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authorMarco Elver <elver@google.com>2021-06-07 15:56:53 +0300
committerPaul E. McKenney <paulmck@kernel.org>2021-07-20 23:49:44 +0300
commitd8fd74d35a8d3c602232e3238e916bda9d03d520 (patch)
treecb6e2461b1af5196bb1dfccc03adc288c120934e /fs/adfs
parent9c827cd1fcdf54bb50f874f91af0d5de2aceb035 (diff)
downloadlinux-d8fd74d35a8d3c602232e3238e916bda9d03d520.tar.xz
kcsan: permissive: Ignore data-racy 1-bit value changes
Add rules to ignore data-racy reads with only 1-bit value changes. Details about the rules are captured in comments in kernel/kcsan/permissive.h. More background follows. While investigating a number of data races, we've encountered data-racy accesses on flags variables to be very common. The typical pattern is a reader masking all but one bit, and/or the writer setting/clearing only 1 bit (current->flags being a frequently encountered case; more examples in mm/sl[au]b.c, which disable KCSAN for this reason). Since these types of data-racy accesses are common (with the assumption they are intentional and hard to miscompile) having the option (with CONFIG_KCSAN_PERMISSIVE=y) to filter them will avoid forcing everyone to mark them, and deliberately left to preference at this time. One important motivation for having this option built-in is to move closer to being able to enable KCSAN on CI systems or for testers wishing to test the whole kernel, while more easily filtering less interesting data races with higher probability. For the implementation, we considered several alternatives, but had one major requirement: that the rules be kept together with the Linux-kernel tree. Adding them to the compiler would preclude us from making changes quickly; if the rules require tweaks, having them part of the compiler requires waiting another ~1 year for the next release -- that's not realistic. We are left with the following options: 1. Maintain compiler plugins as part of the kernel-tree that removes instrumentation for some accesses (e.g. plain-& with 1-bit mask). The analysis would be reader-side focused, as no assumption can be made about racing writers. Because it seems unrealistic to maintain 2 plugins, one for LLVM and GCC, we would likely pick LLVM. Furthermore, no kernel infrastructure exists to maintain LLVM plugins, and the build-system implications and maintenance overheads do not look great (historically, plugins written against old LLVM APIs are not guaranteed to work with newer LLVM APIs). 2. Find a set of rules that can be expressed in terms of observed value changes, and make it part of the KCSAN runtime. The analysis is writer-side focused, given we rely on observed value changes. The approach taken here is (2). While a complete approach requires both (1) and (2), experiments show that the majority of data races involving trivial bit operations on flags variables can be removed with (2) alone. It goes without saying that the filtering of data races using (1) or (2) does _not_ guarantee they are safe! Therefore, limiting ourselves to (2) for now is the conservative choice for setups that wish to enable CONFIG_KCSAN_PERMISSIVE=y. Signed-off-by: Marco Elver <elver@google.com> Acked-by: Mark Rutland <mark.rutland@arm.com> Signed-off-by: Paul E. McKenney <paulmck@kernel.org>
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