kernel_optimize_test/lib/idr.c
Matthew Wilcox 66ee620f06 idr: Permit any valid kernel pointer to be stored
An upcoming change to the encoding of internal entries will set the bottom
two bits to 0b10.  Unfortunately, m68k only aligns some data structures
to 2 bytes, so the IDR will interpret them as internal entries and things
will go badly wrong.

Change the radix tree so that it stops either when the node indicates
that it's the bottom of the tree (shift == 0) or when the entry is not an
internal entry.  This means we cannot insert an arbitrary kernel pointer
as a multiorder entry, but the IDR does not permit multiorder entries.

Annoyingly, this means the IDR can no longer take advantage of the radix
tree's ability to store a single entry at offset 0 without allocating
memory.  A pointer which is 2-byte aligned cannot be stored directly in
the root as it would be indistinguishable from a node, so we must allocate
a node in order to store a 2-byte pointer at index 0.  The idr_replace()
function does not take a GFP flags argument, so cannot allocate memory.
If a user inserts a 4-byte aligned pointer at index 0 and then replaces
it with a 2-byte aligned pointer, we must be able to store it.

Arbitrary pointer values are still not permitted; pointers of the
form 2 + (i * 4) for values of i between 0 and 1023 are reserved for
the implementation.  These are not valid kernel pointers as they would
point into the zero page.

This change does cause a runtime memory consumption regression for
the IDA.  I will recover that later.

Signed-off-by: Matthew Wilcox <willy@infradead.org>
Tested-by: Guenter Roeck <linux@roeck-us.net>
2018-09-29 22:47:48 -04:00

576 lines
17 KiB
C

#include <linux/bitmap.h>
#include <linux/bug.h>
#include <linux/export.h>
#include <linux/idr.h>
#include <linux/slab.h>
#include <linux/spinlock.h>
#include <linux/xarray.h>
DEFINE_PER_CPU(struct ida_bitmap *, ida_bitmap);
/**
* idr_alloc_u32() - Allocate an ID.
* @idr: IDR handle.
* @ptr: Pointer to be associated with the new ID.
* @nextid: Pointer to an ID.
* @max: The maximum ID to allocate (inclusive).
* @gfp: Memory allocation flags.
*
* Allocates an unused ID in the range specified by @nextid and @max.
* Note that @max is inclusive whereas the @end parameter to idr_alloc()
* is exclusive. The new ID is assigned to @nextid before the pointer
* is inserted into the IDR, so if @nextid points into the object pointed
* to by @ptr, a concurrent lookup will not find an uninitialised ID.
*
* The caller should provide their own locking to ensure that two
* concurrent modifications to the IDR are not possible. Read-only
* accesses to the IDR may be done under the RCU read lock or may
* exclude simultaneous writers.
*
* Return: 0 if an ID was allocated, -ENOMEM if memory allocation failed,
* or -ENOSPC if no free IDs could be found. If an error occurred,
* @nextid is unchanged.
*/
int idr_alloc_u32(struct idr *idr, void *ptr, u32 *nextid,
unsigned long max, gfp_t gfp)
{
struct radix_tree_iter iter;
void __rcu **slot;
unsigned int base = idr->idr_base;
unsigned int id = *nextid;
if (WARN_ON_ONCE(!(idr->idr_rt.gfp_mask & ROOT_IS_IDR)))
idr->idr_rt.gfp_mask |= IDR_RT_MARKER;
id = (id < base) ? 0 : id - base;
radix_tree_iter_init(&iter, id);
slot = idr_get_free(&idr->idr_rt, &iter, gfp, max - base);
if (IS_ERR(slot))
return PTR_ERR(slot);
*nextid = iter.index + base;
/* there is a memory barrier inside radix_tree_iter_replace() */
radix_tree_iter_replace(&idr->idr_rt, &iter, slot, ptr);
radix_tree_iter_tag_clear(&idr->idr_rt, &iter, IDR_FREE);
return 0;
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(idr_alloc_u32);
/**
* idr_alloc() - Allocate an ID.
* @idr: IDR handle.
* @ptr: Pointer to be associated with the new ID.
* @start: The minimum ID (inclusive).
* @end: The maximum ID (exclusive).
* @gfp: Memory allocation flags.
