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authorPaul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>2009-08-17 15:17:54 +1000
committerPaul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>2009-08-18 14:48:43 +1000
commit9c1e105238c474d19905af504f2e7f42d4f71f9e (patch)
tree39406fa1c36e5894f2eb48a7f5fbb787736118a4 /arch/powerpc/mm/stab.c
parent1660e9d3d04b6c636b7171bf6c08ac7b82a7de79 (diff)
powerpc: Allow perf_counters to access user memory at interrupt time
This provides a mechanism to allow the perf_counters code to access user memory in a PMU interrupt routine. Such an access can cause various kinds of interrupt: SLB miss, MMU hash table miss, segment table miss, or TLB miss, depending on the processor. This commit only deals with 64-bit classic/server processors, which use an MMU hash table. 32-bit processors are already able to access user memory at interrupt time. Since we don't soft-disable on 32-bit, we avoid the possibility of reentering hash_page or the TLB miss handlers, since they run with interrupts disabled. On 64-bit processors, an SLB miss interrupt on a user address will update the slb_cache and slb_cache_ptr fields in the paca. This is OK except in the case where a PMU interrupt occurs in switch_slb, which also accesses those fields. To prevent this, we hard-disable interrupts in switch_slb. Interrupts are already soft-disabled at this point, and will get hard-enabled when they get soft-enabled later. This also reworks slb_flush_and_rebolt: to avoid hard-disabling twice, and to make sure that it clears the slb_cache_ptr when called from other callers than switch_slb, the existing routine is renamed to __slb_flush_and_rebolt, which is called by switch_slb and the new version of slb_flush_and_rebolt. Similarly, switch_stab (used on POWER3 and RS64 processors) gets a hard_irq_disable() to protect the per-cpu variables used there and in ste_allocate. If a MMU hashtable miss interrupt occurs, normally we would call hash_page to look up the Linux PTE for the address and create a HPTE. However, hash_page is fairly complex and takes some locks, so to avoid the possibility of deadlock, we check the preemption count to see if we are in a (pseudo-)NMI handler, and if so, we don't call hash_page but instead treat it like a bad access that will get reported up through the exception table mechanism. An interrupt whose handler runs even though the interrupt occurred when soft-disabled (such as the PMU interrupt) is considered a pseudo-NMI handler, which should use nmi_enter()/nmi_exit() rather than irq_enter()/irq_exit(). Acked-by: Benjamin Herrenschmidt <benh@kernel.crashing.org> Signed-off-by: Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'arch/powerpc/mm/stab.c')
-rw-r--r--arch/powerpc/mm/stab.c11
1 files changed, 10 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/arch/powerpc/mm/stab.c b/arch/powerpc/mm/stab.c
index 98cd1dc2ae75..ab5fb48b3e90 100644
--- a/arch/powerpc/mm/stab.c
+++ b/arch/powerpc/mm/stab.c
@@ -164,7 +164,7 @@ void switch_stab(struct task_struct *tsk, struct mm_struct *mm)
{
struct stab_entry *stab = (struct stab_entry *) get_paca()->stab_addr;
struct stab_entry *ste;
- unsigned long offset = __get_cpu_var(stab_cache_ptr);
+ unsigned long offset;
unsigned long pc = KSTK_EIP(tsk);
unsigned long stack = KSTK_ESP(tsk);
unsigned long unmapped_base;
@@ -172,6 +172,15 @@ void switch_stab(struct task_struct *tsk, struct mm_struct *mm)
/* Force previous translations to complete. DRENG */
asm volatile("isync" : : : "memory");
+ /*
+ * We need interrupts hard-disabled here, not just soft-disabled,
+ * so that a PMU interrupt can't occur, which might try to access
+ * user memory (to get a stack trace) and possible cause an STAB miss
+ * which would update the stab_cache/stab_cache_ptr per-cpu variables.
+ */
+ hard_irq_disable();
+
+ offset = __get_cpu_var(stab_cache_ptr);
if (offset <= NR_STAB_CACHE_ENTRIES) {
int i;