[PATCH -next v5 7/8] arm64: add uaccess to machine check safe
Mark Rutland
mark.rutland at arm.com
Sat Jun 18 21:35:35 AEST 2022
On Sat, Jun 18, 2022 at 05:27:45PM +0800, Tong Tiangen wrote:
>
>
> 在 2022/6/17 17:06, Mark Rutland 写道:
> > On Sat, May 28, 2022 at 06:50:55AM +0000, Tong Tiangen wrote:
> > > If user access fail due to hardware memory error, only the relevant
> > > processes are affected, so killing the user process and isolate the
> > > error page with hardware memory errors is a more reasonable choice
> > > than kernel panic.
> > >
> > > Signed-off-by: Tong Tiangen <tongtiangen at huawei.com>
> >
> > > ---
> > > arch/arm64/lib/copy_from_user.S | 8 ++++----
> > > arch/arm64/lib/copy_to_user.S | 8 ++++----
> >
> > All of these changes are to the *kernel* accesses performed as part of copy
> > to/from user, and have nothing to do with userspace, so it does not make sense
> > to mark these as UACCESS.
>
> You have a point. so there is no need to modify copy_from/to_user.S in this
> patch set.
Cool, thanks. If this patch just has the extable change, that's fine by me.
> > Do we *actually* need to recover from failues on these accesses? Looking at
> > _copy_from_user(), the kernel will immediately follow this up with a memset()
> > to the same address which will be fatal anyway, so this is only punting the
> > failure for a few instructions.
>
> If recovery success, The task will be killed and there will be no subsequent
> memset().
I don't think that's true.
IIUC per the last patch, in the exception handler we'll apply the fixup then
force a signal. That doesn't kill the task immediately, and we'll return from
the exception handler back into the original context (with the fixup applied).
The structure of copy_from_user() is
copy_from_user(to, from, n) {
_copy_from_user(to, from, n) {
res = n;
res = raw_copy_from_user(to, from, n);
if (res)
memset(to + (n - res), 0, res);
}
}
So when the fixup is applied and res indicates that the copy terminated early,
there is an unconditinal memset() before the fatal signal is handled in the
return to userspace path.
> > If we really need to recover from certain accesses to kernel memory we should
> > add a new EX_TYPE_KACCESS_ERR_ZERO_MC or similar, but we need a strong
> > rationale as to why that's useful. As things stand I do not beleive it makes
> > sense for copy to/from user specifically.
[...]
> > > diff --git a/arch/arm64/mm/extable.c b/arch/arm64/mm/extable.c
> > > index c301dcf6335f..8ca8d9639f9f 100644
> > > --- a/arch/arm64/mm/extable.c
> > > +++ b/arch/arm64/mm/extable.c
> > > @@ -86,10 +86,10 @@ bool fixup_exception_mc(struct pt_regs *regs)
> > > if (!ex)
> > > return false;
> > > - /*
> > > - * This is not complete, More Machine check safe extable type can
> > > - * be processed here.
> > > - */
> > > + switch (ex->type) {
> > > + case EX_TYPE_UACCESS_ERR_ZERO:
> > > + return ex_handler_uaccess_err_zero(ex, regs);
> > > + }
> >
> > This addition specifically makes sense to me, so can you split this into a separate patch?
>
> According to my understanding of the above, only the modification of
> extable.c is retained.
>
> So what do you mean which part is made into a separate patch?
As above, if you just retain the extable.c changes, that's fine by me.
Thanks,
Mark.
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