[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [PATCH] x86: enable interrupts around dump_execstate()
On 14.09.2022 16:23, Roger Pau Monné wrote: > On Wed, Sep 14, 2022 at 12:13:49PM +0200, Jan Beulich wrote: >> On 14.09.2022 11:13, Roger Pau Monné wrote: >>> On Wed, Sep 14, 2022 at 10:31:34AM +0200, Jan Beulich wrote: >>>> On 14.09.2022 10:14, Jan Beulich wrote: >>>>> On 13.09.2022 16:50, Roger Pau Monné wrote: >>>>>> On Mon, Dec 13, 2021 at 04:12:55PM +0100, Jan Beulich wrote: >>>>>>> show_hvm_stack() requires interrupts to be enabled to avoids triggering >>>>>>> the consistency check in check_lock() for the p2m lock. To do so in >>>>>>> spurious_interrupt() requires adding reentrancy protection / handling >>>>>>> there. >>>>>> >>>>>> There's also an ASSERT(!in_irq()) in _percpu_write_lock() that will >>>>>> trigger when trying to acquire the p2m lock from spurious_interrupt() >>>>>> context, as p2m_lock() -> mm_write_lock() -> _mm_write_lock -> >>>>>> percpu_write_lock(). >>>>> >>>>> s/will/may/ since spurious_interrupt() doesn't itself use irq_enter(), >>> >>> do_IRQ() does call irq_enter(), and that's the caller of >>> spurious_interrupt() AFAICT. >> >> Hmm, you're right. I was mislead by smp_call_function_interrupt() >> explicitly using irq_{enter,exit}(). I guess that should have been >> removed in b57458c1d02b ("x86: All vectored interrupts go through >> do_IRQ()"). I guess I need to either open-code the variant of in_irq() >> I'd need, or (perhaps better for overall state) explicitly irq_exit() >> before the check and irq_enter() after the call. Thoughts? > > Well, it's ugly but it's likely the easier way to get this working. Just to clarify - the first of the options I did name is (of course) not viable: If we open-coded a local_irq_count() == 1 check here, the assertion you named would still trigger. >>>>> but yes - we could nest inside a lower priority interrupt. I'll make >>>>> local_irq_enable() depend on !in_irq(). >>>> >>>> Upon further thought I guess more precautions are necessary: We might >>>> have interrupted code holding the P2M lock already, and we might also >>>> have interrupted code holding another MM lock precluding acquiring of >>>> the P2M lock. All of this probably plays into Andrew's concerns, yet >>>> still I don't view it as a viable route to omit the stack dump for HVM >>>> domains, and in particular for PVH Dom0. Sadly I can't think of any >>>> better approach ... >>> >>> Yes, I also had those concerns. The mm locks are recursive, but >>> spurious_interrupt() hitting in the middle of code already holding any >>> mm lock is likely to end up triggering the mm lock order checker. >> >> Guarding against this is possible, while ... >> >>> One (likely very risky option ATM) is to introduce a per pCPU flag >>> that when set will turn all mm locks into noops, and use it here in >>> order to avoid any locking issues. This could introduce two issues at >>> least: first one is how resilient page walking routines are against >>> page tables changing under their feet. The second one is that any >>> page table walker p2m helper should avoid doing modifications to the >>> p2m, so no P2M_ALLOC or P2M_UNSHARE flags could be used. >> >> ... personally I view this as too risky. > > Is the dump of the stack only used for the debug key handler, or there > are other places this is also used? It's called from show_execution_state(), which also dumps state for e.g. crashes or WARN_ON()s. Jan
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