[dpdk-dev] [PATCH] dpdk: Fix abort on double free.

Aaron Conole aconole at redhat.com
Tue Nov 29 16:57:10 CET 2016


Hi Ilya,

Ilya Maximets <i.maximets at samsung.com> writes:

> On 28.11.2016 21:55, Aaron Conole wrote:
>> Ilya Maximets <i.maximets at samsung.com> writes:
>> 
>>> According to DPDK API (lib/librte_eal/common/include/rte_eal.h):
>>>
>>> 	"After the call to rte_eal_init(), all arguments argv[x]
>>> 	 with x < ret may be modified and should not be accessed
>>> 	 by the application."
>>>
>>> This means, that OVS must not free the arguments passed to DPDK.
>>> In real world, 'rte_eal_init()' replaces the last argument in
>>> 'dpdk_argv' with the first one by doing this:
>> 
>> Thanks for spotting this error, Ilya.
>> 
>>> 	# eal_parse_args() from lib/librte_eal/linuxapp/eal/eal.c
>>>
>>> 	char *prgname = argv[0];
>>> 	...
>>> 	if (optind >= 0)
>>> 		argv[optind-1] = prgname;
>>>
>>> This leads to double free inside 'deferred_argv_release()' and
>>> possible ABORT at exit:
>> 
>> I haven't seen this, which is both shocking and scary - the commit which
>> does this copy is almost 4 years old;  did you have to do anything
>> specific for this behavior to occur?  Did something change in DPDK
>> recently that exposed this behavior?  Just wondering how you reproduced
>> it.
>
> Abort was caught up accidentally. I'm able to reproduce it on my a
> little unusual testing system (ARMv8 + Fedora 21 + clang 3.5) without
> any specific manipulations. The bug exists always but it's hard
> for libc to detect double free here because there are many other
> frees/allocations at exit time. I've used following patch to confirm
> the issue if it wasn't detected by libc:

Well, it's at least good that you can observe it consistently.  Did you
try my provided patch to see if that works as well?

> diff --git a/lib/dpdk.c b/lib/dpdk.c
> index 49a589a..65d2d28 100644
> --- a/lib/dpdk.c
> +++ b/lib/dpdk.c
> @@ -258,6 +258,8 @@ deferred_argv_release(void)
>  {
>      int result;
>      for (result = 0; result < dpdk_argc; ++result) {
> +        VLOG_INFO("DPDK ARGV release: %2d: 0x%" PRIx64 " (%s)",
> +                  result, (intptr_t)dpdk_argv[result], dpdk_argv[result]);
>          free(dpdk_argv[result]);
>      }
>  

It's quite glaring after studying the code.  Really good catch!

>> 
>>> *** Error in `ovs-vswitchd': double free or corruption (fasttop) <...> ***
>>> 	Program received signal SIGABRT, Aborted.
>>>
>>> 	#0  raise () from /lib64/libc.so.6
>>> 	#1  abort () from /lib64/libc.so.6
>>> 	#2  __libc_message () from /lib64/libc.so.6
>>> 	#3  free () from /lib64/libc.so.6
>>> 	#4  deferred_argv_release () at lib/dpdk.c:261
>>> 	#5  __run_exit_handlers () from /lib64/libc.so.6
>>> 	#6  exit () from /lib64/libc.so.6
>>> 	#7  __libc_start_main () from /lib64/libc.so.6
>>> 	#8  _start ()
>>>
>>> Fix that by not calling free for the memory passed to DPDK.
>>>
>>> CC: Aaron Conole <aconole at redhat.com>
>>> Fixes: bab694097133 ("netdev-dpdk: Convert initialization from
>>> cmdline to db")
>>> Signed-off-by: Ilya Maximets <i.maximets at samsung.com>
>>> ---
>> 
>> We need to free the memory - I think that is not a question;
>
> Actually, it is. According to DPDK API (see above) 'rte_eal_init()'
> takes the ownership of 'argv'. This means that we must not free
> or use this memory.

Apologies for the ranty-wall of text below.

DPDK *cannot* take ownership of freeing this memory, unless 1) it expects a
completely separate array from argv/argc than the one passed during
program execution and initialization, or 2) it expects the hosted
environment to give it the responsibility of cleaning this up.  It
explicitly claims that the argv/argc is what comes from main(), and
therefore should obey the restrictions and privileges afforded those
variables.

In fact, I don't even see anywhere that dpdk preserves argv, *at all*.
Looking through the history very quickly (admittedly just back to commit
af75078fece3615088e561357c1e97603e43a5fe in dpdk) confirms that dpdk
hasn't stored the arguments anywhere to do any processing.

DPDK api guide does NOT state that it takes possession - and that matches
with what happens in the code, BUT I will agree the statement

  'all arguments argv[x] with x < ret may be modified and should not be
  accessed by the application'

is a bit ambiguous.  I think it's trying to say that the application should do
its getopt()s parsing before calling the dpdk init routine, because DPDK libs
will change the array.  I don't see a reason for modifying the array in
the code (the `argv[optind-1] = progname`), but if the dpdk library wants
to do that, it is free to do so according to C99 5.1.2.2.1;  I think
it's best we always free what we allocate, which is why I suggested the
side array patch which stores additional pointers to the data to be
free'd up at exit.

I am not sure which is more appropriate, since this is an exit condition,
after all.  The memory will get free()d up eventually by the
environments on which OvS runs.  It doesn't _feel_ correct to leave the
memory dangling, since we can free it.

Anyone else have thoughts on this?

> Some thoughts:
> DPDK internally doesn't free this memory, but it's not the reason to
> touch it from the outside. Actually, DPDK API change required here to
> support freeing of this resources if needed. But until there is no
> 'rte_eal_uninit()' such API change isn't actually useful.
>
> Also, I forget to remove the variables. So, the following incremental
> to my original patch required:
>
> ------------------------------------
> diff --git a/lib/dpdk.c b/lib/dpdk.c
> index 2014946..4201149 100644
> --- a/lib/dpdk.c
> +++ b/lib/dpdk.c
> @@ -250,9 +250,6 @@ get_dpdk_args(const struct smap *ovs_other_config, char ***argv,
>      return i + extra_argc;
>  }
>  
> -static char **dpdk_argv;
> -static int dpdk_argc;
> -
>  static void
>  dpdk_init__(const struct smap *ovs_other_config)
>  {
> @@ -370,9 +367,6 @@ dpdk_init__(const struct smap *ovs_other_config)
>          }
>      }
>  
> -    dpdk_argv = argv;
> -    dpdk_argc = argc;
> -
>      rte_memzone_dump(stdout);
>  
>      /* We are called from the main thread here */
> ------------------------------------
>
> Best regards, Ilya Maximets.


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