From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: Anssi Hannula Subject: Re: [PATCH 3/3] net: macb: add missing barriers when reading buffers Date: Fri, 7 Dec 2018 14:00:02 +0200 Message-ID: <567c5ea6-d74d-5398-aee5-2b486ddff983@bitwise.fi> References: <20181130182137.27974-1-anssi.hannula@bitwise.fi> <20181130182137.27974-4-anssi.hannula@bitwise.fi> <6378cbaf-2c8d-3c22-2d2d-632c32c6195a@microchip.com> Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Cc: Nicolas.Ferre@microchip.com, davem@davemloft.net, netdev@vger.kernel.org To: Claudiu.Beznea@microchip.com Return-path: Received: from mail.bitwise.fi ([109.204.228.163]:35056 "EHLO mail.bitwise.fi" rhost-flags-OK-OK-OK-OK) by vger.kernel.org with ESMTP id S1725992AbeLGMAP (ORCPT ); Fri, 7 Dec 2018 07:00:15 -0500 In-Reply-To: Content-Language: en-US Sender: netdev-owner@vger.kernel.org List-ID: On 6.12.2018 16:14, Claudiu.Beznea@microchip.com wrote: > Hi Anssi, Hi! > On 05.12.2018 16:00, Anssi Hannula wrote: >> On 5.12.2018 14:37, Claudiu.Beznea@microchip.com wrote: >>> On 30.11.2018 20:21, Anssi Hannula wrote: >>>> When reading buffer descriptors on RX or on TX completion, an >>>> RX_USED/TX_USED bit is checked first to ensure that the descriptor has >>>> been populated. However, there are no memory barriers to ensure that the >>>> data protected by the RX_USED/TX_USED bit is up-to-date with respect to >>>> that bit. >>>> >>>> Fix that by adding DMA read memory barriers on those paths. >>>> >>>> I did not observe any actual issues caused by these being missing, >>>> though. >>>> >>>> Tested on a ZynqMP based system. >>>> >>>> Signed-off-by: Anssi Hannula >>>> Fixes: 89e5785fc8a6 ("[PATCH] Atmel MACB ethernet driver") >>>> Cc: Nicolas Ferre >>>> --- >>>> drivers/net/ethernet/cadence/macb_main.c | 20 ++++++++++++++++---- >>>> 1 file changed, 16 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-) >>>> >>>> diff --git a/drivers/net/ethernet/cadence/macb_main.c b/drivers/net/ethernet/cadence/macb_main.c >>>> index 430b7a0f5436..c93baa8621d5 100644 >>>> --- a/drivers/net/ethernet/cadence/macb_main.c >>>> +++ b/drivers/net/ethernet/cadence/macb_main.c >>>> @@ -861,6 +861,11 @@ static void macb_tx_interrupt(struct macb_queue *queue) >>>> >>>> /* First, update TX stats if needed */ >>>> if (skb) { >>>> + /* Ensure all of desc is at least as up-to-date >>>> + * as ctrl (TX_USED bit) >>>> + */ >>>> + dma_rmb(); >>>> + >>> Is this necessary? Wouldn't previous rmb() take care of this? At this time >>> data specific to this descriptor was completed. The TX descriptors for next >>> data to be send is updated under a locked spinlock. >> The previous rmb() is before the TX_USED check, so my understanding is >> that the following could happen in theory: > We are using this IP on and ARM architecture, so, with regards to rmb(), I > understand from [1] that dsb completes when: > "All explicit memory accesses before this instruction complete. > All Cache, Branch predictor and TLB maintenance operations before this > instruction complete." > >> 1. rmb(). > According to [1] this should end after all previous instructions (loads, > stores) ends. > >> 2. Reads are reordered so that TX timestamp is read first - no barriers >> are crossed. > But, as per [1], no onward instruction will be reached until all > instruction prior to dsb ends, so, after rmb() all descriptor's members > should be updated, right? The descriptor that triggered the TX interrupt should be visible now, yes. However, the controller may be writing to any other descriptors at the same time as the loop is processing through them, as there are multiple TX buffers. >> 3. HW writes timestamp and sets TX_USED (or they become visible). > I expect hardware to set TX_USED and timestamp before raising TX complete > interrupt. If so, there should be no on-flight updates of this descriptor, > right? Hardware raised a TX_USED bit read interrupt when it reads a > descriptor like this and hangs TX. For the first iteration of the loop, that is correct - there should be no in-flight writes from controller as it already raised the interrupt. However, the following iterations of the loop process descriptors that may or may not have the interrupt raised yet, and therefore may still have in-flight writes. >> 4. Code checks TX_USED. >> 5. Code operates on timestamp that is actually garbage. >> >> I'm not 100% sure that there isn't some lighter/cleaner way to do this >> than dma_rmb(), though. > If you still think this scenario could happen why not calling a dsb in > gem_ptp_do_timestamp(). I feel like that is a proper place to call it. OK, I will move it there. Unless we arrive at a conclusion that it is unnecessary altogether, of course :) > Moreover, there is bit 32 of desc->ctrl which tells you if a valid > timestamp was placed in the descriptor. But, again, I expect the timestamp > and TX_USED to be set by hardware before