From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 Return-Path: From: Greg Kroah-Hartman To: linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org, stable@vger.kernel.org Cc: Greg Kroah-Hartman , alan@lxorguk.ukuu.org.uk, Vincent Palatin , Duncan Laurie , Olof Johansson , "H. Peter Anvin" Subject: [ 12/27] x86, fpu: Avoid FPU lazy restore after suspend Date: Thu, 6 Dec 2012 16:58:56 -0800 Message-Id: <20121207005829.192265076@linuxfoundation.org> In-Reply-To: <20121207005825.232489605@linuxfoundation.org> References: <20121207005825.232489605@linuxfoundation.org> Sender: linux-kernel-owner@vger.kernel.org List-ID: 3.6-stable review patch. If anyone has any objections, please let me know. ------------------ From: Vincent Palatin commit 644c154186386bb1fa6446bc5e037b9ed098db46 upstream. When a cpu enters S3 state, the FPU state is lost. After resuming for S3, if we try to lazy restore the FPU for a process running on the same CPU, this will result in a corrupted FPU context. Ensure that "fpu_owner_task" is properly invalided when (re-)initializing a CPU, so nobody will try to lazy restore a state which doesn't exist in the hardware. Tested with a 64-bit kernel on a 4-core Ivybridge CPU with eagerfpu=off, by doing thousands of suspend/resume cycles with 4 processes doing FPU operations running. Without the patch, a process is killed after a few hundreds cycles by a SIGFPE. Signed-off-by: Vincent Palatin Cc: Duncan Laurie Cc: Olof Johansson Link: http://lkml.kernel.org/r/1354306532-1014-1-git-send-email-vpalatin@chromium.org Signed-off-by: H. Peter Anvin Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman --- arch/x86/include/asm/fpu-internal.h | 15 +++++++++------ arch/x86/kernel/smpboot.c | 5 +++++ 2 files changed, 14 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-) --- a/arch/x86/include/asm/fpu-internal.h +++ b/arch/x86/include/asm/fpu-internal.h @@ -334,14 +334,17 @@ static inline void __thread_fpu_begin(st typedef struct { int preload; } fpu_switch_t; /* - * FIXME! We could do a totally lazy restore, but we need to - * add a per-cpu "this was the task that last touched the FPU - * on this CPU" variable, and the task needs to have a "I last - * touched the FPU on this CPU" and check them. + * Must be run with preemption disabled: this clears the fpu_owner_task, + * on this CPU. * - * We don't do that yet, so "fpu_lazy_restore()" always returns - * false, but some day.. + * This will disable any lazy FPU state restore of the current FPU state, + * but if the current thread owns the FPU, it will still be saved by. */ +static inline void __cpu_disable_lazy_restore(unsigned int cpu) +{ + per_cpu(fpu_owner_task, cpu) = NULL; +} + static inline int fpu_lazy_restore(struct task_struct *new, unsigned int cpu) { return new == this_cpu_read_stable(fpu_owner_task) && --- a/arch/x86/kernel/smpboot.c +++ b/arch/x86/kernel/smpboot.c @@ -68,6 +68,8 @@ #include #include #include +#include +#include #include #include #include @@ -817,6 +819,9 @@ int __cpuinit native_cpu_up(unsigned int per_cpu(cpu_state, cpu) = CPU_UP_PREPARE; + /* the FPU context is blank, nobody can own it */ + __cpu_disable_lazy_restore(cpu); + err = do_boot_cpu(apicid, cpu, tidle); if (err) { pr_debug("do_boot_cpu failed %d\n", err);