Commit 8b91cee5 authored by Nicholas Piggin's avatar Nicholas Piggin Committed by Michael Ellerman

powerpc/64s/hash: Make hash faults work in NMI context

Hash faults are not resoved in NMI context, instead causing the access
to fail. This is done because perf interrupts can get backtraces
including walking the user stack, and taking a hash fault on those could
deadlock on the HPTE lock if the perf interrupt hits while the same HPTE
lock is being held by the hash fault code. The user-access for the stack
walking will notice the access failed and deal with that in the perf
code.

The reason to allow perf interrupts in is to better profile hash faults.

The problem with this is any hash fault on a kernel access that happens
in NMI context will crash, because kernel accesses must not fail.

Hard lockups, system reset, machine checks that access vmalloc space
including modules and including stack backtracing and symbol lookup in
modules, per-cpu data, etc could all run into this problem.

Fix this by disallowing perf interrupts in the hash fault code (the
direct hash fault is covered by MSR[EE]=0 so the PMI disable just needs
to extend to the preload case). This simplifies the tricky logic in hash
faults and perf, at the cost of reduced profiling of hash faults.

perf can still latch addresses when interrupts are disabled, it just
won't get the stack trace at that point, so it would still find hot
spots, just sometimes with confusing stack chains.

An alternative could be to allow perf interrupts here but always do the
slowpath stack walk if we are in nmi context, but that slows down all
perf interrupt stack walking on hash though and it does not remove as
much tricky code.
Reported-by: default avatarLaurent Dufour <ldufour@linux.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: default avatarNicholas Piggin <npiggin@gmail.com>
Tested-by: default avatarLaurent Dufour <ldufour@linux.ibm.com>
Reviewed-by: default avatarAneesh Kumar K.V <aneesh.kumar@linux.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: default avatarMichael Ellerman <mpe@ellerman.id.au>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220204035348.545435-1-npiggin@gmail.com
parent 406a8c1d
......@@ -612,7 +612,7 @@ DECLARE_INTERRUPT_HANDLER_RAW(do_slb_fault);
DECLARE_INTERRUPT_HANDLER(do_bad_segment_interrupt);
/* hash_utils.c */
DECLARE_INTERRUPT_HANDLER_RAW(do_hash_fault);
DECLARE_INTERRUPT_HANDLER(do_hash_fault);
/* fault.c */
DECLARE_INTERRUPT_HANDLER(do_page_fault);
......
......@@ -1621,8 +1621,7 @@ int hash_page(unsigned long ea, unsigned long access, unsigned long trap,
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(hash_page);
DECLARE_INTERRUPT_HANDLER(__do_hash_fault);
DEFINE_INTERRUPT_HANDLER(__do_hash_fault)
DEFINE_INTERRUPT_HANDLER(do_hash_fault)
{
unsigned long ea = regs->dar;
unsigned long dsisr = regs->dsisr;
......@@ -1681,35 +1680,6 @@ DEFINE_INTERRUPT_HANDLER(__do_hash_fault)
}
}
/*
* The _RAW interrupt entry checks for the in_nmi() case before
* running the full handler.
*/
DEFINE_INTERRUPT_HANDLER_RAW(do_hash_fault)
{
/*
* If we are in an "NMI" (e.g., an interrupt when soft-disabled), then
* don't call hash_page, just fail the fault. This is required to
* prevent re-entrancy problems in the hash code, namely perf
* interrupts hitting while something holds H_PAGE_BUSY, and taking a
* hash fault. See the comment in hash_preload().
*
* We come here as a result of a DSI at a point where we don't want
* to call hash_page, such as when we are accessing memory (possibly
* user memory) inside a PMU interrupt that occurred while interrupts
* were soft-disabled. We want to invoke the exception handler for
