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Re: [Xen-devel] [PATCH v3 5/8] ARM: VGIC: factor out vgic_connect_hw_irq()





On 31/01/18 15:54, Andre Przywara wrote:
Hi,

Yeah! Locking discussions! Have fun below ;-)

On 30/01/18 13:19, Julien Grall wrote:
Hi Andre,

On 24/01/18 18:10, Andre Przywara wrote:
At the moment we happily access VGIC internal data structures like
the rank and struct pending_irq in gic.c, which should be VGIC agnostic.

Factor out a new function vgic_connect_hw_irq(), which allows a virtual
IRQ to be connected to a hardware IRQ (using the hw bit in the LR).

This removes said accesses to VGIC data structures and improves
abstraction.

You are modifying the locking of the 2 functions. But I don't see how
this is safe. Can you explain it?

Are you worried about anything particular? I will explain my reasoning
below, but feel free to point me to the cause of your gripes.

In general, it is quite nice to explain roughly in the commit message why the new locking order is ok. It would avoid reviewers to spend time guessing why it is fine.

In that particular case I am concerned about any potential concurrent access on anything related to a vIRQ.

[...]

       set_bit(_IRQ_GUEST, &desc->status);

This looks wrong to me. You don't want to execute any of the code below
if you are not able to route the pIRQ. For instance because the vIRQ has
already a desc assigned.

Ah, good point. Indeed I didn't consider the failure path. Should be
easily fixed, though. Thanks for catching this.

   @@ -156,31 +141,19 @@ int gic_route_irq_to_guest(struct domain *d,
unsigned int virq,
           gic_set_irq_type(desc, desc->arch.type);
       gic_set_irq_priority(desc, priority);
   -    p->desc = desc;
-    res = 0;
-
-out:
-    vgic_unlock_rank(v_target, rank, flags);
-
-    return res;
+    return vgic_connect_hw_irq(d, NULL, virq, desc);
   }
     /* This function only works with SPIs for now */
   int gic_remove_irq_from_guest(struct domain *d, unsigned int virq,
                                 struct irq_desc *desc)
   {
-    struct vcpu *v_target = vgic_get_target_vcpu(d->vcpu[0], virq);
-    struct vgic_irq_rank *rank = vgic_rank_irq(v_target, virq);
-    struct pending_irq *p = irq_to_pending(v_target, virq);
-    unsigned long flags;
+    int ret;
         ASSERT(spin_is_locked(&desc->lock));
       ASSERT(test_bit(_IRQ_GUEST, &desc->status));
-    ASSERT(p->desc == desc);

You dropped this assert but I don't see any replacement in the new code?
We really want to make sure the caller will not do something dumb here
(like passing a different desc).

So the first thing here is that I can't have anything dereferencing
struct pending_irq here. Secondly the rank lock (protecting the p->
structure) is only taken below, so nothing prevents this from changing
between the ASSERT and the lock, AFAICS.

You could move the ASSERT within the lock, right?

And to be honest, I don't really get the purpose of this ASSERT: the
desc pointer is taken from the pending_irq in the caller, but without
any locks. So if I am not mistaken, it could race with a
gic_route_irq_to_xen(), and that would lead to the ASSERT triggering,
just because of this race and not because of the code being broken
ultimately.
I *could* get the irq_desc by calling the new vgic_get_hw_irq_desc() -
again. Not sure if that is useful, though.
Another possibility would be to rethink this whole functionality:
The only caller (release_guest_irq() in irq.c) gets a virtual IRQ
number, then finds the associated irq_desc, only to lock it. Then it
passes both the virtual IRQ number and the irq_desc to this function,
where both are rechecked. The reason for this redundancy seems to be
some locking order (irq_desc first?), however I can't find any
documentation about this.
So I wonder if we could just pass on only the virtual IRQ number, and
let it up to this function here to safely retrieve the right irq_desc.

While I agree that the ASSERT without any lock is dangerous, it could at least catch someone passing the wrong irq_desc. Something will really go wrong if you disable pIRQ A but the irq_desc was belonging to pIRQ B.

And I agree that the code does not prevent that today. But it at least limit the scope of the problem.

So I think the code should be:

gic_remove_irq_from_guest(.....)
{

   vgic_lock_rank(...)
   if ( p->desc != desc )
   {
        vgic_unlock_rank(...)
        return -1;
   }

   do the vGIC removal

   vgic_unlock_rank(...)

   return 0;
}


       ASSERT(!is_lpi(virq));
   -    vgic_lock_rank(v_target, rank, flags);

I couldn't find what this lock protects here, so early at least. Until
the actual "p->desc = NULL;" line below nothing needs to be protected by
this lock, it's all already covered by the desc lock.
We only need the lock to eventually atomically remove the connection
between the h/w and the virtual IRQ, which is done in
vgic_connect_hw_irq() now.

See above.

--
Julien Grall

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