Re: [PATCH v3 11/13] xen/pvcalls: implement poll command

From: Stefano Stabellini
Date: Tue Sep 12 2017 - 19:13:25 EST


On Tue, 12 Sep 2017, Boris Ostrovsky wrote:
> On 09/12/2017 06:17 PM, Stefano Stabellini wrote:
> > On Tue, 12 Sep 2017, Boris Ostrovsky wrote:
> >>>>> +
> >>>>> +unsigned int pvcalls_front_poll(struct file *file, struct socket *sock,
> >>>>> + poll_table *wait)
> >>>>> +{
> >>>>> + struct pvcalls_bedata *bedata;
> >>>>> + struct sock_mapping *map;
> >>>>> +
> >>>>> + if (!pvcalls_front_dev)
> >>>>> + return POLLNVAL;
> >>>>> + bedata = dev_get_drvdata(&pvcalls_front_dev->dev);
> >>>>> +
> >>>>> + map = (struct sock_mapping *) READ_ONCE(sock->sk->sk_send_head);
> >>>> I just noticed this --- why is it READ_ONCE? Are you concerned that
> >>>> sk_send_head may change?
> >>> No, but I wanted to avoid partial reads. A caller could call
> >>> pvcalls_front_accept and pvcalls_front_poll on newsock almost at the
> >>> same time (it is probably not the correct way to use the API), I wanted
> >>> to make sure that "map" is either read correctly, or not read at all.
> >> How can you have a partial read on a pointer?
> > I don't think that the compiler makes any promises on translating a
> > pointer read into a single read instruction. Of couse, I expect gcc to
> > actually do it without any need for READ/WRITE_ONCE.
>
> READ_ONCE() only guarantees ordering but not atomicity. It resolves (for
> 64-bit pointers) to
>
> case 8: *(__u64 *)res = *(volatile __u64 *)p; break;
>
> so if compiler was breaking accesses into two then nothing would have
> prevented it from breaking them here (I don't think volatile declaration
> would affect this). Moreover, for sizes >8 bytes READ_ONCE() is
> __builtin_memcpy() which is definitely not atomic.
>
> So you can't rely on READ_ONCE being atomic from that perspective.

I thought that READ_ONCE guaranteed atomicity for sizes less or equal to
the machine word size. It doesn't make any atomicity guarantees for
sizes >8 bytes.


> OTOH, I am pretty sure pointer accesses are guaranteed to be atomic. For
> example, atomic64_read() is READ_ONCE(u64), which (per above) is
> dereferencing of a 64-bit pointer in C.

I am happy to remove the READ_ONCE and WRITE_ONCE, if we all think it is
safe.