Re: [PATCH 2/2] mm/zswap: fix race between lru writeback and swapoff

From: Chengming Zhou
Date: Sat Jan 27 2024 - 09:53:51 EST


On 2024/1/26 23:31, Johannes Weiner wrote:
> On Fri, Jan 26, 2024 at 08:30:15AM +0000, chengming.zhou@xxxxxxxxx wrote:
>> From: Chengming Zhou <zhouchengming@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
>>
>> LRU writeback has race problem with swapoff, as spotted by Yosry[1]:
>>
>> CPU1 CPU2
>> shrink_memcg_cb swap_off
>> list_lru_isolate zswap_invalidate
>> zswap_swapoff
>> kfree(tree)
>> // UAF
>> spin_lock(&tree->lock)
>>
>> The problem is that the entry in lru list can't protect the tree from
>> being swapoff and freed, and the entry also can be invalidated and freed
>> concurrently after we unlock the lru lock.
>>
>> We can fix it by moving the swap cache allocation ahead before
>> referencing the tree, then check invalidate race with tree lock,
>> only after that we can safely deref the entry. Note we couldn't
>> deref entry or tree anymore after we unlock the folio, since we
>> depend on this to hold on swapoff.
>
> This is a great simplification on top of being a bug fix.
>
>> So this patch moves all tree and entry usage to zswap_writeback_entry(),
>> we only use the copied swpentry on the stack to allocate swap cache
>> and return with folio locked, after which we can reference the tree.
>> Then check invalidate race with tree lock, the following things is
>> much the same like zswap_load().
>>
>> Since we can't deref the entry after zswap_writeback_entry(), we
>> can't use zswap_lru_putback() anymore, instead we rotate the entry
>> in the LRU list so concurrent reclaimers have little chance to see it.
>> Or it will be deleted from LRU list if writeback success.
>>
>> Another confusing part to me is the update of memcg nr_zswap_protected
>> in zswap_lru_putback(). I'm not sure why it's needed here since
>> if we raced with swapin, memcg nr_zswap_protected has already been
>> updated in zswap_folio_swapin(). So not include this part for now.
>
> Good observation.
>
> Technically, it could also fail on -ENOMEM, but in practice these size
> allocations don't fail, especially since the shrinker runs in
> PF_MEMALLOC context. The shrink_worker might be affected, since it
> doesn't But the common case is -EEXIST, which indeed double counts.

Ah right, the rotation of the more unlikely case that allocation fail
indeed need to update the memcg nr_zswap_protected, only the case of
-EEXIST has double counts problem.

>
> To make it "correct", you'd have to grab an objcg reference with the
> LRU lock, and also re-order the objcg put on entry freeing after the
> LRU del. This is probably not worth doing. But it could use a comment.

Agree, will add your comments below.

>
> I was going to ask if you could reorder objcg uncharging after LRU
> deletion to make it more robust for future changes in that direction.
> However, staring at this, I notice this is a second UAF bug:
>
> if (entry->objcg) {
> obj_cgroup_uncharge_zswap(entry->objcg, entry->length);
> obj_cgroup_put(entry->objcg);
> }
> if (!entry->length)
> atomic_dec(&zswap_same_filled_pages);
> else {
> zswap_lru_del(&entry->pool->list_lru, entry);
>
> zswap_lru_del() uses entry->objcg to determine the list_lru memcg, but
> the put may have killed it. I'll send a separate patch on top.

Good observation.

>
>> @@ -860,40 +839,34 @@ static enum lru_status shrink_memcg_cb(struct list_head *item, struct list_lru_o
>> {
>> struct zswap_entry *entry = container_of(item, struct zswap_entry, lru);
>> bool *encountered_page_in_swapcache = (bool *)arg;
>> - struct zswap_tree *tree;
>> - pgoff_t swpoffset;
>> + swp_entry_t swpentry;
>> enum lru_status ret = LRU_REMOVED_RETRY;
>> int writeback_result;
>>
>> + /*
>> + * First rotate to the tail of lru list before unlocking lru lock,
>> + * so the concurrent reclaimers have little chance to see it.
>> + * It will be deleted from the lru list if writeback success.
>> + */
>> + list_move_tail(item, &l->list);
>
> We don't hold a reference to the object, so there could also be an
> invalidation waiting on the LRU lock, which will free the entry even
> when writeback fails.
>
> It would also be good to expand on the motivation, because it's not
> clear WHY you'd want to hide it from other reclaimers.

Right, my comments are not clear enough.

>
> Lastly, maybe mention the story around temporary failures? Most
> shrinkers have a lock inversion pattern (object lock -> LRU lock for
> linking versus LRU lock -> object trylock during reclaim) that can
> fail and require the same object be tried again before advancing.

Your comments are great, will add in the next version.

Thanks.

>
> How about this?
>
> /*
> * Rotate the entry to the tail before unlocking the LRU,
> * so that in case of an invalidation race concurrent
> * reclaimers don't waste their time on it.
> *
> * If writeback succeeds, or failure is due to the entry
> * being invalidated by the swap subsystem, the invalidation
> * will unlink and free it.
> *
> * Temporary failures, where the same entry should be tried
> * again immediately, almost never happen for this shrinker.
> * We don't do any trylocking; -ENOMEM comes closest,
> * but that's extremely rare and doesn't happen spuriously
> * either. Don't bother distinguishing this case.
> *
> * But since they do exist in theory, the entry cannot just
> * be unlinked, or we could leak it. Hence, rotate.
> */
>
> Otherwise, looks great to me.
>
> Acked-by: Johannes Weiner <hannes@xxxxxxxxxxx>