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    sched_clock: Prevent 64bit inatomicity on 32bit systems · a1cbcaa9
    Thomas Gleixner authored
    
    
    The sched_clock_remote() implementation has the following inatomicity
    problem on 32bit systems when accessing the remote scd->clock, which
    is a 64bit value.
    
    CPU0			CPU1
    
    sched_clock_local()	sched_clock_remote(CPU0)
    ...
    			remote_clock = scd[CPU0]->clock
    			    read_low32bit(scd[CPU0]->clock)
    cmpxchg64(scd->clock,...)
    			    read_high32bit(scd[CPU0]->clock)
    
    While the update of scd->clock is using an atomic64 mechanism, the
    readout on the remote cpu is not, which can cause completely bogus
    readouts.
    
    It is a quite rare problem, because it requires the update to hit the
    narrow race window between the low/high readout and the update must go
    across the 32bit boundary.
    
    The resulting misbehaviour is, that CPU1 will see the sched_clock on
    CPU1 ~4 seconds ahead of it's own and update CPU1s sched_clock value
    to this bogus timestamp. This stays that way due to the clamping
    implementation for about 4 seconds until the synchronization with
    CLOCK_MONOTONIC undoes the problem.
    
    The issue is hard to observe, because it might only result in a less
    accurate SCHED_OTHER timeslicing behaviour. To create observable
    damage on realtime scheduling classes, it is necessary that the bogus
    update of CPU1 sched_clock happens in the context of an realtime
    thread, which then gets charged 4 seconds of RT runtime, which results
    in the RT throttler mechanism to trigger and prevent scheduling of RT
    tasks for a little less than 4 seconds. So this is quite unlikely as
    well.
    
    The issue was quite hard to decode as the reproduction time is between
    2 days and 3 weeks and intrusive tracing makes it less likely, but the
    following trace recorded with trace_clock=global, which uses
    sched_clock_local(), gave the final hint:
    
      <idle>-0   0d..30 400269.477150: hrtimer_cancel: hrtimer=0xf7061e80
      <idle>-0   0d..30 400269.477151: hrtimer_start:  hrtimer=0xf7061e80 ...
    irq/20-S-587 1d..32 400273.772118: sched_wakeup:   comm= ... target_cpu=0
      <idle>-0   0dN.30 400273.772118: hrtimer_cancel: hrtimer=0xf7061e80
    
    What happens is that CPU0 goes idle and invokes
    sched_clock_idle_sleep_event() which invokes sched_clock_local() and
    CPU1 runs a remote wakeup for CPU0 at the same time, which invokes
    sched_remote_clock(). The time jump gets propagated to CPU0 via
    sched_remote_clock() and stays stale on both cores for ~4 seconds.
    
    There are only two other possibilities, which could cause a stale
    sched clock:
    
    1) ktime_get() which reads out CLOCK_MONOTONIC returns a sporadic
       wrong value.
    
    2) sched_clock() which reads the TSC returns a sporadic wrong value.
    
    #1 can be excluded because sched_clock would continue to increase for
       one jiffy and then go stale.
    
    #2 can be excluded because it would not make the clock jump
       forward. It would just result in a stale sched_clock for one jiffy.
    
    After quite some brain twisting and finding the same pattern on other
    traces, sched_clock_remote() remained the only place which could cause
    such a problem and as explained above it's indeed racy on 32bit
    systems.
    
    So while on 64bit systems the readout is atomic, we need to verify the
    remote readout on 32bit machines. We need to protect the local->clock
    readout in sched_clock_remote() on 32bit as well because an NMI could
    hit between the low and the high readout, call sched_clock_local() and
    modify local->clock.
    
    Thanks to Siegfried Wulsch for bearing with my debug requests and
    going through the tedious tasks of running a bunch of reproducer
    systems to generate the debug information which let me decode the
    issue.
    
    Reported-by: default avatarSiegfried Wulsch <Siegfried.Wulsch@rovema.de>
    Acked-by: default avatarPeter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org>
    Cc: Steven Rostedt <rostedt@goodmis.org>
    Link: http://lkml.kernel.org/r/alpine.LFD.2.02.1304051544160.21884@ionos
    
    
    Signed-off-by: default avatarThomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de>
    Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
    a1cbcaa9