Commit 1e98d8c5 authored by Matthew Brost's avatar Matthew Brost Committed by John Harrison

drm/i915: Hold reference to intel_context over life of i915_request

Hold a reference to the intel_context over life of an i915_request.
Without this an i915_request can exist after the context has been
destroyed (e.g. request retired, context closed, but user space holds a
reference to the request from an out fence). In the case of GuC
submission + virtual engine, the engine that the request references is
also destroyed which can trigger bad pointer dref in fence ops (e.g.
i915_fence_get_driver_name). We could likely change
i915_fence_get_driver_name to avoid touching the engine but let's just
be safe and hold the intel_context reference.

v2:
 (John Harrison)
  - Update comment explaining how GuC mode and execlists mode deal with
    virtual engines differently
Signed-off-by: default avatarMatthew Brost <matthew.brost@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: default avatarJohn Harrison <John.C.Harrison@Intel.com>
Signed-off-by: default avatarJohn Harrison <John.C.Harrison@Intel.com>
Link: https://patchwork.freedesktop.org/patch/msgid/20210727002348.97202-4-matthew.brost@intel.com
parent 96d3e0e1
......@@ -125,39 +125,17 @@ static void i915_fence_release(struct dma_fence *fence)
i915_sw_fence_fini(&rq->semaphore);
/*
* Keep one request on each engine for reserved use under mempressure
*
* We do not hold a reference to the engine here and so have to be
* very careful in what rq->engine we poke. The virtual engine is
* referenced via the rq->context and we released that ref during
* i915_request_retire(), ergo we must not dereference a virtual
* engine here. Not that we would want to, as the only consumer of
* the reserved engine->request_pool is the power management parking,
* which must-not-fail, and that is only run on the physical engines.
*
* Since the request must have been executed to be have completed,
* we know that it will have been processed by the HW and will
* not be unsubmitted again, so rq->engine and rq->execution_mask
* at this point is stable. rq->execution_mask will be a single
* bit if the last and _only_ engine it could execution on was a
* physical engine, if it's multiple bits then it started on and
* could still be on a virtual engine. Thus if the mask is not a
* power-of-two we assume that rq->engine may still be a virtual
* engine and so a dangling invalid pointer that we cannot dereference
*
* For example, consider the flow of a bonded request through a virtual
* engine. The request is created with a wide engine mask (all engines
* that we might execute on). On processing the bond, the request mask
* is reduced to one or more engines. If the request is subsequently
* bound to a single engine, it will then be constrained to only
* execute on that engine and never returned to the virtual engine
* after timeslicing away, see __unwind_incomplete_requests(). Thus we
* know that if the rq->execution_mask is a single bit, rq->engine
* can be a physical engine with the exact corresponding mask.
* Keep one request on each engine for reserved use under mempressure,
* do not use with virtual engines as this really is only needed for
* kernel contexts.
*/
if (is_power_of_2(rq->execution_mask) &&
!cmpxchg(&rq->engine->request_pool, NULL, rq))
if (!intel_engine_is_virtual(rq->engine) &&
!cmpxchg(&rq->engine->request_pool, NULL, rq)) {
intel_context_put(rq->context);
return;
}
intel_context_put(rq->context);
kmem_cache_free(global.slab_requests, rq);
}
......@@ -956,7 +934,19 @@ __i915_request_create(struct intel_context *ce, gfp_t gfp)
}
}
rq->context = ce;
/*
* Hold a reference to the intel_context over life of an i915_request.
* Without this an i915_request can exist after the context has been
* destroyed (e.g. request retired, context closed, but user space holds
* a reference to the request from an out fence). In the case of GuC
* submission + virtual engine, the engine that the request references
* is also destroyed which can trigger bad pointer dref in fence ops
* (e.g. i915_fence_get_driver_name). We could likely change these
* functions to avoid touching the engine but let's just be safe and
* hold the intel_context reference. In execlist mode the request always
* eventually points to a physical engine so this isn't an issue.
*/
rq->context = intel_context_get(ce);
rq->engine = ce->engine;
rq->ring = ce->ring;
rq->execution_mask = ce->engine->mask;
......@@ -1033,6 +1023,7 @@ __i915_request_create(struct intel_context *ce, gfp_t gfp)
GEM_BUG_ON(!list_empty(&rq->sched.waiters_list));
err_free:
intel_context_put(ce);
kmem_cache_free(global.slab_requests, rq);
err_unreserve:
intel_context_unpin(ce);
......
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