drm/amdkfd: Flush the process wq before creating a kfd_process

There is a race condition when re-creating a kfd_process for a process.
This has been observed when a process under the debugger executes
exec(3).  In this scenario:
- The process executes exec.
 - This will eventually release the process's mm, which will cause the
   kfd_process object associated with the process to be freed
   (kfd_process_free_notifier decrements the reference count to the
   kfd_process to 0).  This causes kfd_process_ref_release to enqueue
   kfd_process_wq_release to the kfd_process_wq.
- The debugger receives the PTRACE_EVENT_EXEC notification, and tries to
  re-enable AMDGPU traps (KFD_IOC_DBG_TRAP_ENABLE).
 - When handling this request, KFD tries to re-create a kfd_process.
   This eventually calls kfd_create_process and kobject_init_and_add.

At this point the call to kobject_init_and_add can fail because the
old kfd_process.kobj has not been freed yet by kfd_process_wq_release.

This patch proposes to avoid this race by making sure to drain
kfd_process_wq before creating a new kfd_process object.  This way, we
know that any cleanup task is done executing when we reach
kobject_init_and_add.

Signed-off-by: Lancelot SIX <lancelot.six@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Felix Kuehling <felix.kuehling@amd.com>
Signed-off-by: Alex Deucher <alexander.deucher@amd.com>
This commit is contained in:
Lancelot SIX 2024-04-10 14:14:13 +01:00 committed by Alex Deucher
parent 6f0c228ed9
commit f5b9053398
1 changed files with 8 additions and 0 deletions

View File

@ -829,6 +829,14 @@ struct kfd_process *kfd_create_process(struct task_struct *thread)
if (process) {
pr_debug("Process already found\n");
} else {
/* If the process just called exec(3), it is possible that the
* cleanup of the kfd_process (following the release of the mm
* of the old process image) is still in the cleanup work queue.
* Make sure to drain any job before trying to recreate any
* resource for this process.
*/
flush_workqueue(kfd_process_wq);
process = create_process(thread);
if (IS_ERR(process))
goto out;