On 18/06/2021 16:42, Marc Zyngier wrote: > On 2021-06-18 15:40, Catalin Marinas wrote: >> On Fri, Jun 18, 2021 at 02:28:20PM +0100, Steven Price wrote: >>> mte_sync_tags() used test_and_set_bit() to set the PG_mte_tagged flag >>> before restoring/zeroing the MTE tags. However if another thread were to >>> race and attempt to sync the tags on the same page before the first >>> thread had completed restoring/zeroing then it would see the flag is >>> already set and continue without waiting. This would potentially expose >>> the previous contents of the tags to user space, and cause any updates >>> that user space makes before the restoring/zeroing has completed to >>> potentially be lost. >>> >>> Since this code is run from atomic contexts we can't just lock the page >>> during the process. Instead implement a new (global) spinlock to protect >>> the mte_sync_page_tags() function. >>> >>> Fixes: 34bfeea4a9e9 ("arm64: mte: Clear the tags when a page is >>> mapped in user-space with PROT_MTE") >>> Reviewed-by: Catalin Marinas <catalin.mari...@arm.com> >>> Signed-off-by: Steven Price <steven.pr...@arm.com> >> >> Although I reviewed this patch, I think we should drop it from this >> series and restart the discussion with the Chromium guys on what/if they >> need PROT_MTE with MAP_SHARED. It currently breaks if you have two >> PROT_MTE mappings but if they are ok with only one of the mappings being >> PROT_MTE, I'm happy to just document it. >> >> Not sure whether subsequent patches depend on it though. > > I'd certainly like it to be independent of the KVM series, specially > as this series is pretty explicit that this MTE lock is not required > for KVM.
Sure, since KVM no longer uses the lock we don't have the dependency - so I'll drop the first patch. > This will require some rework of patch #2, I believe. And while we're > at it, a rebase on 5.13-rc4 wouldn't hurt, as both patches #3 and #5 > conflict with it... Yeah there will be minor conflicts in patch #2 - but nothing major. I'll rebase as requested at the same time. Thanks, Steve