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Message-ID: <87o8p8mlfx.fsf@cloudflare.com>
Date: Wed, 24 Jun 2020 19:18:42 +0200
From: Jakub Sitnicki <jakub@...udflare.com>
To: bpf@...r.kernel.org
Cc: netdev@...r.kernel.org, kernel-team@...udflare.com,
Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@...com>
Subject: Re: [PATCH bpf-next v2 2/3] bpf, netns: Keep attached programs in bpf_prog_array
On Tue, Jun 23, 2020 at 12:34 PM CEST, Jakub Sitnicki wrote:
> Prepare for having multi-prog attachments for new netns attach types by
> storing programs to run in a bpf_prog_array, which is well suited for
> iterating over programs and running them in sequence.
>
> Because bpf_prog_array is dynamically resized, after this change a
> potentially blocking memory allocation in bpf(PROG_QUERY) callback can
> happen, in order to collect program IDs before copying the values to
> user-space supplied buffer. This forces us to adapt how we protect access
> to the attached program in the callback. As bpf_prog_array_copy_to_user()
> helper can sleep, we switch from an RCU read lock to holding a mutex that
> serializes updaters.
>
> To handle bpf(PROG_ATTACH) scenario when we are replacing an already
> attached program, we introduce a new bpf_prog_array helper called
> bpf_prog_array_replace_item that will exchange the old program with a new
> one. bpf-cgroup does away with such helper by computing an index into the
> array from a program position in an external list of attached
> programs/links. Such approach fails when a dummy prog is left in the array
> after a memory allocation failure on link release, but is necessary in
> bpf-cgroup case because the same BPF program can be present in the array
> multiple times due to inheritance, and attachment cannot be reliably
> identified by bpf_prog pointer comparison.
>
> No functional changes intended.
>
> Acked-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@...com>
> Signed-off-by: Jakub Sitnicki <jakub@...udflare.com>
> ---
> include/linux/bpf.h | 3 +
> include/net/netns/bpf.h | 5 +-
> kernel/bpf/core.c | 20 ++++--
> kernel/bpf/net_namespace.c | 137 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++----------
> net/core/flow_dissector.c | 21 +++---
> 5 files changed, 132 insertions(+), 54 deletions(-)
>
[...]
> diff --git a/kernel/bpf/net_namespace.c b/kernel/bpf/net_namespace.c
> index b951dab2687f..593523a22168 100644
> --- a/kernel/bpf/net_namespace.c
> +++ b/kernel/bpf/net_namespace.c
[...]
> @@ -93,8 +108,16 @@ static int bpf_netns_link_update_prog(struct bpf_link *link,
> goto out_unlock;
> }
>
> + run_array = rcu_dereference_protected(net->bpf.run_array[type],
> + lockdep_is_held(&netns_bpf_mutex));
> + if (run_array)
> + ret = bpf_prog_array_replace_item(run_array, link->prog, new_prog);
Thinking about this some more, link update should fail with -EINVAL if
new_prog already exists in run_array. Same as PROG_ATTACH fails with
-EINVAL when trying to attach the same prog for the second time.
Otherwise, LINK_UPDATE can lead to having same BPF prog present multiple
times in the prog_array, once attaching more than one prog gets enabled.
Then we would we end up with the same challenge as bpf-cgroup, that is
how to find the program index into the prog_array in presence of
dummy_prog's.
> + else
> + ret = -ENOENT;
> + if (ret)
> + goto out_unlock;
> +
> old_prog = xchg(&link->prog, new_prog);
> - rcu_assign_pointer(net->bpf.progs[type], new_prog);
> bpf_prog_put(old_prog);
>
> out_unlock:
[...]
> @@ -217,14 +249,25 @@ int netns_bpf_prog_attach(const union bpf_attr *attr, struct bpf_prog *prog)
> if (ret)
> goto out_unlock;
>
> - attached = rcu_dereference_protected(net->bpf.progs[type],
> - lockdep_is_held(&netns_bpf_mutex));
> + attached = net->bpf.progs[type];
> if (attached == prog) {
> /* The same program cannot be attached twice */
> ret = -EINVAL;
> goto out_unlock;
> }
> - rcu_assign_pointer(net->bpf.progs[type], prog);
> +
> + run_array = rcu_dereference_protected(net->bpf.run_array[type],
> + lockdep_is_held(&netns_bpf_mutex));
> + if (run_array) {
> + ret = bpf_prog_array_replace_item(run_array, attached, prog);
I didn't consider here that there can be a run_array with a dummy_prog
from a link release that failed to allocate memory.
In such case bpf_prog_array_replace_item will fail, while we actually
want to replace the dummy_prog.
The right thing to do is to replace the first item in prog array:
if (run_array) {
WRITE_ONCE(run_array->items[0].prog, prog);
} else {
/* allocate a bpf_prog_array */
}
This leaves just one user of bpf_prog_array_replace_item(), so I think
I'm just going to fold it into its only caller, that is the update_prog
callback.
> + } else {
> + ret = bpf_prog_array_copy(NULL, NULL, prog, &run_array);
> + rcu_assign_pointer(net->bpf.run_array[type], run_array);
> + }
> + if (ret)
> + goto out_unlock;
> +
> + net->bpf.progs[type] = prog;
> if (attached)
> bpf_prog_put(attached);
>
[...]
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