linux/include/net/tls.h

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/*
* Copyright (c) 2016-2017, Mellanox Technologies. All rights reserved.
* Copyright (c) 2016-2017, Dave Watson <davejwatson@fb.com>. All rights reserved.
*
* This software is available to you under a choice of one of two
* licenses. You may choose to be licensed under the terms of the GNU
* General Public License (GPL) Version 2, available from the file
* COPYING in the main directory of this source tree, or the
* OpenIB.org BSD license below:
*
* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or
* without modification, are permitted provided that the following
* conditions are met:
*
* - Redistributions of source code must retain the above
* copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following
* disclaimer.
*
* - Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above
* copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following
* disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials
* provided with the distribution.
*
* THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND,
* EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF
* MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND
* NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS
* BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN
* ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN
* CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE
* SOFTWARE.
*/
#ifndef _TLS_OFFLOAD_H
#define _TLS_OFFLOAD_H
#include <linux/types.h>
#include <asm/byteorder.h>
#include <linux/crypto.h>
#include <linux/socket.h>
#include <linux/tcp.h>
net/tls: add a TX lock TLS TX needs to release and re-acquire the socket lock if send buffer fills up. TLS SW TX path currently depends on only allowing one thread to enter the function by the abuse of sk_write_pending. If another writer is already waiting for memory no new ones are allowed in. This has two problems: - writers don't wake other threads up when they leave the kernel; meaning that this scheme works for single extra thread (second application thread or delayed work) because memory becoming available will send a wake up request, but as Mallesham and Pooja report with larger number of threads it leads to threads being put to sleep indefinitely; - the delayed work does not get _scheduled_ but it may _run_ when other writers are present leading to crashes as writers don't expect state to change under their feet (same records get pushed and freed multiple times); it's hard to reliably bail from the work, however, because the mere presence of a writer does not guarantee that the writer will push pending records before exiting. Ensuring wakeups always happen will make the code basically open code a mutex. Just use a mutex. The TLS HW TX path does not have any locking (not even the sk_write_pending hack), yet it uses a per-socket sg_tx_data array to push records. Fixes: a42055e8d2c3 ("net/tls: Add support for async encryption of records for performance") Reported-by: Mallesham Jatharakonda <mallesh537@gmail.com> Reported-by: Pooja Trivedi <poojatrivedi@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <jakub.kicinski@netronome.com> Reviewed-by: Simon Horman <simon.horman@netronome.com> Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2019-11-05 22:24:35 +00:00
#include <linux/mutex.h>
#include <linux/netdevice.h>
#include <linux/rcupdate.h>
tls: convert to generic sk_msg interface Convert kTLS over to make use of sk_msg interface for plaintext and encrypted scattergather data, so it reuses all the sk_msg helpers and data structure which later on in a second step enables to glue this to BPF. This also allows to remove quite a bit of open coded helpers which are covered by the sk_msg API. Recent changes in kTLs 80ece6a03aaf ("tls: Remove redundant vars from tls record structure") and 4e6d47206c32 ("tls: Add support for inplace records encryption") changed the data path handling a bit; while we've kept the latter optimization intact, we had to undo the former change to better fit the sk_msg model, hence the sg_aead_in and sg_aead_out have been brought back and are linked into the sk_msg sgs. Now the kTLS record contains a msg_plaintext and msg_encrypted sk_msg each. In the original code, the zerocopy_from_iter() has been used out of TX but also RX path. For the strparser skb-based RX path, we've left the zerocopy_from_iter() in decrypt_internal() mostly untouched, meaning it has been moved into tls_setup_from_iter() with charging logic removed (as not used from RX). Given RX path is not based on sk_msg objects, we haven't pursued setting up a dummy sk_msg to call into sk_msg_zerocopy_from_iter(), but it could be an option to prusue in a later step. Joint work with John. Signed-off-by: Daniel Borkmann <daniel@iogearbox.net> Signed-off-by: John Fastabend <john.fastabend@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org>
2018-10-13 00:45:59 +00:00
#include <net/net_namespace.h>
#include <net/tcp.h>
#include <net/strparser.h>