*
* Allocates an unused ID in the range specified by @start and @end. If
* @end is <= 0, it is treated as one larger than %INT_MAX. This allows
* callers to use @start + N as @end as long as N is within integer range.
*
* The caller should provide their own locking to ensure that two
* concurrent modifications to the IDR are not possible. Read-only
* accesses to the IDR may be done under the RCU read lock or may
* exclude simultaneous writers.
*
* Return: The newly allocated ID, -ENOMEM if memory allocation failed,
* or -ENOSPC if no free IDs could be found.
*/
int idr_alloc(struct idr *idr, void *ptr, int start, int end, gfp_t gfp)
{
u32 id = start;
int ret;
if (WARN_ON_ONCE(start < 0))
return -EINVAL;
ret = idr_alloc_u32(idr, ptr, &id, end > 0 ? end - 1 : INT_MAX, gfp);
if (ret)
return ret;
return id;
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(idr_alloc);
/**
* idr_alloc_cyclic() - Allocate an ID cyclically.
* @idr: IDR handle.
* @ptr: Pointer to be associated with the new ID.
* @start: The minimum ID (inclusive).
* @end: The maximum ID (exclusive).
* @gfp: Memory allocation flags.
*
* Allocates an unused ID in the range specified by @nextid and @end. If
* @end is <= 0, it is treated as one larger than %INT_MAX. This allows
* callers to use @start + N as @end as long as N is within integer range.
* The search for an unused ID will start at the last ID allocated and will
* wrap around to @start if no free IDs are found before reaching @end.
*
* The caller should provide their own locking to ensure that two
* concurrent modifications to the IDR are not possible. Read-only
* accesses to the IDR may be done under the RCU read lock or may
* exclude simultaneous writers.
*
* Return: The newly allocated ID, -ENOMEM if memory allocation failed,
* or -ENOSPC if no free IDs could be found.
*/
int idr_alloc_cyclic(struct idr *idr, void *ptr, int start, int end, gfp_t gfp)
{
u32 id = idr->idr_next;
int err, max = end > 0 ? end - 1 : INT_MAX;
if ((int)id < start)
id = start;
err = idr_alloc_u32(idr, ptr, &id, max, gfp);
if ((err == -ENOSPC) && (id > start)) {
id = start;
err = idr_alloc_u32(idr, ptr, &id, max, gfp);
}
if (err)
return err;
idr->idr_next = id + 1;
return id;
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(idr_alloc_cyclic);
/**
* idr_remove() - Remove an ID from the IDR.
* @idr: IDR handle.
* @id: Pointer ID.
*
* Removes this ID from the IDR. If the ID was not previously in the IDR,
* this function returns %NULL.
*
* Since this function modifies the IDR, the caller should provide their
* own locking to ensure that concurrent modification of the same IDR is
* not possible.
*
* Return: The pointer formerly associated with this ID.
*/
void *idr_remove(struct idr *idr, unsigned long id)
{
return radix_tree_delete_item(&idr->idr_rt, id - idr->idr_base, NULL);
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(idr_remove);
/**
* idr_find() - Return pointer for given ID.
* @idr: IDR handle.
* @id: Pointer ID.
*
* Looks up the pointer associated with this ID. A %NULL pointer may
* indicate that @id is not allocated or that the %NULL pointer was
* associated with this ID.
*
* This function can be called under rcu_read_lock(), given that the leaf
* pointers lifetimes are correctly managed.
*
* Return: The pointer associated with this ID.
*/
void *idr_find(const struct idr *idr, unsigned long id)
{
return radix_tree_lookup(&idr->idr_rt, id - idr->idr_base);
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(idr_find);
/**
* idr_for_each() - Iterate through all stored pointers.
* @idr: IDR handle.
* @fn: Function to be called for each pointer.
* @data: Data passed to callback function.
*
* The callback function will be called for each entry in @idr, passing
* the ID, the entry and @data.
*
* If @fn returns anything other than %0, the iteration stops and that
* value is returned from this function.
*
* idr_for_each() can be called concurrently with idr_alloc() and
* idr_remove() if protected by RCU. Newly added entries may not be
* seen and deleted entries may be seen, but adding and removing entries
* will not cause other entries to be skipped, nor spurious ones to be seen.
