Re: [PATCH] mm/userfaultfd: selftests: Fix memory corruption with thp enabled

From: Axel Rasmussen
Date: Mon Sep 27 2021 - 13:47:33 EST


On Fri, Sep 24, 2021 at 12:59 PM Peter Xu <peterx@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> On Fri, Sep 24, 2021 at 10:21:30AM -0700, Axel Rasmussen wrote:
> > On Thu, Sep 23, 2021 at 4:25 PM Peter Xu <peterx@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > >
> > > In RHEL's gating selftests we've encountered memory corruption in the uffd
> > > event test even with upstream kernel:
> > >
> > > # ./userfaultfd anon 128 4
> > > nr_pages: 32768, nr_pages_per_cpu: 32768
> > > bounces: 3, mode: rnd racing read, userfaults: 6240 missing (6240) 14729 wp (14729)
> > > bounces: 2, mode: racing read, userfaults: 1444 missing (1444) 28877 wp (28877)
> > > bounces: 1, mode: rnd read, userfaults: 6055 missing (6055) 14699 wp (14699)
> > > bounces: 0, mode: read, userfaults: 82 missing (82) 25196 wp (25196)
> > > testing uffd-wp with pagemap (pgsize=4096): done
> > > testing uffd-wp with pagemap (pgsize=2097152): done
> > > testing events (fork, remap, remove): ERROR: nr 32427 memory corruption 0 1 (errno=0, line=963)
> > > ERROR: faulting process failed (errno=0, line=1117)
> > >
> > > It can be easily reproduced when global thp enabled, which is the default for
> > > RHEL.
> > >
> > > It's also known as a side effect of commit 0db282ba2c12 ("selftest: use mmap
> > > instead of posix_memalign to allocate memory", 2021-07-23), which is imho right
> > > itself on using mmap() to make sure the addresses will be untagged even on arm.
> > >
> > > The problem is, for each test we allocate buffers using two allocate_area()
> > > calls. We assumed these two buffers won't affect each other, however they
> > > could, because mmap() could have found that the two buffers are near each other
> > > and having the same VMA flags, so they got merged into one VMA.
> > >
> > > It won't be a big problem if thp is not enabled, but when thp is agressively
> > > enabled it means when initializing the src buffer it could accidentally setup
> > > part of the dest buffer too when there's a shared THP that overlaps the two
> > > regions. Then some of the dest buffer won't be able to be trapped by
> > > userfaultfd missing mode, then it'll cause memory corruption as described.
> > >
> > > To fix it, do release_pages() after initializing the src buffer.
> >
> > But, if I understand correctly, release_pages() will just free the
> > physical pages, but not touch the VMA(s). So, with the right
> > max_ptes_none setting, why couldn't khugepaged just decide to
> > re-collapse (with zero pages) immediately after we release the pages,
> > causing the same problem? It seems to me this change just
> > significantly narrows the race window (which explains why we see less
> > of the issue), but doesn't fix it fundamentally.
>
> Did you mean you can reproduce the issue even with this patch?

No, I haven't actually seen this happen after the patch. I suspect
with this patch the window for it to happen is small, so reproducing
may be hard. But from a theoretical standpoint, I don't see why it
couldn't happen.

>
> It is a good point anyway, indeed I don't see anything stops it from happening.
>
> I wanted to prepare a v2 by releasing the pages after uffdio registration where
> we'll do the vma split, but it won't simply work because release_pages() will
> cause the process to hang death since that test registers with EVENT_REMOVE,
> and release_pages() upon the thp will trigger synchronous EVENT_REMOVE which
> cannot be handled by anyone.
>
> Another solution is to map some PROT_NONE regions between the buffers, to make
> sure they won't share a VMA. I'll need to think more about which is better..

One possibility would be to MADV_NOHUGEPAGE the regions, which at
least would fix the immediate flakiness. Then we could spend some time
adding a test case which specifically targets THP interactions? (I do
think we want test coverage of that in the end, but with the current
tests it's kind of "accidental".)

>
> --
> Peter Xu
>