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Re: [Xen-devel] [PATCH 4/5] xen/arm: optee: handle share buffer translation error


  • To: Julien Grall <julien.grall@xxxxxxx>
  • From: Volodymyr Babchuk <Volodymyr_Babchuk@xxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Wed, 11 Sep 2019 18:32:28 +0000
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  • Cc: "tee-dev@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx" <tee-dev@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx" <xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, Stefano Stabellini <sstabellini@xxxxxxxxxx>, Volodymyr Babchuk <Volodymyr_Babchuk@xxxxxxxx>
  • Delivery-date: Wed, 11 Sep 2019 18:32:57 +0000
  • List-id: Xen developer discussion <xen-devel.lists.xenproject.org>
  • Thread-index: AQHVWeNnnvmrLONixEqfoDDhmmN88qck3sAAgAIL/4A=
  • Thread-topic: [PATCH 4/5] xen/arm: optee: handle share buffer translation error

Julien Grall writes:

> Hi Volodymyr,
>
> On 8/23/19 7:48 PM, Volodymyr Babchuk wrote:
>> There is a case possible, when OP-TEE asks guest to allocate shared
>> buffer, but Xen for some reason can't translate buffer's addresses. In
>> this situation we should do two things:
>>
>> 1. Tell guest to free allocated buffer, so there will be no memory
>> leak for guest.
>>
>> 2. Tell OP-TEE that buffer allocation failed.
>>
>> To ask guest to free allocated buffer we should perform the same
>> thing, as OP-TEE does - issue RPC request. This is done by filling
>> request buffer (luckily we can reuse the same buffer, that OP-TEE used
>> to issue original request) and then return to guest with special
>> return code.
>>
>> Then we need to handle next call from guest in a special way: as RPC
>> was issued by Xen, not by OP-TEE, it should be handled by Xen.
>> Basically, this is the mechanism to preempt OP-TEE mediator.
>>
>> The same mechanism can be used in the future to preempt mediator
>> during translation large (>512 pages) shared buffers.
>>
>> Signed-off-by: Volodymyr Babchuk <volodymyr_babchuk@xxxxxxxx>
>> ---
>>   xen/arch/arm/tee/optee.c | 167 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++--------
>>   1 file changed, 136 insertions(+), 31 deletions(-)
>>
>> diff --git a/xen/arch/arm/tee/optee.c b/xen/arch/arm/tee/optee.c
>> index 3ce6e7fa55..4eebc60b62 100644
>> --- a/xen/arch/arm/tee/optee.c
>> +++ b/xen/arch/arm/tee/optee.c
>> @@ -96,6 +96,11 @@
>>                                 OPTEE_SMC_SEC_CAP_UNREGISTERED_SHM | \
>>                                 OPTEE_SMC_SEC_CAP_DYNAMIC_SHM)
>>   +enum optee_call_state {
>> +    OPTEEM_CALL_NORMAL = 0,
>
> enum always start counting at 0. Also, looking at the code, it does
> not seem you need to know the value. Right?
Yep. This is a bad habit. Will remove.

>
>> +    OPTEEM_CALL_XEN_RPC,
>
> I am a bit confused, the enum is called optee_call_state but all the
> enum are prefixed with OPTEEM_CALL_. Why the discrepancy?
Because I'm bad at naming things :)

OPTEEM_CALL_STATE_XEN_RPC looks too long. But you are right, so I'll
rename the enum values. Unless, you have a better idea for this.

>
>> +};
>> +
>>   static unsigned int __read_mostly max_optee_threads;
>>     /*
>> @@ -112,6 +117,9 @@ struct optee_std_call {
>>       paddr_t guest_arg_ipa;
>>       int optee_thread_id;
>>       int rpc_op;
>> +    /* Saved buffer type for the last buffer allocate request */
>
> Looking at the code, it feels to me you are saving the buffer type for
> the current command and not the last. Did I miss anything?
Yes, right. Will rename.