net/tls: Add support for async encryption of records for performance In current implementation, tls records are encrypted & transmitted serially. Till the time the previously submitted user data is encrypted, the implementation waits and on finish starts transmitting the record. This approach of encrypt-one record at a time is inefficient when asynchronous crypto accelerators are used. For each record, there are overheads of interrupts, driver softIRQ scheduling etc. Also the crypto accelerator sits idle most of time while an encrypted record's pages are handed over to tcp stack for transmission. This patch enables encryption of multiple records in parallel when an async capable crypto accelerator is present in system. This is achieved by allowing the user space application to send more data using sendmsg() even while previously issued data is being processed by crypto accelerator. This requires returning the control back to user space application after submitting encryption request to accelerator. This also means that zero-copy mode of encryption cannot be used with async accelerator as we must be done with user space application buffer before returning from sendmsg(). There can be multiple records in flight to/from the accelerator. Each of the record is represented by 'struct tls_rec'. This is used to store the memory pages for the record. After the records are encrypted, they are added in a linked list called tx_ready_list which contains encrypted tls records sorted as per tls sequence number. The records from tx_ready_list are transmitted using a newly introduced function called tls_tx_records(). The tx_ready_list is polled for any record ready to be transmitted in sendmsg(), sendpage() after initiating encryption of new tls records. This achieves parallel encryption and transmission of records when async accelerator is present. There could be situation when crypto accelerator completes encryption later than polling of tx_ready_list by sendmsg()/sendpage(). Therefore we need a deferred work context to be able to transmit records from tx_ready_list. The deferred work context gets scheduled if applications are not sending much data through the socket. If the applications issue sendmsg()/sendpage() in quick succession, then the scheduling of tx_work_handler gets cancelled as the tx_ready_list would be polled from application's context itself. This saves scheduling overhead of deferred work. The patch also brings some side benefit. We are able to get rid of the concept of CLOSED record. This is because the records once closed are either encrypted and then placed into tx_ready_list or if encryption fails, the socket error is set. This simplifies the kernel tls sendpath. However since tls_device.c is still using macros, accessory functions for CLOSED records have been retained. Signed-off-by: Vakul Garg <vakul.garg@nxp.com> Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2018-09-21 04:16:13 +00:00
#include <crypto/aead.h>
#include <uapi/linux/tls.h>
struct tls_rec;
/* Maximum data size carried in a TLS record */
#define TLS_MAX_PAYLOAD_SIZE ((size_t)1 << 14)
#define TLS_HEADER_SIZE 5
#define TLS_NONCE_OFFSET TLS_HEADER_SIZE
#define TLS_CRYPTO_INFO_READY(info) ((info)->cipher_type)
#define TLS_AAD_SPACE_SIZE 13
#define TLS_MAX_IV_SIZE 16
#define TLS_TAG_SIZE 16
#define TLS_MAX_REC_SEQ_SIZE 8
#define TLS_MAX_AAD_SIZE TLS_AAD_SPACE_SIZE
/* For CCM mode, the full 16-bytes of IV is made of '4' fields of given sizes.
*
* IV[16] = b0[1] || implicit nonce[4] || explicit nonce[8] || length[3]
*
* The field 'length' is encoded in field 'b0' as '(length width - 1)'.
* Hence b0 contains (3 - 1) = 2.
*/
#define TLS_AES_CCM_IV_B0_BYTE 2
#define TLS_SM4_CCM_IV_B0_BYTE 2
enum {
TLS_BASE,
TLS_SW,
TLS_HW,
TLS_HW_RECORD,
TLS_NUM_CONFIG,
};
net/tls: Add support for async encryption of records for performance In current implementation, tls records are encrypted & transmitted serially. Till the time the previously submitted user data is encrypted, the implementation waits and on finish starts transmitting the record. This approach of encrypt-one record at a time is inefficient when asynchronous crypto accelerators are used. For each record, there are overheads of interrupts, driver softIRQ scheduling etc. Also the crypto accelerator sits idle most of time while an encrypted record's pages are handed over to tcp stack for transmission. This patch enables encryption of multiple records in parallel when an async capable crypto accelerator is present in system. This is achieved by allowing the user space application to send more data using sendmsg() even while previously issued data is being processed by crypto accelerator. This requires returning the control back to user space application after submitting encryption request to accelerator. This also means that zero-copy mode of encryption cannot be used with async accelerator as we must be done with user space application buffer before returning from sendmsg(). There can be multiple records in flight to/from the accelerator. Each of the record is represented by 'struct tls_rec'. This is used to store the memory pages for the record. After the records are encrypted, they are added in a linked list called tx_ready_list which contains encrypted tls records sorted as per tls sequence number. The records from tx_ready_list are transmitted using a newly introduced function called tls_tx_records(). The tx_ready_list is polled for any record ready to be transmitted in sendmsg(), sendpage() after initiating encryption of new tls records. This achieves parallel encryption and transmission of records when async accelerator is present. There could be situation when crypto accelerator completes encryption later than polling of tx_ready_list by sendmsg()/sendpage(). Therefore we need a deferred work context to be able to transmit records from tx_ready_list. The deferred work context gets scheduled if applications are not sending much data through the socket. If the applications issue sendmsg()/sendpage() in quick succession, then the scheduling of tx_work_handler gets cancelled as the tx_ready_list would be polled from application's context itself. This saves scheduling overhead of deferred work. The patch also brings some side benefit. We are able to get rid of the concept of CLOSED record. This is because the records once closed are either encrypted and then placed into tx_ready_list or if encryption fails, the socket error is set. This simplifies the kernel tls sendpath. However since tls_device.c is still using macros, accessory functions for CLOSED records have been retained. Signed-off-by: Vakul Garg <vakul.garg@nxp.com> Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2018-09-21 04:16:13 +00:00
