[Intel-gfx] [PATCH v2] drm/i915/active: Fix misuse of non-idle barriers as fence trackers
Andi Shyti
andi.shyti at linux.intel.com
Thu Mar 2 00:42:05 UTC 2023
Hi Janusz,
On Sat, Feb 25, 2023 at 11:12:18PM +0100, Janusz Krzysztofik wrote:
> Users reported oopses on list corruptions when using i915 perf with a
> number of concurrently running graphics applications. Root cause analysis
> pointed at an issue in barrier processing code -- a race among perf open /
> close replacing active barriers with perf requests on kernel context and
> concurrent barrier preallocate / acquire operations performed during user
> context first pin / last unpin.
>
> When adding a request to a composite tracker, we try to reuse an existing
> fence tracker, already allocated and registered with that composite. The
> tracker we obtain may already track another fence, may be an idle barrier,
> or an active barrier.
>
> If the tracker we get occurs a non-idle barrier then we try to delete that
> barrier from a list of barrier tasks it belongs to. However, while doing
> that we don't respect return value from a function that performs the
> barrier deletion. Should the deletion ever failed, we would end up
> reusing the tracker still registered as a barrier task. Since the same
> structure field is reused with both fence callback lists and barrier
> tasks list, list corruptions would likely occur.
>
> Barriers are now deleted from a barrier tasks list by temporarily removing
> the list content, traversing that content with skip over the node to be
> deleted, then populating the list back with the modified content. Should
> that intentionally racy concurrent deletion attempts be not serialized,
> one or more of those may fail because of the list being temporary empty.
>
> Related code that ignores the results of barrier deletion was initially
> introduced in v5.4 by commit d8af05ff38ae ("drm/i915: Allow sharing the
> idle-barrier from other kernel requests"). However, all users of the
> barrier deletion routine were apparently serialized at that time, then the
> issue didn't exhibit itself. Results of git bisect with help of a newly
> developed igt at gem_barrier_race@remote-request IGT test indicate that list
> corruptions might start to appear after commit 311770173fac ("drm/i915/gt:
> Schedule request retirement when timeline idles"), introduced in v5.5.
>
> Respect results of barrier deletion attempts -- mark the barrier as idle
> only if successfully deleted from the list. Then, before proceeding with
> setting our fence as the one currently tracked, make sure that the tracker
> we've got is not a non-idle barrier. If that check fails then don't use
> that tracker but go back and try to acquire a new, usable one.
>
> v2: no code changes,
> - blame commit 311770173fac ("drm/i915/gt: Schedule request retirement
> when timeline idles"), v5.5, not commit d8af05ff38ae ("drm/i915: Allow
> sharing the idle-barrier from other kernel requests"), v5.4,
> - reword commit description.
That's a very good explanation and very much needed for such a
catch. Thanks!
> Closes: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/drm/intel/-/issues/6333
> Fixes: 311770173fac ("drm/i915/gt: Schedule request retirement when timeline idles")
> Cc: Chris Wilson <chris at chris-wilson.co.uk>
> Cc: stable at vger.kernel.org # v5.5
> Signed-off-by: Janusz Krzysztofik <janusz.krzysztofik at linux.intel.com>
> ---
> drivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_active.c | 25 ++++++++++++++-----------
> 1 file changed, 14 insertions(+), 11 deletions(-)
>
> diff --git a/drivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_active.c b/drivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_active.c
> index 7412abf166a8c..f9282b8c87c1c 100644
> --- a/drivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_active.c
> +++ b/drivers/gpu/drm/i915/i915_active.c
> @@ -422,12 +422,12 @@ replace_barrier(struct i915_active *ref, struct i915_active_fence *active)
> * we can use it to substitute for the pending idle-barrer
> * request that we want to emit on the kernel_context.
> */
> - __active_del_barrier(ref, node_from_active(active));
> - return true;
> + return __active_del_barrier(ref, node_from_active(active));
In general, I support the idea of always checking the return
value, even if we expect a certain outcome. In these cases, the
likely/unlikely macros can be helpful. Given this change, I
believe the patch deserves an ack.
That being said, I was curious whether using an explicit lock
and a normal list of active barriers, rather than a lockless
list, could have solved the problem. It seems like using a
lockless list and iterating over it could be overkill, unless
there are specific scenarios where the lockless properties are
necessary.
Of course, this may be something to consider in a future cleanup,
as it may be outside the scope of this particular patch.
> }
>
> int i915_active_add_request(struct i915_active *ref, struct i915_request *rq)
> {
> + u64 idx = i915_request_timeline(rq)->fence_context;
> struct dma_fence *fence = &rq->fence;
> struct i915_active_fence *active;
> int err;
> @@ -437,16 +437,19 @@ int i915_active_add_request(struct i915_active *ref, struct i915_request *rq)
> if (err)
> return err;
>
> - active = active_instance(ref, i915_request_timeline(rq)->fence_context);
> - if (!active) {
> - err = -ENOMEM;
> - goto out;
> - }
> + do {
> + active = active_instance(ref, idx);
> + if (!active) {
> + err = -ENOMEM;
> + goto out;
> + }
> +
> + if (replace_barrier(ref, active)) {
> + RCU_INIT_POINTER(active->fence, NULL);
> + atomic_dec(&ref->count);
> + }
> + } while (is_barrier(active));
unlikely()?
It's worth noting that for each iteration, we are rebuilding the
list of barriers. Therefore, I believe it may be necessary to
perform a cleanup within the replace_barrier() function.
Thanks,
Andi
>
> - if (replace_barrier(ref, active)) {
> - RCU_INIT_POINTER(active->fence, NULL);
> - atomic_dec(&ref->count);
> - }
> if (!__i915_active_fence_set(active, fence))
> __i915_active_acquire(ref);
>
> --
> 2.25.1
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