On 2021/10/20 14:41, Viresh Kumar wrote:> On 20-10-21, 14:35, Jie Deng wrote: >> Yes, but we need to know what's the best value to be configured for a >> specific "other side". >> >> I think the "other side" should be more aware of what value is reasonable to >> be used. > If we _really_ need that, then it would require an update to the > specification first. > > I am not sure if the other side is the only party in play here. It > depends on the entire setup and not just the hardware device. > Specially with virtualisation things become really slow because of > context switches, etc. It may be better for the guest userspace to > decide on the value. > > Since this is specially for virtualisation, the kernel may set the > value to few HZ by default, lets say 10 (Yeah its really high) :).I'm OK with this way for the simplicity.
Vincent Whitchurch
2021-Oct-20 10:55 UTC
[PATCH 1/2] i2c: virtio: disable timeout handling
On Wed, Oct 20, 2021 at 09:04:45AM +0200, Jie Deng wrote:> On 2021/10/20 14:41, Viresh Kumar wrote: > > On 20-10-21, 14:35, Jie Deng wrote: > >> Yes, but we need to know what's the best value to be configured for a > >> specific "other side". > >> > >> I think the "other side" should be more aware of what value is reasonable to > >> be used. > > If we _really_ need that, then it would require an update to the > > specification first. > > > > I am not sure if the other side is the only party in play here. It > > depends on the entire setup and not just the hardware device. > > Specially with virtualisation things become really slow because of > > context switches, etc. It may be better for the guest userspace to > > decide on the value. > > > > Since this is specially for virtualisation, the kernel may set the > > value to few HZ by default, lets say 10 (Yeah its really high) :). > > I'm OK with this way for the simplicity.That would not be safe. Userspace can change this timeout and the end result with the current implementation of the driver is potentially kernel memory corruption, which is something userspace of course never should be able to trigger. Even if the timeout were hardcoded in the driver and the driver made to ignore what userspace requests, it would need to be set to a ridiculously high value so that we can guarantee that the timeout never ever occurs (since the result is potentially random kernel memory corruption). Which is basically equivalent to disabling the timeout entirely as my patch does. If the timeout cannot be disabled, then the driver should be fixed to always copy buffers and hold on to them to avoid memory corruption in the case of timeout, as I mentioned in my commit message. That would be quite a substantial change to the driver so it's not something I'm personally comfortable with doing, especially not this late in the -rc cycle, so I'd leave that to others.