// SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-only /* * Context tracking: Probe on high level context boundaries such as kernel * and userspace. This includes syscalls and exceptions entry/exit. * * This is used by RCU to remove its dependency on the timer tick while a CPU * runs in userspace. * * Started by Frederic Weisbecker: * * Copyright (C) 2012 Red Hat, Inc., Frederic Weisbecker * * Many thanks to Gilad Ben-Yossef, Paul McKenney, Ingo Molnar, Andrew Morton, * Steven Rostedt, Peter Zijlstra for suggestions and improvements. * */ #include #include #include #include #include #include DEFINE_PER_CPU(struct context_tracking, context_tracking) = { #ifdef CONFIG_CONTEXT_TRACKING_IDLE .dynticks = ATOMIC_INIT(1), #endif }; EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(context_tracking); #ifdef CONFIG_CONTEXT_TRACKING_IDLE noinstr void ct_idle_enter(void) { rcu_idle_enter(); } EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(ct_idle_enter); void ct_idle_exit(void) { rcu_idle_exit(); } EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(ct_idle_exit); /** * ct_irq_enter - inform RCU that current CPU is entering irq away from idle * * Enter an interrupt handler, which might possibly result in exiting * idle mode, in other words, entering the mode in which read-side critical * sections can occur. The caller must have disabled interrupts. * * Note that the Linux kernel is fully capable of entering an interrupt * handler that it never exits, for example when doing upcalls to user mode! * This code assumes that the idle loop never does upcalls to user mode. * If your architecture's idle loop does do upcalls to user mode (or does * anything else that results in unbalanced calls to the irq_enter() and * irq_exit() functions), RCU will give you what you deserve, good and hard. * But very infrequently and irreproducibly. * * Use things like work queues to work around this limitation. * * You have been warned. * * If you add or remove a call to ct_irq_enter(), be sure to test with * CONFIG_RCU_EQS_DEBUG=y. */ noinstr void ct_irq_enter(void) { lockdep_assert_irqs_disabled(); ct_nmi_enter(); } /** * ct_irq_exit - inform RCU that current CPU is exiting irq towards idle * * Exit from an interrupt handler, which might possibly result in entering * idle mode, in other words, leaving the mode in which read-side critical * sections can occur. The caller must have disabled interrupts. * * This code assumes that the idle loop never does anything that might * result in unbalanced calls to irq_enter() and irq_exit(). If your * architecture's idle loop violates this assumption, RCU will give you what * you deserve, good and hard. But very infrequently and irreproducibly. * * Use things like work queues to work around this limitation. * * You have been warned. * * If you add or remove a call to ct_irq_exit(), be sure to test with * CONFIG_RCU_EQS_DEBUG=y. */ noinstr void ct_irq_exit(void) { lockdep_assert_irqs_disabled(); ct_nmi_exit(); } /* * Wrapper for ct_irq_enter() where interrupts are enabled. * * If you add or remove a call to ct_irq_enter_irqson(), be sure to test * with CONFIG_RCU_EQS_DEBUG=y. */ void ct_irq_enter_irqson(void) { unsigned long flags; local_irq_save(flags); ct_irq_enter(); local_irq_restore(flags); } /* * Wrapper for ct_irq_exit() where interrupts are enabled. * * If you add or remove a call to ct_irq_exit_irqson(), be sure to test * with CONFIG_RCU_EQS_DEBUG=y. */ void ct_irq_exit_irqson(void) { unsigned long flags; local_irq_save(flags); ct_irq_exit(); local_irq_restore(flags); } noinstr void ct_nmi_enter(void) { rcu_nmi_enter(); } noinstr void ct_nmi_exit(void) { rcu_nmi_exit(); } #endif /* #ifdef CONFIG_CONTEXT_TRACKING_IDLE */ #ifdef CONFIG_CONTEXT_TRACKING_USER #define CREATE_TRACE_POINTS #include DEFINE_STATIC_KEY_FALSE(context_tracking_key); EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(context_tracking_key); static noinstr bool context_tracking_recursion_enter(void) { int recursion; recursion = __this_cpu_inc_return(context_tracking.recursion); if (recursion == 1) return true; WARN_ONCE((recursion < 1), "Invalid context tracking recursion value %d\n", recursion); __this_cpu_dec(context_tracking.recursion); return false; } static __always_inline void context_tracking_recursion_exit(void) { __this_cpu_dec(context_tracking.recursion); } /** * __ct_user_enter - Inform the context tracking that the CPU is going * to enter user or guest space mode. * * This function must be called right before we switch from the kernel * to user or guest space, when it's guaranteed the remaining kernel * instructions to execute won't use any RCU read side critical section * because this function sets RCU in extended quiescent state. */ void noinstr __ct_user_enter(enum ctx_state state) { /* Kernel threads aren't supposed to go to userspace */ WARN_ON_ONCE(!current->mm); if (!context_tracking_recursion_enter()) return; if ( __this_cpu_read(context_tracking.state) != state) { if (__this_cpu_read(context_tracking.active)) { /* * At this stage, only low level arch entry code remains and * then we'll run in userspace. We can assume there won't be * any RCU read-side critical section until the next call to * user_exit() or ct_irq_enter(). Let's remove RCU's dependency * on the tick. */ if (state == CONTEXT_USER) { instrumentation_begin(); trace_user_enter(0); vtime_user_enter(current); instrumentation_end(); } rcu_user_enter(); } /* * Even if context tracking is disabled on this CPU, because it's outside * the full dynticks mask for example, we still have to keep