struct tx_work {
struct delayed_work work;
struct sock *sk;
};
struct tls_sw_context_tx {
struct crypto_aead *aead_send;
struct crypto_wait async_wait;
struct tx_work tx_work;
struct tls_rec *open_rec;
net/tls: Fixed race condition in async encryption On processors with multi-engine crypto accelerators, it is possible that multiple records get encrypted in parallel and their encryption completion is notified to different cpus in multicore processor. This leads to the situation where tls_encrypt_done() starts executing in parallel on different cores. In current implementation, encrypted records are queued to tx_ready_list in tls_encrypt_done(). This requires addition to linked list 'tx_ready_list' to be protected. As tls_decrypt_done() could be executing in irq content, it is not possible to protect linked list addition operation using a lock. To fix the problem, we remove linked list addition operation from the irq context. We do tx_ready_list addition/removal operation from application context only and get rid of possible multiple access to the linked list. Before starting encryption on the record, we add it to the tail of tx_ready_list. To prevent tls_tx_records() from transmitting it, we mark the record with a new flag 'tx_ready' in 'struct tls_rec'. When record encryption gets completed, tls_encrypt_done() has to only update the 'tx_ready' flag to true & linked list add operation is not required. The changed logic brings some other side benefits. Since the records are always submitted in tls sequence number order for encryption, the tx_ready_list always remains sorted and addition of new records to it does not have to traverse the linked list. Lastly, we renamed tx_ready_list in 'struct tls_sw_context_tx' to 'tx_list'. This is because now, the some of the records at the tail are not ready to transmit. Fixes: a42055e8d2c3 ("net/tls: Add support for async encryption") Signed-off-by: Vakul Garg <vakul.garg@nxp.com> Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2018-09-24 10:05:56 +00:00
struct list_head tx_list;
net/tls: Add support for async encryption of records for performance In current implementation, tls records are encrypted & transmitted serially. Till the time the previously submitted user data is encrypted, the implementation waits and on finish starts transmitting the record. This approach of encrypt-one record at a time is inefficient when asynchronous crypto accelerators are used. For each record, there are overheads of interrupts, driver softIRQ scheduling etc. Also the crypto accelerator sits idle most of time while an encrypted record's pages are handed over to tcp stack for transmission. This patch enables encryption of multiple records in parallel when an async capable crypto accelerator is present in system. This is achieved by allowing the user space application to send more data using sendmsg() even while previously issued data is being processed by crypto accelerator. This requires returning the control back to user space application after submitting encryption request to accelerator. This also means that zero-copy mode of encryption cannot be used with async accelerator as we must be done with user space application buffer before returning from sendmsg(). There can be multiple records in flight to/from the accelerator. Each of the record is represented by 'struct tls_rec'. This is used to store the memory pages for the record. After the records are encrypted, they are added in a linked list called tx_ready_list which contains encrypted tls records sorted as per tls sequence number. The records from tx_ready_list are transmitted using a newly introduced function called tls_tx_records(). The tx_ready_list is polled for any record ready to be transmitted in sendmsg(), sendpage() after initiating encryption of new tls records. This achieves parallel encryption and transmission of records when async accelerator is present. There could be situation when crypto accelerator completes encryption later than polling of tx_ready_list by sendmsg()/sendpage(). Therefore we need a deferred work context to be able to transmit records from tx_ready_list. The deferred work context gets scheduled if applications are not sending much data through the socket. If the applications issue sendmsg()/sendpage() in quick succession, then the scheduling of tx_work_handler gets cancelled as the tx_ready_list would be polled from application's context itself. This saves scheduling overhead of deferred work. The patch also brings some side benefit. We are able to get rid of the concept of CLOSED record. This is because the records once closed are either encrypted and then placed into tx_ready_list or if encryption fails, the socket error is set. This simplifies the kernel tls sendpath. However since tls_device.c is still using macros, accessory functions for CLOSED records have been retained. Signed-off-by: Vakul Garg <vakul.garg@nxp.com> Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2018-09-21 04:16:13 +00:00
atomic_t encrypt_pending;
2020-05-22 20:10:31 +00:00
/* protect crypto_wait with encrypt_pending */
spinlock_t encrypt_compl_lock;