*/
int idr_for_each(const struct idr *idr,
int (*fn)(int id, void *p, void *data), void *data)
{
struct radix_tree_iter iter;
void __rcu **slot;
int base = idr->idr_base;
radix_tree_for_each_slot(slot, &idr->idr_rt, &iter, 0) {
int ret;
unsigned long id = iter.index + base;
if (WARN_ON_ONCE(id > INT_MAX))
break;
ret = fn(id, rcu_dereference_raw(*slot), data);
if (ret)
return ret;
}
return 0;
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(idr_for_each);
/**
* idr_get_next() - Find next populated entry.
* @idr: IDR handle.
* @nextid: Pointer to an ID.
*
* Returns the next populated entry in the tree with an ID greater than
* or equal to the value pointed to by @nextid. On exit, @nextid is updated
* to the ID of the found value. To use in a loop, the value pointed to by
* nextid must be incremented by the user.
*/
void *idr_get_next(struct idr *idr, int *nextid)
{
struct radix_tree_iter iter;
void __rcu **slot;
unsigned long base = idr->idr_base;
unsigned long id = *nextid;
id = (id < base) ? 0 : id - base;
slot = radix_tree_iter_find(&idr->idr_rt, &iter, id);
if (!slot)
return NULL;
id = iter.index + base;
if (WARN_ON_ONCE(id > INT_MAX))
return NULL;
*nextid = id;
return rcu_dereference_raw(*slot);
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(idr_get_next);
/**
* idr_get_next_ul() - Find next populated entry.
* @idr: IDR handle.
* @nextid: Pointer to an ID.
*
* Returns the next populated entry in the tree with an ID greater than
* or equal to the value pointed to by @nextid. On exit, @nextid is updated
* to the ID of the found value. To use in a loop, the value pointed to by
* nextid must be incremented by the user.
*/
void *idr_get_next_ul(struct idr *idr, unsigned long *nextid)
{
struct radix_tree_iter iter;
void __rcu **slot;
unsigned long base = idr->idr_base;
unsigned long id = *nextid;
id = (id < base) ? 0 : id - base;
slot = radix_tree_iter_find(&idr->idr_rt, &iter, id);
if (!slot)
return NULL;
*nextid = iter.index + base;
return rcu_dereference_raw(*slot);
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(idr_get_next_ul);
/**
* idr_replace() - replace pointer for given ID.
* @idr: IDR handle.
* @ptr: New pointer to associate with the ID.
* @id: ID to change.
*
* Replace the pointer registered with an ID and return the old value.
* This function can be called under the RCU read lock concurrently with
* idr_alloc() and idr_remove() (as long as the ID being removed is not
* the one being replaced!).
*
* Returns: the old value on success. %-ENOENT indicates that @id was not
* found. %-EINVAL indicates that @ptr was not valid.
*/
void *idr_replace(struct idr *idr, void *ptr, unsigned long id)
{
struct radix_tree_node *node;
void __rcu **slot = NULL;
void *entry;
id -= idr->idr_base;
entry = __radix_tree_lookup(&idr->idr_rt, id, &node, &slot);
if (!slot || radix_tree_tag_get(&idr->idr_rt, id, IDR_FREE))
return ERR_PTR(-ENOENT);
__radix_tree_replace(&idr->idr_rt, node, slot, ptr, NULL);
return entry;
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(idr_replace);
/**
* DOC: IDA description
*
* The IDA is an ID allocator which does not provide the ability to
* associate an ID with a pointer. As such, it only needs to store one
* bit per ID, and so is more space efficient than an IDR. To use an IDA,
* define it using DEFINE_IDA() (or embed a &struct ida in a data structure,
* then initialise it using ida_init()). To allocate a new ID, call
* ida_alloc(), ida_alloc_min(), ida_alloc_max() or ida_alloc_range().
* To free an ID, call ida_free().
*
* ida_destroy() can be used to dispose of an IDA without needing to
* free the individual IDs in it. You can use ida_is_empty() to find
* out whether the IDA has any IDs currently allocated.
*
* IDs are currently limited to the range [0-INT_MAX]. If this is an awkward
* limitation, it should be quite straightforward to raise the maximum.