>> +    unsigned int rpc_buffer_type;
>> +    enum optee_call_state state;
>>       uint64_t rpc_data_cookie;
>>       bool in_flight;
>>       register_t rpc_params[2];
>> @@ -299,6 +307,7 @@ static struct optee_std_call *allocate_std_call(struct 
>> optee_domain *ctx)
>>         call->optee_thread_id = -1;
>>       call->in_flight = true;
>> +    call->state = OPTEEM_CALL_NORMAL;
>>         spin_lock(&ctx->lock);
>>       list_add_tail(&call->list, &ctx->call_list);
>> @@ -1075,6 +1084,10 @@ static int handle_rpc_return(struct optee_domain *ctx,
>>               ret = -ERESTART;
>>           }
>>   +        /* Save the buffer type in case we will want to free it
>> */
>> +        if ( shm_rpc->xen_arg->cmd == OPTEE_RPC_CMD_SHM_ALLOC )
>> +            call->rpc_buffer_type = shm_rpc->xen_arg->params[0].u.value.a;
>> +
>>           unmap_domain_page(shm_rpc->xen_arg);
>>       }
>>   @@ -1239,18 +1252,102 @@ err:
>>       return;
>>   }
>>   +/*
>> + * Prepare RPC request to free shared buffer in the same way, as
>> + * OP-TEE does this.
>> + *
>> + * Return values:
>> + *  true  - successfully prepared RPC request
>> + *  false - there was an error
>> + */
>> +static bool issue_rpc_cmd_free(struct optee_domain *ctx,
>> +                               struct cpu_user_regs *regs,
>> +                               struct optee_std_call *call,
>> +                               struct shm_rpc *shm_rpc,
>> +                               uint64_t cookie)
>> +{
>> +    register_t r1, r2;
>> +
>> +    /* In case if guest will forget to update it with meaningful value */
>> +    shm_rpc->xen_arg->ret = TEEC_ERROR_GENERIC;
>> +    shm_rpc->xen_arg->cmd = OPTEE_RPC_CMD_SHM_FREE;
>> +    shm_rpc->xen_arg->num_params = 1;
>> +    shm_rpc->xen_arg->params[0].attr = OPTEE_MSG_ATTR_TYPE_VALUE_INPUT;
>> +    shm_rpc->xen_arg->params[0].u.value.a = call->rpc_buffer_type;
>> +    shm_rpc->xen_arg->params[0].u.value.b = cookie;
>> +
>> +    if ( access_guest_memory_by_ipa(current->domain,
>> +                                    gfn_to_gaddr(shm_rpc->gfn),
>> +                                    shm_rpc->xen_arg,
>> +                                    OPTEE_MSG_GET_ARG_SIZE(1),
>> +                                    true) )
>> +    {
>> +        /*
>> +         * Well, this is quite bad. We have error in error path.
>> +         * This can happen only if guest behaves badly, so all
>> +         * we can do is to return error to OP-TEE and leave
>> +         * guest's memory leaked.
>
> Could you expand a bit more what you mean by "guest's memory leaked"?
There will be memory leak somewhere in the guest. Yes, looks
like it is misleading...

What I mean, is that OP-TEE requests guest to allocate some
memory. Guest does not know, when OP-TEE finishes using this memory, so
guest will free the memory only by OP-TEE's request. We can't emulate
this request in current circumstances, so guest will keep part of own
memory reserved for OP-TEE infinitely.

> What the state of the page from Xen PoV?
From Xen point of view all will be perfectly fine.

> I.e. is there any reference
> taken by the OP-TEE mediator? Will the page be freed once the guest is
> destroyed?...
As I said, it has nothing to do with the page as Xen it sees. Mediator
will call put_page() prior to entering this function. So, no Xen
resources are used.

