On Fri, 2024-08-09 at 02:35 -0700, Dmitrii Kuvaiskii wrote:
On Thu, Jul 25, 2024 at 01:21:56PM +1200, Huang, Kai wrote:
Two enclave threads may try to add and remove the same enclave page simultaneously (e.g., if the SGX runtime supports both lazy allocation and MADV_DONTNEED semantics). Consider some enclave page added to the enclave. User space decides to temporarily remove this page (e.g., emulating the MADV_DONTNEED semantics) on CPU1. At the same time, user space performs a memory access on the same page on CPU2, which results in a #PF and ultimately in sgx_vma_fault(). Scenario proceeds as follows:
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Here, CPU1 removed the page. However CPU2 installed the PTE entry on the same page. This enclave page becomes perpetually inaccessible (until another SGX_IOC_ENCLAVE_REMOVE_PAGES ioctl). This is because the page is marked accessible in the PTE entry but is not EAUGed, and any subsequent access to this page raises a fault: with the kernel believing there to be a valid VMA, the unlikely error code X86_PF_SGX encountered by code path do_user_addr_fault() -> access_error() causes the SGX driver's sgx_vma_fault() to be skipped and user space receives a SIGSEGV instead. The userspace SIGSEGV handler cannot perform EACCEPT because the page was not EAUGed. Thus, the user space is stuck with the inaccessible page.
Reading the code, it seems the ioctl(sgx_ioc_enclave_modify_types) also zaps EPC mapping when converting a normal page to TSC. Thus IIUC it should also suffer this issue?
Technically yes, sgx_enclave_modify_types() has a similar code path and can be patched in a similar way.
Practically though, I can't imagine an SGX program or framework to allow a scenario when CPU1 modifies the type of the enclave page from REG to TCS and at the same time CPU2 performs a memory access on the same page. This would be clearly a bug in the SGX program/framework. For example, Gramine always follows the path of: create a new REG enclave page, modify it to TCS, only then start using it; i.e., there is never a point in time at which the REG page is allocated and ready to be converted to a TCS page, and some other thread/CPU accesses it in-between these steps.
I think we need to understand the consequence of such bug (assuming such behaviour is 100% a bug) both to kernel and to enclave.
To the kernel I don't see any big issue: for the sgx_vma_fault() path it will find the EPC page is already loaded thus just setup the mapping again; for the sgx_enclave_modify_types() path the worst case is __emodt() could fail, resulting in enclave being killed probably.
So if this race is 100% a bug, and will also certainly kill the enclave, then I guess it is fine not to handle. But there's an "assuming" here.
On the other hand, there's no risk if we apply BUSY flag here too. If it is a bug in enclave, then it can die anyway; otherwise it may survive.
TLDR: I can add similar handling to sgx_enclave_modify_types() if reviewers insist, but I don't see how this data race can ever be triggered by benign real-world SGX applications.
So as mentioned above, I intend to suggest to also apply the BUSY flag here. And we can have a consist rule in the kernel:
If an enclave page is under certainly operation by the kernel with the mapping removed, other threads trying to access that page are temporarily blocked and should retry.
But this is only my 2cents, and I'll leave to maintainers.