
> > seems to handling NULL as input page], isn't the NULL returning will make
> > the kernel panic anyway? Doesn't it make more sense to just add a BUG_ON()
> > depending on some configuration like CONFIG_DEBUG_NET or CONFIG_DEVMEM?
> > As returning NULL seems to be causing a confusion for the caller of
> > skb_frag_page() as whether to or how to handle the NULL returning case.
>
> Possibly, though Linus doesn't like BUG_ON on principle..
>
> I think the bigger challenge is convincing people that this devmem
> stuff doesn't just open a bunch of holes in the kernel where userspace
> can crash it.
>

It does not, and as of right now there are no pending concerns from
any netdev maintainers regarding mishandled devmem checks at least.
This is because the devmem series comes with a full audit of
skb_frag_page() callers [1] and all areas in the net stack attempting
to access the skb [2].

[1] https://patchwork.kernel.org/project/netdevbpf/patch/20231218024024.3516870-10-almasrymina@xxxxxxxxxx/
[2] https://patchwork.kernel.org/project/netdevbpf/patch/20231218024024.3516870-11-almasrymina@xxxxxxxxxx/

> The fact you all are debating what to do with skb_frag_page() suggests
> to me there isn't confidence...
>

The debate raging on is related to the performance of skb_frag_page(),
not correctness (and even then, I don't think it's related to
perf...). Yunsheng would like us to optimize skb_frag_page() using an
unconditional cast from netmem to page. This in Yunsheng's mind is a
performance optimization as we don't need to add an if statement
checking if the netmem is a page. I'm resistant to implement that
change so far because:

(a) unconditionally casting from netmem to page negates the compiler
type safety that you and Christian are laying out as a requirement for
the devmem stuff.
(b) With likely/unlikely or static branches the check to make sure
netmem is page is a no-op for existing use cases anyway, so AFAIU,
there is no perf gain from optimizing it out anyway.

But none of this is related to correctness. Code calling
skb_frag_page() will fail or crash if it's not handled correctly
regardless of the implementation details of skb_frag_page(). In the
devmem series we add support to handle it correctly via [1] & [2].

--
Thanks,
Mina