*/
/*
* Developer's notes:
*
* The IDA uses the functionality provided by the IDR & radix tree to store
* bitmaps in each entry. The IDR_FREE tag means there is at least one bit
* free, unlike the IDR where it means at least one entry is free.
*
* I considered telling the radix tree that each slot is an order-10 node
* and storing the bit numbers in the radix tree, but the radix tree can't
* allow a single multiorder entry at index 0, which would significantly
* increase memory consumption for the IDA. So instead we divide the index
* by the number of bits in the leaf bitmap before doing a radix tree lookup.
*
* As an optimisation, if there are only a few low bits set in any given
* leaf, instead of allocating a 128-byte bitmap, we use the 'exceptional
* entry' functionality of the radix tree to store BITS_PER_LONG - 2 bits
* directly in the entry. By being really tricksy, we could store
* BITS_PER_LONG - 1 bits, but there're diminishing returns after optimising
* for 0-3 allocated IDs.
*
* We allow the radix tree 'exceptional' count to get out of date. Nothing
* in the IDA nor the radix tree code checks it. If it becomes important
* to maintain an accurate exceptional count, switch the rcu_assign_pointer()
* calls to radix_tree_iter_replace() which will correct the exceptional
* count.
*
* The IDA always requires a lock to alloc/free. If we add a 'test_bit'
* equivalent, it will still need locking. Going to RCU lookup would require
* using RCU to free bitmaps, and that's not trivial without embedding an
* RCU head in the bitmap, which adds a 2-pointer overhead to each 128-byte
* bitmap, which is excessive.
*/
#define IDA_MAX (0x80000000U / IDA_BITMAP_BITS - 1)
static int ida_get_new_above(struct ida *ida, int start)
{
struct radix_tree_root *root = &ida->ida_rt;
void __rcu **slot;
struct radix_tree_iter iter;
struct ida_bitmap *bitmap;
unsigned long index;
unsigned bit, ebit;
int new;
index = start / IDA_BITMAP_BITS;
bit = start % IDA_BITMAP_BITS;
ebit = bit + RADIX_TREE_EXCEPTIONAL_SHIFT;
slot = radix_tree_iter_init(&iter, index);
for (;;) {
if (slot)
slot = radix_tree_next_slot(slot, &iter,
RADIX_TREE_ITER_TAGGED);
if (!slot) {
slot = idr_get_free(root, &iter, GFP_NOWAIT, IDA_MAX);
if (IS_ERR(slot)) {
if (slot == ERR_PTR(-ENOMEM))
return -EAGAIN;
return PTR_ERR(slot);
}
}
if (iter.index > index) {
bit = 0;
ebit = RADIX_TREE_EXCEPTIONAL_SHIFT;
}
new = iter.index * IDA_BITMAP_BITS;
bitmap = rcu_dereference_raw(*slot);
if (radix_tree_exception(bitmap)) {
unsigned long tmp = (unsigned long)bitmap;
ebit = find_next_zero_bit(&tmp, BITS_PER_LONG, ebit);
if (ebit < BITS_PER_LONG) {
tmp |= 1UL << ebit;
rcu_assign_pointer(*slot, (void *)tmp);
return new + ebit -
RADIX_TREE_EXCEPTIONAL_SHIFT;
}
bitmap = this_cpu_xchg(ida_bitmap, NULL);
if (!bitmap)
return -EAGAIN;
bitmap->bitmap[0] = tmp >> RADIX_TREE_EXCEPTIONAL_SHIFT;
rcu_assign_pointer(*slot, bitmap);
}
if (bitmap) {
bit = find_next_zero_bit(bitmap->bitmap,
IDA_BITMAP_BITS, bit);
new += bit;
if (new < 0)
return -ENOSPC;
if (bit == IDA_BITMAP_BITS)
continue;
__set_bit(bit, bitmap->bitmap);
if (bitmap_full(bitmap->bitmap, IDA_BITMAP_BITS))
radix_tree_iter_tag_clear(root, &iter,
IDR_FREE);
} else {
new += bit;
if (new < 0)
return -ENOSPC;
if (ebit < BITS_PER_LONG) {
bitmap = (void *)((1UL << ebit) |
RADIX_TREE_EXCEPTIONAL_ENTRY);
radix_tree_iter_replace(root, &iter, slot,