net/tls: Add support for async encryption of records for performance In current implementation, tls records are encrypted & transmitted serially. Till the time the previously submitted user data is encrypted, the implementation waits and on finish starts transmitting the record. This approach of encrypt-one record at a time is inefficient when asynchronous crypto accelerators are used. For each record, there are overheads of interrupts, driver softIRQ scheduling etc. Also the crypto accelerator sits idle most of time while an encrypted record's pages are handed over to tcp stack for transmission. This patch enables encryption of multiple records in parallel when an async capable crypto accelerator is present in system. This is achieved by allowing the user space application to send more data using sendmsg() even while previously issued data is being processed by crypto accelerator. This requires returning the control back to user space application after submitting encryption request to accelerator. This also means that zero-copy mode of encryption cannot be used with async accelerator as we must be done with user space application buffer before returning from sendmsg(). There can be multiple records in flight to/from the accelerator. Each of the record is represented by 'struct tls_rec'. This is used to store the memory pages for the record. After the records are encrypted, they are added in a linked list called tx_ready_list which contains encrypted tls records sorted as per tls sequence number. The records from tx_ready_list are transmitted using a newly introduced function called tls_tx_records(). The tx_ready_list is polled for any record ready to be transmitted in sendmsg(), sendpage() after initiating encryption of new tls records. This achieves parallel encryption and transmission of records when async accelerator is present. There could be situation when crypto accelerator completes encryption later than polling of tx_ready_list by sendmsg()/sendpage(). Therefore we need a deferred work context to be able to transmit records from tx_ready_list. The deferred work context gets scheduled if applications are not sending much data through the socket. If the applications issue sendmsg()/sendpage() in quick succession, then the scheduling of tx_work_handler gets cancelled as the tx_ready_list would be polled from application's context itself. This saves scheduling overhead of deferred work. The patch also brings some side benefit. We are able to get rid of the concept of CLOSED record. This is because the records once closed are either encrypted and then placed into tx_ready_list or if encryption fails, the socket error is set. This simplifies the kernel tls sendpath. However since tls_device.c is still using macros, accessory functions for CLOSED records have been retained. Signed-off-by: Vakul Garg <vakul.garg@nxp.com> Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2018-09-21 04:16:13 +00:00
int async_notify;
u8 async_capable:1;
net/tls: Add support for async encryption of records for performance In current implementation, tls records are encrypted & transmitted serially. Till the time the previously submitted user data is encrypted, the implementation waits and on finish starts transmitting the record. This approach of encrypt-one record at a time is inefficient when asynchronous crypto accelerators are used. For each record, there are overheads of interrupts, driver softIRQ scheduling etc. Also the crypto accelerator sits idle most of time while an encrypted record's pages are handed over to tcp stack for transmission. This patch enables encryption of multiple records in parallel when an async capable crypto accelerator is present in system. This is achieved by allowing the user space application to send more data using sendmsg() even while previously issued data is being processed by crypto accelerator. This requires returning the control back to user space application after submitting encryption request to accelerator. This also means that zero-copy mode of encryption cannot be used with async accelerator as we must be done with user space application buffer before returning from sendmsg(). There can be multiple records in flight to/from the accelerator. Each of the record is represented by 'struct tls_rec'. This is used to store the memory pages for the record. After the records are encrypted, they are added in a linked list called tx_ready_list which contains encrypted tls records sorted as per tls sequence number. The records from tx_ready_list are transmitted using a newly introduced function called tls_tx_records(). The tx_ready_list is polled for any record ready to be transmitted in sendmsg(), sendpage() after initiating encryption of new tls records. This achieves parallel encryption and transmission of records when async accelerator is present. There could be situation when crypto accelerator completes encryption later than polling of tx_ready_list by sendmsg()/sendpage(). Therefore we need a deferred work context to be able to transmit records from tx_ready_list. The deferred work context gets scheduled if applications are not sending much data through the socket. If the applications issue sendmsg()/sendpage() in quick succession, then the scheduling of tx_work_handler gets cancelled as the tx_ready_list would be polled from application's context itself. This saves scheduling overhead of deferred work. The patch also brings some side benefit. We are able to get rid of the concept of CLOSED record. This is because the records once closed are either encrypted and then placed into tx_ready_list or if encryption fails, the socket error is set. This simplifies the kernel tls sendpath. However since tls_device.c is still using macros, accessory functions for CLOSED records have been retained. Signed-off-by: Vakul Garg <vakul.garg@nxp.com> Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2018-09-21 04:16:13 +00:00
#define BIT_TX_SCHEDULED 0
#define BIT_TX_CLOSING 1
net/tls: Add support for async encryption of records for performance In current implementation, tls records are encrypted & transmitted serially. Till the time the previously submitted user data is encrypted, the implementation waits and on finish starts transmitting the record. This approach of encrypt-one record at a time is inefficient when asynchronous crypto accelerators are used. For each record, there are overheads of interrupts, driver softIRQ scheduling etc. