[PATCH 05/15] perf: Track guest callbacks on a per-CPU basis
Peter Zijlstra
peterz at infradead.org
Fri Aug 27 07:56:45 PDT 2021
On Fri, Aug 27, 2021 at 02:49:50PM +0000, Sean Christopherson wrote:
> On Fri, Aug 27, 2021, Peter Zijlstra wrote:
> > On Thu, Aug 26, 2021 at 05:57:08PM -0700, Sean Christopherson wrote:
> > > Use a per-CPU pointer to track perf's guest callbacks so that KVM can set
> > > the callbacks more precisely and avoid a lurking NULL pointer dereference.
> >
> > I'm completely failing to see how per-cpu helps anything here...
>
> It doesn't help until KVM is converted to set the per-cpu pointer in flows that
> are protected against preemption, and more specifically when KVM only writes to
> the pointer from the owning CPU.
So the 'problem' I have with this is that sane (!KVM using) people, will
still have to suffer that load, whereas with the static_call() we patch
in an 'xor %rax,%rax' and only have immediate code flow.
> Ignoring static call for the moment, I don't see how the unreg side can be safe
> using a bare single global pointer. There is no way for KVM to prevent an NMI
> from running in parallel on a different CPU. If there's a more elegant solution,
> especially something that can be backported, e.g. an rcu-protected pointer, I'm
> all for it. I went down the per-cpu path because it allowed for cleanups in KVM,
> but similar cleanups can be done without per-cpu perf callbacks.
If all the perf_guest_cbs dereferences are with preemption disabled
(IRQs disabled, IRQ context, NMI context included), then the sequence:
WRITE_ONCE(perf_guest_cbs, NULL);
synchronize_rcu();
Ensures that all prior observers of perf_guest_csb will have completed
and future observes must observe the NULL value.
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