>
>> +         */
>> +        shm_rpc->xen_arg->ret = TEEC_ERROR_GENERIC;
>> +        shm_rpc->xen_arg->num_params = 0;
>> +
>> +        return false;
>> +    }
>> +
>> +    uint64_to_regpair(&r1, &r2, shm_rpc->cookie);
>> +
>> +    call->state = OPTEEM_CALL_XEN_RPC;
>> +    call->rpc_op = OPTEE_SMC_RPC_FUNC_CMD;
>> +    call->rpc_params[0] = r1;
>> +    call->rpc_params[1] = r2;
>> +    call->optee_thread_id = get_user_reg(regs, 3);
>> +
>> +    set_user_reg(regs, 0, OPTEE_SMC_RETURN_RPC_CMD);
>> +    set_user_reg(regs, 1, r1);
>> +    set_user_reg(regs, 2, r2);
>> +
>> +    return true;
>> +}
>> +
>> +/* Handles return from Xen-issued RPC */
>> +static void handle_xen_rpc_return(struct optee_domain *ctx,
>> +                                  struct cpu_user_regs *regs,
>> +                                  struct optee_std_call *call,
>> +                                  struct shm_rpc *shm_rpc)
>> +{
>> +    call->state = OPTEEM_CALL_NORMAL;
>> +
>> +    /*
>> +     * Right now we have only one reason to be there - we asked guest
>> +     * to free shared buffer and it did it. Now we can tell OP-TEE that
>> +     * buffer allocation failed.
>> +     */
>
> Should we add an ASSERT to ensure the command is the one we expect?
It is strange, that it is missing, actually. Looks like I forgot to add
it. But, looking at xen-error-handling, maybe BOG_ON() would be better?

>> +
>> +    /*
>> +     * We are not checking return value from a guest because we assume
>> +     * that OPTEE_RPC_CMD_SHM_FREE newer fails.
>
> s/newer/never/
Oops. Thank you.

>> +     */
>> +
>> +    shm_rpc->xen_arg->ret = TEEC_ERROR_GENERIC;
>> +    shm_rpc->xen_arg->num_params = 0;
>> +}
>> +
>>   /*
>>    * This function is called when guest is finished processing RPC
>>    * request from OP-TEE and wished to resume the interrupted standard
>>    * call.
>> + *
>> + * Return values:
>> + *  false - there was an error, do not call OP-TEE
>> + *  true  - success, proceed as normal
>>    */
>> -static void handle_rpc_cmd_alloc(struct optee_domain *ctx,
>> +static bool handle_rpc_cmd_alloc(struct optee_domain *ctx,
>>                                    struct cpu_user_regs *regs,
>>                                    struct optee_std_call *call,
>>                                    struct shm_rpc *shm_rpc)
>>   {
>>       if ( shm_rpc->xen_arg->ret || shm_rpc->xen_arg->num_params != 1 )
>> -        return;
>> +        return true;
>>         if ( shm_rpc->xen_arg->params[0].attr !=
>> (OPTEE_MSG_ATTR_TYPE_TMEM_OUTPUT |
>>                                                 OPTEE_MSG_ATTR_NONCONTIG) )
>> @@ -1258,7 +1355,7 @@ static void handle_rpc_cmd_alloc(struct optee_domain 
>> *ctx,
>>           gdprintk(XENLOG_WARNING,
>>                    "Invalid attrs for shared mem buffer: %"PRIx64"\n",
>>                    shm_rpc->xen_arg->params[0].attr);
>> -        return;
>> +        return true;
>>       }
>>         /* Free pg list for buffer */
>> @@ -1274,21 +1371,14 @@ static void handle_rpc_cmd_alloc(struct optee_domain 
>> *ctx,
>>       {
>>           call->rpc_data_cookie = 0;
>>           /*
>> -         * Okay, so there was problem with guest's buffer and we need
>> -         * to tell about this to OP-TEE.
>> -         */
>> -        shm_rpc->xen_arg->ret = TEEC_ERROR_GENERIC;
>> -        shm_rpc->xen_arg->num_params = 0;
>> -        /*
>> -         * TODO: With current implementation, OP-TEE will not issue
>> -         * RPC to free this buffer. Guest and OP-TEE will be out of
>> -         * sync: guest believes that it provided buffer to OP-TEE,
>> -         * while OP-TEE thinks of opposite. Ideally, we need to
>> -         * emulate RPC with OPTEE_MSG_RPC_CMD_SHM_FREE command.
>> +         * We are unable to translate guest's buffer, so we need tell guest
>> +         * to free it, before returning error to OP-TEE.
>
> Do you mean "reporting" instead of "returning"?
Yes, I do.

> Also s/error/an error/
Sure. Thank you.

--
Volodymyr Babchuk at EPAM
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