raising TX complete interrupt. Yes, but since my concern is that without barriers in between, desc->ctrl might be read after ts_1/ts_2, so that bit might be seen as set even though ts_1 is not yet an actual timestamp. And per above, all this may occur before the TX complete interrupt is raised for the descriptor in question. I agree that this TX case seems somewhat unlikely to be triggered in real life at least at present, though, as the ts_1/ts_2 read is so far after the desc->ctrl read, and behind function calls, so unlikely to be reordered before desc->ctrl read. But the similar RX cases below seem more problematic as the racy loads in question are right after each other in code. > [1] > http://infocenter.arm.com/help/index.jsp?topic=/com.arm.doc.dui0489c/CIHGHHIE.html > >>>> if (gem_ptp_do_txstamp(queue, skb, desc) == 0) { >>>> /* skb now belongs to timestamp buffer >>>> * and will be removed later >>>> @@ -1000,12 +1005,16 @@ static int gem_rx(struct macb_queue *queue, int budget) >>>> rmb(); >>>> >>>> rxused = (desc->addr & MACB_BIT(RX_USED)) ? true : false; >>>> - addr = macb_get_addr(bp, desc); >>>> - ctrl = desc->ctrl; >>>> >>>> if (!rxused) >>>> break; >>>> >>>> + /* Ensure other data is at least as up-to-date as rxused */ >>>> + dma_rmb(); >>> Same here, wouldn't previous rmb() should do this job? >> The scenario I'm concerned about here (and in the last hunk) is: >> >> 1. rmb(). >> 2. ctrl is read (i.e. ctrl read reordered before addr read). > Same here with regards to [1]. All prior loads, stores should be finished > when dsb ends. Yes, but the problematic loads are *after* the dsb. >> 3. HW updates to ctrl and addr become visible. >> 4. RX_USED check. >> 5. code operates on garbage ctrl. > If this is happen then the data will be read on next interrupt. As long as the RX_USED bit is set, the code in gem_rx() will either drop the frame or process it, depending on if it seems valid or not. It will not be processed again on next interrupt. I'll try to rephrase what I meant: 1. rmb(). This does nothing for loads that occur after it. 2. ctrl is loaded. It does not contain valid data yet. 3. HW receives a new frame and writes ctrl, addr, and they become visible to processor. 4. addr is loaded. It contains the RX_USED=1 as written in step 3. 5. Code does the RX_USED check, it sees 1 and continues processing the frame. 6. Code operates on ctrl, but as it was loaded before step 3, it contains old data. The old ctrl may e.g. cause the frame to be dropped due to the RX_SOF/RX_EOF check. > > dma_rmb() is a dmb. According to [1]: > "Data Memory Barrier acts as a memory barrier. It ensures that all explicit > memory accesses that appear in program order before the DMB instruction are > observed before any explicit memory accesses that appear in program order > after the DMB instruction. It does not affect the ordering of any other > instructions executing on the processor." > > and your code is: > > /* Ensure other data is at least as up-to-date as rxused */ > dma_rmb(); > > addr = macb_get_addr(bp, desc); > ctrl = desc->ctrl; > > I understand from this that you want to wait for instructions prior to > dma_rmb() to be finished? I want the load of "desc->addr" on the "rxused = (desc->addr & MACB_BIT(RX_USED)) ? true : false;" line to be observed before the later loads, such as "desc->ctrl". >> I think it may be OK to move the earlier rmb() outside the loop so that >> there is an rmb() only before and after the RX loop, as I don't at least >> immediately see any hard requirement to do it on each loop pass (unlike >> the added dma_rmb()). But my intent was to fix issues instead of >> optimization so I didn't look too closely into that. > But you said you did not see any issues with the code as it was previously. I meant that I have not observed any issues in practice (though I haven't really tried to), but I do see theoretical issues which this patch addresses. Especially the issues addressed by the two RX hunks seem entirely possible - the gem_rx() one requires the compiler to just reorder the two adjacent loads, and the macb_rx() one does not even require any reordering - desc->ctrl is read before desc->addr in the code. > Thank you, > Claudiu Beznea > >>>> + >>>> + addr = macb_get_addr(bp, desc); >>>> + ctrl = desc->ctrl; >>>> + >>>> queue->rx_tail++; >>>> count++; >>>> >>>> @@ -1180,11 +1189,14 @@ static int macb_rx(struct macb_queue *queue, int budget) >>>> /* Make hw descriptor updates visible to CPU */ >>>> rmb(); >>>> >>>> - ctrl = desc->ctrl; >>>> - >>>> if (!(desc->addr & MACB_BIT(RX_USED))) >>>> break; >>>> >>>> + /* Ensure other data is at least as up-to-date as addr */ >>>> + dma_rmb(); >>> Ditto >>> >>>> + >>>> + ctrl = desc->ctrl; >>>> + >>>> if (ctrl & MACB_BIT(RX_SOF)) { >>>> if (first_frag != -1) >>>> discard_partial_frame(queue, first_frag, tail); >>>> -- Anssi Hannula / Bitwise Oy +358 503803997