bitmap);
return new;
}
bitmap = this_cpu_xchg(ida_bitmap, NULL);
if (!bitmap)
return -EAGAIN;
__set_bit(bit, bitmap->bitmap);
radix_tree_iter_replace(root, &iter, slot, bitmap);
}
return new;
}
}
static void ida_remove(struct ida *ida, int id)
{
unsigned long index = id / IDA_BITMAP_BITS;
unsigned offset = id % IDA_BITMAP_BITS;
struct ida_bitmap *bitmap;
unsigned long *btmp;
struct radix_tree_iter iter;
void __rcu **slot;
slot = radix_tree_iter_lookup(&ida->ida_rt, &iter, index);
if (!slot)
goto err;
bitmap = rcu_dereference_raw(*slot);
if (radix_tree_exception(bitmap)) {
btmp = (unsigned long *)slot;
offset += RADIX_TREE_EXCEPTIONAL_SHIFT;
if (offset >= BITS_PER_LONG)
goto err;
} else {
btmp = bitmap->bitmap;
}
if (!test_bit(offset, btmp))
goto err;
__clear_bit(offset, btmp);
radix_tree_iter_tag_set(&ida->ida_rt, &iter, IDR_FREE);
if (radix_tree_exception(bitmap)) {
if (rcu_dereference_raw(*slot) ==
(void *)RADIX_TREE_EXCEPTIONAL_ENTRY)
radix_tree_iter_delete(&ida->ida_rt, &iter, slot);
} else if (bitmap_empty(btmp, IDA_BITMAP_BITS)) {
kfree(bitmap);
radix_tree_iter_delete(&ida->ida_rt, &iter, slot);
}
return;
err:
WARN(1, "ida_free called for id=%d which is not allocated.\n", id);
}
/**
* ida_destroy() - Free all IDs.
* @ida: IDA handle.
*
* Calling this function frees all IDs and releases all resources used
* by an IDA. When this call returns, the IDA is empty and can be reused
* or freed. If the IDA is already empty, there is no need to call this
* function.
*
* Context: Any context.
*/
void ida_destroy(struct ida *ida)
{
unsigned long flags;
struct radix_tree_iter iter;
void __rcu **slot;
xa_lock_irqsave(&ida->ida_rt, flags);
radix_tree_for_each_slot(slot, &ida->ida_rt, &iter, 0) {
struct ida_bitmap *bitmap = rcu_dereference_raw(*slot);
if (!radix_tree_exception(bitmap))
kfree(bitmap);
radix_tree_iter_delete(&ida->ida_rt, &iter, slot);
}
xa_unlock_irqrestore(&ida->ida_rt, flags);
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(ida_destroy);
/**
* ida_alloc_range() - Allocate an unused ID.
* @ida: IDA handle.
* @min: Lowest ID to allocate.
* @max: Highest ID to allocate.
* @gfp: Memory allocation flags.
*
* Allocate an ID between @min and @max, inclusive. The allocated ID will
* not exceed %INT_MAX, even if @max is larger.
*
* Context: Any context.
* Return: The allocated ID, or %-ENOMEM if memory could not be allocated,
* or %-ENOSPC if there are no free IDs.
*/
int ida_alloc_range(struct ida *ida, unsigned int min, unsigned int max,
gfp_t gfp)
{
int id = 0;
unsigned long flags;
if ((int)min < 0)
return -ENOSPC;
if ((int)max < 0)
max = INT_MAX;
again:
xa_lock_irqsave(&ida->ida_rt, flags);
id = ida_get_new_above(ida, min);
if (id > (int)max) {
ida_remove(ida, id);
id = -ENOSPC;
}
xa_unlock_irqrestore(&ida->ida_rt, flags);
if (unlikely(id == -EAGAIN)) {
if (!ida_pre_get(ida, gfp))
return -ENOMEM;
goto again;
}
return id;
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(ida_alloc_range);
/**
* ida_free() - Release an allocated ID.
* @ida: IDA handle.
* @id: Previously allocated ID.
*
* Context: Any context.
*/
void ida_free(struct ida *ida, unsigned int id)
{
unsigned long flags;
BUG_ON((int)id < 0);
xa_lock_irqsave(&ida->ida_rt, flags);
ida_remove(ida, id);
xa_unlock_irqrestore(&ida->ida_rt, flags);
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(ida_free);