Re: lib/vdso: Make delta calculation work correctly

From: Vincenzo Frascino
Date: Wed Jun 26 2019 - 07:08:36 EST


Hi Thomas,

On 26/06/2019 11:02, Thomas Gleixner wrote:
> The x86 vdso implementation on which the generic vdso library is based on
> has subtle (unfortunately undocumented) twists:
>
> 1) The code assumes that the clocksource mask is U64_MAX which means that
> no bits are masked. Which is true for any valid x86 VDSO clocksource.
> Stupidly it still did the mask operation for no reason and at the wrong
> place right after reading the clocksource.
>
> 2) It contains a sanity check to catch the case where slightly
> unsynchronized TSC values can be overserved which would cause the delta
> calculation to make a huge jump. It therefore checks whether the
> current TSC value is larger than the value on which the current
> conversion is based on. If it's not larger the base value is used to
> prevent time jumps.
>
> #1 Is not only stupid for the X86 case because it does the masking for no
> reason it is also completely wrong for clocksources with a smaller mask
> which can legitimately wrap around during a conversion period. The core
> timekeeping code does it correct by applying the mask after the delta
> calculation:
>
> (now - base) & mask
>
> #2 is equally broken for clocksources which have smaller masks and can wrap
> around during a conversion period because there the now > base check is
> just wrong and causes stale time stamps and time going backwards issues.
>
> Unbreak it by:
>
> 1) Removing the mask operation from the clocksource read which makes the
> fallback detection work for all clocksources
>
> 2) Replacing the conditional delta calculation with a overrideable inline
> function.
>
> #2 could reuse clocksource_delta() from the timekeeping code but that
> results in a significant performance hit for the x86 VSDO. The timekeeping
> core code must have the non optimized version as it has to operate
> correctly with clocksources which have smaller masks as well to handle the
> case where TSC is discarded as timekeeper clocksource and replaced by HPET
> or pmtimer. For the VDSO there is no replacement clocksource. If TSC is
> unusable the syscall is enforced which does the right thing.
>
> To accomodate to the needs of various architectures provide an overrideable
> inline function which defaults to the regular delta calculation with
> masking:
>
> (now - base) & mask
>
> Override it for x86 with the non-masking and checking version.
>
> This unbreaks the ARM64 syscall fallback operation, allows to use
> clocksources with arbitrary width and preserves the performance
> optimization for x86.
>
> Signed-off-by: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>

A part a typo that leads to compilation errors on non-x86 platforms the rest
looks fine by me.

I tested it on arm64 and behaves correctly.

With this:

Reviewed-by: Vincenzo Frascino <vincenzo.frascino@xxxxxxx>

> ---
> arch/x86/include/asm/vdso/gettimeofday.h | 27 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++
> lib/vdso/gettimeofday.c | 19 +++++++++++++++----
> 2 files changed, 42 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-)
>
> --- a/arch/x86/include/asm/vdso/gettimeofday.h
> +++ b/arch/x86/include/asm/vdso/gettimeofday.h
> @@ -229,6 +229,33 @@ static __always_inline const struct vdso
> return __vdso_data;
> }
>
> +/*
> + * x86 specific delta calculation.
> + *
> + * The regular implementation assumes that clocksource reads are globally
> + * monotonic. The TSC can be slightly off across sockets which can cause
> + * the regular delta calculation (@cycles - @last) to return a huge time
> + * jump.
> + *
> + * Therefore it needs to be verified that @cycles are greater than
> + * @last. If not then use @last, which is the base time of the current
> + * conversion period.
> + *
> + * This variant also removes the masking of the subtraction because the
> + * clocksource mask of all VDSO capable clocksources on x86 is U64_MAX
> + * which would result in a pointless operation. The compiler cannot
> + * optimize it away as the mask comes from the vdso data and is not compile
> + * time constant.
> + */
> +static __always_inline
> +u64 vdso_calc_delta(u64 cycles, u64 last, u64 mask, u32 mult)
> +{
> + if (cycles > last)
> + return (cycles - last) * mult;
> + return 0;
> +}
> +#define vdso_calc_delta vdso_calc_delta
> +
> #endif /* !__ASSEMBLY__ */
>
> #endif /* __ASM_VDSO_GETTIMEOFDAY_H */
> --- a/lib/vdso/gettimeofday.c
> +++ b/lib/vdso/gettimeofday.c
> @@ -26,6 +26,18 @@
> #include <asm/vdso/gettimeofday.h>
> #endif /* ENABLE_COMPAT_VDSO */
>
> +#ifndef vdso_calc_delta
> +/*
> + * Default implementation which works for all sane clocksources. That
> + * obviously excludes x86/TSC.
> + */
> +static __always_inline
> +u64 vdso_calc_delta(u64 cycles, u64 last, u64 mask, u32 mult)
> +{
> + return ((cyles - last) & mask) * mult;

Typo here:

s/cyles/cycles/

> +}
> +#endif
> +
> static int do_hres(const struct vdso_data *vd, clockid_t clk,
> struct __kernel_timespec *ts)
> {
> @@ -35,14 +47,13 @@ static int do_hres(const struct vdso_dat
>
> do {
> seq = vdso_read_begin(vd);
> - cycles = __arch_get_hw_counter(vd->clock_mode) &
> - vd->mask;
> + cycles = __arch_get_hw_counter(vd->clock_mode);
> ns = vdso_ts->nsec;
> last = vd->cycle_last;
> if (unlikely((s64)cycles < 0))
> return clock_gettime_fallback(clk, ts);
> - if (cycles > last)
> - ns += (cycles - last) * vd->mult;
> +
> + ns += vdso_calc_delta(cycles, last, vd->mask, vd->mult);
> ns >>= vd->shift;
> sec = vdso_ts->sec;
> } while (unlikely(vdso_read_retry(vd, seq)));
>

--
Regards,
Vincenzo