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  • David Howells's avatar
    rxrpc: Fix deadlock between call creation and sendmsg/recvmsg · 540b1c48
    David Howells authored
    
    
    All the routines by which rxrpc is accessed from the outside are serialised
    by means of the socket lock (sendmsg, recvmsg, bind,
    rxrpc_kernel_begin_call(), ...) and this presents a problem:
    
     (1) If a number of calls on the same socket are in the process of
         connection to the same peer, a maximum of four concurrent live calls
         are permitted before further calls need to wait for a slot.
    
     (2) If a call is waiting for a slot, it is deep inside sendmsg() or
         rxrpc_kernel_begin_call() and the entry function is holding the socket
         lock.
    
     (3) sendmsg() and recvmsg() or the in-kernel equivalents are prevented
         from servicing the other calls as they need to take the socket lock to
         do so.
    
     (4) The socket is stuck until a call is aborted and makes its slot
         available to the waiter.
    
    Fix this by:
    
     (1) Provide each call with a mutex ('user_mutex') that arbitrates access
         by the users of rxrpc separately for each specific call.
    
     (2) Make rxrpc_sendmsg() and rxrpc_recvmsg() unlock the socket as soon as
         they've got a call and taken its mutex.
    
         Note that I'm returning EWOULDBLOCK from recvmsg() if MSG_DONTWAIT is
         set but someone else has the lock.  Should I instead only return
         EWOULDBLOCK if there's nothing currently to be done on a socket, and
         sleep in this particular instance because there is something to be
         done, but we appear to be blocked by the interrupt handler doing its
         ping?
    
     (3) Make rxrpc_new_client_call() unlock the socket after allocating a new
         call, locking its user mutex and adding it to the socket's call tree.
         The call is returned locked so that sendmsg() can add data to it
         immediately.
    
         From the moment the call is in the socket tree, it is subject to
         access by sendmsg() and recvmsg() - even if it isn't connected yet.
    
     (4) Lock new service calls in the UDP data_ready handler (in
         rxrpc_new_incoming_call()) because they may already be in the socket's
         tree and the data_ready handler makes them live immediately if a user
         ID has already been preassigned.
    
         Note that the new call is locked before any notifications are sent
         that it is live, so doing mutex_trylock() *ought* to always succeed.
         Userspace is prevented from doing sendmsg() on calls that are in a
         too-early state in rxrpc_do_sendmsg().
    
     (5) Make rxrpc_new_incoming_call() return the call with the user mutex
         held so that a ping can be scheduled immediately under it.
    
         Note that it might be worth moving the ping call into
         rxrpc_new_incoming_call() and then we can drop the mutex there.
    
     (6) Make rxrpc_accept_call() take the lock on the call it is accepting and
         release the socket after adding the call to the socket's tree.  This
         is slightly tricky as we've dequeued the call by that point and have
         to requeue it.
    
         Note that requeuing emits a trace event.
    
     (7) Make rxrpc_kernel_send_data() and rxrpc_kernel_recv_data() take the
         new mutex immediately and don't bother with the socket mutex at all.
    
    This patch has the nice bonus that calls on the same socket are now to some
    extent parallelisable.
    
    Note that we might want to move rxrpc_service_prealloc() calls out from the
    socket lock and give it its own lock, so that we don't hang progress in
    other calls because we're waiting for the allocator.
    
    We probably also want to avoid calling rxrpc_notify_socket() from within
    the socket lock (rxrpc_accept_call()).
    
    Signed-off-by: default avatarDavid Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
    Tested-by: default avatarMarc Dionne <marc.c.dionne@auristor.com>
    Signed-off-by: default avatarDavid S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
    540b1c48