Philippe Gerum wrote: > Jan Kiszka wrote: >> Jan Kiszka wrote: >>> Philippe Gerum wrote: >>>> Jan Kiszka wrote: >>>>> Philippe Gerum wrote: >>>>>> Jan Kiszka wrote: >>>>>>> This is an attempt to fix the broken root domain state adjustment in >>>>>>> __ipipe_handle_exception. Patch below fixes the issues recently reported >>>>>>> by Roman Pisl. Also, it currently makes much more sense to me than what >>>>>>> we have so far. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> In short, this patch propagates the hardware irq state into the root >>>>>>> domains stall flag shortly before calling into the Linux handler, and >>>>>>> only then. This avoids spurious root domain stalls the end up over the >>>>>>> wrong Linux context due to context switches between enter and exit of >>>>>>> ipipe_handle_exception. Also, this patch drops the bogus >>>>>>> local_irq_save/restore pair that doesn't account for Linux irq state >>>>>>> changes inside its fault handler. >>>>>>> >>>>>> Actually, it is not bogus at all, it is even mandatory on x86_64, given >>>>>> that we >>>>>> don't branch to any sysretq/iretq emulation unlike with x86_32. So if we >>>>>> don't >>>>>> restore the stall bit for the root domain properly there, we could end up >>>>>> running with interrupts off in user-space. >>>>>> >>>>>> However, the way the interrupt state is currently saved is wrong: we >>>>>> should not >>>>>> local_irq_disable() over non-root domains. Here is some on-line >>>>>> documentation to >>>>>> explain why: >>>>>> >>>>>> The main difference between x86_32 and 64 is that the former does >>>>>> virtualize the >>>>>> interrupt state in entry_32.S, unlike the latter. For that reason, >>>>>> x86_64 does >>>>>> not require (actually, we should not be doing) any fixup. So, to sum up: >>>>>> >>>>>> - we use fixup_if() to restore the virtual interrupt state properly when >>>>>> control >>>>>> is given back to the code that triggered the fault/exception (x86_32). >>>>>> We need >>>>>> to do that because of task migrations between primary and secondary >>>>>> modes. >>>>>> >>>>>> - we must clear the virtual interrupt flag before calling the I-pipe >>>>>> handler / >>>>>> Linux regular exception handler, because our callee may/must run in the >>>>>> root >>>>>> domain as well, and expect that interrupt state to reflect the hw one, >>>>>> as set by >>>>>> the x86 exception gate / fault prologue in entry_*.S. >>>>>> >>>>>> - because of the above, we must use >>>>>> local_irq_save()/local_irq_restore_nosync() >>>>>> in our fault handler to make sure to restore the virtual interrupt flag >>>>>> properly >>>>>> between this routine, and the exception return statement (i.e. during >>>>>> the Linux >>>>>> fault epilogue in entry_*.S). >>>>> OK, if there is a reason to enforce a stalled root domain while calling >>>>> into the exception hook, this makes some sense. But I don't think it is >>>>> formally correct to save the root state on entry and blindly restore it >>>>> _after_ calling the Linux handler. I rather think we should keep the >>>>> state that Linux leaves behind to remain transparent to it. Maybe no >>>>> practical issue ATM, but it makes the code at least illogical. >>>>> >>>> Please re-read the explanations, and you will find the logic. I cannot do >>>> anything more than re-hashing what I just said. What you perceive as >>>> illogical >>>> is actually the only sane way to do this. Formally speaking, a linux fault >>>> handler may NOT alter the interrupt state blindly, so we must be able to >>>> assume >>>> that we ought to restore it the way the lower code set it. >>> I got your first and second point, but they don't imply to me that the >>> third shall be correct as well. "...to make sure to restore the virtual >>> interrupt flag properly" is not directly an clear explanation (for me) >>> why we have to restore the flag across calls to the _Linux_ handler. We >>> can demand that the hook handler leaves the root state untouched, but >>> requiring the same from Linux is a restriction that you don't find in >>> the ipipe-less case, nor do I see the reason for this under ipipe control. >>> >> The make my question a bit more concrete (and help me writing the right >> comments around these lines): What makes the following change bogus, >> which scenario will fail? >> >> Index: b/arch/x86/kernel/ipipe.c >> =================================================================== >> --- a/arch/x86/kernel/ipipe.c >> +++ b/arch/x86/kernel/ipipe.c >> @@ -685,7 +685,9 @@ int __ipipe_handle_exception(struct pt_r >> } >> >> __ipipe_std_extable[vector](regs, error_code); >> - local_irq_restore_nosync(flags); >> + >> + __fixup_if(test_bit(IPIPE_STALL_FLAG, &ipipe_root_cpudom_var(status)), >> + regs); >> >> return 0; >> } >> > > > This would break the interrupt state on x86_64, because it is not virtualized > by
Hmm, __fixup_if is void on x86-64, so this was way off what I was trying to express. > the low level code (latency wise, this is not worth the burden). So your > exception path would stall the root domain, and never unstall it because you > do > not have any iretq/sysretq emulation; actually, you do not have any fixup. > This > would work on x86_32 for the converse reason though. OK, I finally understood this difference. (I guess it comes from a different code structure of entry_32.S compared to entry_64.S, right? So nothing we could unify on our own?) To clarify this for me: For 32 bit, the pipeline state after iret/sysret is calculated in the entry layer (in __ipipe_unstall_iret_root more precisely), so the local_irq_restore_nosync is actually of minor importance here, isn't it? Couldn't we skip it for this arch then? On 64 bit, we have to set the right pipeline state before returning to the entry layer because it won't be touched there at all. We currently do this based on the state found on exception entry, but we could also do it based on the regs.flags state that the Linux handler left behind (like we do on 32 bit). But the scenario I had in mind where this would actually make a difference turned out to be a red herring. I don't think Linux modifies regs.flags in its exception handlers. The ipipe pattern remains inconsistent IMHO, but it is practically irrelevant. Final question to explain the __fixup_if in __ipipe_handle_exception: That's due to the scenario where we migrate to the root domain while running the notify handler? We may return from that migration with some IF state in regs.flags that no longer matches the one found on exception entry, correct? Will stuff all this into a few lines of comments soon. Thanks for your patience, Jan
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