track of the * context transitions and states to prevent inconsistency on those of * other CPUs. * If a task triggers an exception in userspace, sleep on the exception * handler and then migrate to another CPU, that new CPU must know where * the exception returns by the time we call exception_exit(). * This information can only be provided by the previous CPU when it called * exception_enter(). * OTOH we can spare the calls to vtime and RCU when context_tracking.active * is false because we know that CPU is not tickless. */ __this_cpu_write(context_tracking.state, state); } context_tracking_recursion_exit(); } EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(__ct_user_enter); /* * OBSOLETE: * This function should be noinstr but the below local_irq_restore() is * unsafe because it involves illegal RCU uses through tracing and lockdep. * This is unlikely to be fixed as this function is obsolete. The preferred * way is to call __context_tracking_enter() through user_enter_irqoff() * or context_tracking_guest_enter(). It should be the arch entry code * responsibility to call into context tracking with IRQs disabled. */ void ct_user_enter(enum ctx_state state) { unsigned long flags; /* * Some contexts may involve an exception occuring in an irq, * leading to that nesting: * ct_irq_enter() rcu_user_exit() rcu_user_exit() ct_irq_exit() * This would mess up the dyntick_nesting count though. And rcu_irq_*() * helpers are enough to protect RCU uses inside the exception. So * just return immediately if we detect we are in an IRQ. */ if (in_interrupt()) return; local_irq_save(flags); __ct_user_enter(state); local_irq_restore(flags); } NOKPROBE_SYMBOL(ct_user_enter); EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(ct_user_enter); /** * user_enter_callable() - Unfortunate ASM callable version of user_enter() for * archs that didn't manage to check the context tracking * static key from low level code. * * This OBSOLETE function should be noinstr but it unsafely calls * local_irq_restore(), involving illegal RCU uses through tracing and lockdep. * This is unlikely to be fixed as this function is obsolete. The preferred * way is to call user_enter_irqoff(). It should be the arch entry code * responsibility to call into context tracking with IRQs disabled. */ void user_enter_callable(void) { user_enter(); } NOKPROBE_SYMBOL(user_enter_callable); /** * __ct_user_exit - Inform the context tracking that the CPU is * exiting user or guest mode and entering the kernel. * * This function must be called after we entered the kernel from user or * guest space before any use of RCU read side critical section. This * potentially include any high level kernel code like syscalls, exceptions, * signal handling, etc... * * This call supports re-entrancy. This way it can be called from any exception * handler without needing to know if we came from userspace or not. */ void noinstr __ct_user_exit(enum ctx_state state) { if (!context_tracking_recursion_enter()) return; if (__this_cpu_read(context_tracking.state) == state) { if (__this_cpu_read(context_tracking.active)) { /* * We are going to run code that may use RCU. Inform * RCU core about that (ie: we may need the tick again). */ rcu_user_exit(); if (state == CONTEXT_USER) { instrumentation_begin(); vtime_user_exit(current); trace_user_exit(0); instrumentation_end(); } } __this_cpu_write(context_tracking.state, CONTEXT_KERNEL); } context_tracking_recursion_exit(); } EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(__ct_user_exit); /* * OBSOLETE: * This function should be noinstr but the below local_irq_save() is * unsafe because it involves illegal RCU uses through tracing and lockdep. * This is unlikely to be fixed as this function is obsolete. The preferred * way is to call __context_tracking_exit() through user_exit_irqoff() * or context_tracking_guest_exit(). It should be the arch entry code * responsibility to call into context tracking with IRQs disabled. */ void ct_user_exit(enum ctx_state state) { unsigned long flags; if (in_interrupt()) return; local_irq_save(flags); __ct_user_exit(state); local_irq_restore(flags); } NOKPROBE_SYMBOL(ct_user_exit); EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(ct_user_exit); /** * user_exit_callable() - Unfortunate ASM callable version of user_exit() for * archs that didn't manage to check the context tracking * static key from low level code. * * This OBSOLETE function should be noinstr but it unsafely calls local_irq_save(), * involving illegal RCU uses through tracing and lockdep. This is unlikely * to be fixed as this function is obsolete. The preferred way is to call * user_exit_irqoff(). It should be the arch entry code responsibility to * call into context tracking with IRQs disabled. */ void user_exit_callable(void) { user_exit(); } NOKPROBE_SYMBOL(user_exit_callable); void __init ct_cpu_track_user(int cpu) { static __initdata bool initialized = false; if (!per_cpu(context_tracking.active, cpu)) { per_cpu(context_tracking.active, cpu) = true; static_branch_inc(&context_tracking_key); } if (initialized) return; #ifdef CONFIG_HAVE_TIF_NOHZ /* * Set TIF_NOHZ to init/0 and let it propagate to all tasks through fork * This assumes that init is the only task at this early boot stage. */ set_tsk_thread_flag(&init_task, TIF_NOHZ); #endif WARN_ON_ONCE(!tasklist_empty()); initialized = true; } #ifdef CONFIG_CONTEXT_TRACKING_USER_FORCE void __init context_tracking_init(void) { int cpu; for_each_possible_cpu(cpu) ct_cpu_track_user(cpu); } #endif #endif /* #ifdef CONFIG_CONTEXT_TRACKING_USER */