[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [PATCH 4/8] xen/blkfront: don't trust the backend response data blindly
On 08.07.21 08:52, Jan Beulich wrote: On 08.07.2021 08:40, Juergen Gross wrote:On 08.07.21 08:37, Jan Beulich wrote:On 08.07.2021 07:47, Juergen Gross wrote:On 17.05.21 17:33, Jan Beulich wrote:On 17.05.2021 17:22, Juergen Gross wrote:On 17.05.21 17:12, Jan Beulich wrote:On 17.05.2021 16:23, Juergen Gross wrote:On 17.05.21 16:11, Jan Beulich wrote:On 13.05.2021 12:02, Juergen Gross wrote:@@ -1574,10 +1580,16 @@ static irqreturn_t blkif_interrupt(int irq, void *dev_id) spin_lock_irqsave(&rinfo->ring_lock, flags); again: rp = rinfo->ring.sring->rsp_prod; + if (RING_RESPONSE_PROD_OVERFLOW(&rinfo->ring, rp)) { + pr_alert("%s: illegal number of responses %u\n", + info->gd->disk_name, rp - rinfo->ring.rsp_cons); + goto err; + } rmb(); /* Ensure we see queued responses up to 'rp'. */I think you want to insert after the barrier.Why? The relevant variable which is checked is "rp". The result of the check is in no way depending on the responses themselves. And any change of rsp_cons is protected by ring_lock, so there is no possibility of reading an old value here.But this is a standard double read situation: You might check a value and then (via a separate read) use a different one past the barrier.Yes and no. rsp_cons should never be written by the other side, and additionally it would be read multiple times anyway.But I'm talking about rsp_prod, as that's what rp gets loaded from.Oh, now I get your problem. But shouldn't that better be solved by using READ_ONCE() for reading rp instead?Not sure - the rmb() is needed anyway aiui, and hence you could as well move your code addition.Sure. My question was rather: does the rmb() really eliminate the possibility of a double read introduced by the compiler? If yes, moving the code is the correct solution.It doesn't eliminate the possibility of a double read, but (leaving aside split accesses) that's not what you care about here. What you need is a single stable value to operate on. No matter how many (non-split) reads the compiler may issue to fill "rp", the final read's value will be used in the subsequent calculation. Or at least that's been my understanding; thinking about it the compiler might issue multiple reads into distinct registers ahead of the barrier, and use different registers for different subsequent operations. While this would look like intentionally inefficient code generation to me, you may indeed want to play safe and use ACCESS_ONCE() _and_ the barrier. I guess there are more places then which would want similar treatment, and it's not a problem that this change introduces ... Nevertheless I think I can change it right away. It will also help against load tearing. Juergen Attachment:
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