* the access, or panic if there isn't a handler.
*/
if (unlikely(in_nmi())) {
do_bad_page_fault_segv(regs);
return 0;
}
__do_hash_fault(regs);
return 0;
}
#ifdef CONFIG_PPC_MM_SLICES
static bool should_hash_preload(struct mm_struct *mm, unsigned long ea)
{
......@@ -1776,26 +1746,18 @@ static void hash_preload(struct mm_struct *mm, pte_t *ptep, unsigned long ea,
#endif /* CONFIG_PPC_64K_PAGES */
/*
* __hash_page_* must run with interrupts off, as it sets the
* H_PAGE_BUSY bit. It's possible for perf interrupts to hit at any
* time and may take a hash fault reading the user stack, see
* read_user_stack_slow() in the powerpc/perf code.
* __hash_page_* must run with interrupts off, including PMI interrupts
* off, as it sets the H_PAGE_BUSY bit.
*
* If that takes a hash fault on the same page as we lock here, it
* will bail out when seeing H_PAGE_BUSY set, and retry the access
* leading to an infinite loop.
*
* Disabling interrupts here does not prevent perf interrupts, but it
* will prevent them taking hash faults (see the NMI test in
* do_hash_page), then read_user_stack's copy_from_user_nofault will
* fail and perf will fall back to read_user_stack_slow(), which
* walks the Linux page tables.
* It's otherwise possible for perf interrupts to hit at any time and
* may take a hash fault reading the user stack, which could take a
* hash miss and deadlock on the same H_PAGE_BUSY bit.
*
* Interrupts must also be off for the duration of the
* mm_is_thread_local test and update, to prevent preempt running the
* mm on another CPU (XXX: this may be racy vs kthread_use_mm).
*/
local_irq_save(flags);
powerpc_local_irq_pmu_save(flags);
/* Is that local to this CPU ? */
if (mm_is_thread_local(mm))
......@@ -1820,7 +1782,7 @@ static void hash_preload(struct mm_struct *mm, pte_t *ptep, unsigned long ea,
mm_ctx_user_psize(&mm->context),
pte_val(*ptep));
local_irq_restore(flags);
powerpc_local_irq_pmu_restore(flags);
}
/*
......
......@@ -2,7 +2,6 @@
#ifndef _POWERPC_PERF_CALLCHAIN_H
#define _POWERPC_PERF_CALLCHAIN_H
int read_user_stack_slow(const void __user *ptr, void *buf, int nb);
void perf_callchain_user_64(struct perf_callchain_entry_ctx *entry,
struct pt_regs *regs);
void perf_callchain_user_32(struct perf_callchain_entry_ctx *entry,
......@@ -26,17 +25,11 @@ static inline int __read_user_stack(const void __user *ptr, void *ret,
size_t size)
{
unsigned long addr = (unsigned long)ptr;
int rc;
if (addr > TASK_SIZE - size || (addr & (size - 1)))
return -EFAULT;
rc = copy_from_user_nofault(ret, ptr, size);
if (IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_PPC64) && !radix_enabled() && rc)
return read_user_stack_slow(ptr, ret, size);
return rc;
return copy_from_user_nofault(ret, ptr, size);
}
#endif /* _POWERPC_PERF_CALLCHAIN_H */
......@@ -18,33 +18,6 @@
#include "callchain.h"
/*
* On 64-bit we don't want to invoke hash_page on user addresses from
* interrupt context, so if the access faults, we read the page tables
* to find which page (if any) is mapped and access it directly. Radix
* has no need for this so it doesn't use read_user_stack_slow.
*/
int read_user_stack_slow(const void __user *ptr, void *buf, int nb)
{
unsigned long addr = (unsigned long) ptr;
unsigned long offset;
struct page *page;
void *kaddr;
if (get_user_page_fast_only(addr, FOLL_WRITE, &page)) {
kaddr = page_address(page);
/* align address to page boundary */
offset = addr & ~PAGE_MASK;
memcpy(buf, kaddr + offset, nb);
put_page(page);
return 0;
}
return -EFAULT;
}
static int read_user_stack_64(const unsigned long __user *ptr, unsigned long *ret)
{
return __read_user_stack(ptr, ret, sizeof(*ret));
......
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