Brian King brking@linux.vnet.ibm.com writes:
On 11/16/2017 01:33 PM, Jesse Brandeburg wrote:
On Thu, 16 Nov 2017 09:37:48 -0600 Brian King brking@linux.vnet.ibm.com wrote:
Resending as the first attempt is not showing up in the list archive.
This patch converts several network drivers to use smp_rmb rather than read_barrier_depends. The initial issue was discovered with ixgbe on a Power machine which resulted in skb list corruption due to fetching a stale skb pointer. More details can be found in the ixgbe patch description.
Thanks for the fix Brian, I bet it was a tough debug.
The only users in the entire kernel of read_barrier_depends() (not smp_read_barrier_depends) are the Intel network drivers.
Wouldn't it be better for power to just fix read_barrier_depends to do the right thing on power? The question I'm not sure of the answer to is: Is it really the wrong barrier to be using or is the implementation in the kernel powerpc wrong?
So I think the right thing might actually to be to: Fix arch powerpc read_barrier_depends to not be a noop, as the semantics of the read_barrier_depends seems to be sufficient to solve this problem, but it seems not to work for powerpc?
Jesse,
Thanks for the quick response.
Cc'ing linuxppc-dev as well.
I did think about changing the powerpc definition of read_barrier_depends, but after reading up on that barrier, decided it was not the correct barrier to be used in this context. Here is some good historical background on read_barrier_depends that I found, along with an example.
https://lwn.net/Articles/5159/
Since there is no data-dependency in the code in question here, I think the smp_rmb is the proper barrier to use.
Yes I agree.
The read_barrier_depends() is correct to order the load of eop_desc and then the dependent load of eop_desc->wb.status, but it's only required or does anything on Alpha.
For background, the code in question looks like this:
CPU 1 CPU2 ============================ ============================ 1: ixgbe_xmit_frame_ring ixgbe_clean_tx_irq 2: first->skb = skb eop_desc = tx_buffer->next_to_watch if (!eop_desc) break; 3: ixgbe_tx_map read_barrier_depends() if (!(eop_desc->wb.status) ... ) break; 4: wmb 5: first->next_to_watch = tx_desc napi_consume_skb(tx_buffer->skb ..); 6: writel(i, tx_ring->tail);
What we see on powerpc is that tx_buffer->skb on CPU2 is getting loaded prior to tx_buffer->next_to_watch. Changing the read_barrier_depends to a smp_rmb solves this and prevents us from dereferencing old pointer.
Right. Given that read_barrier_depends() is a nop, there's nothing there to order the load of tx_buffer->skb vs anything else.
If it's actually the load of tx_buffer->skb that's the issue then the smp_rmb() should really be immediately prior to that, rather than where the read_barrier_depends() currently is.
cheers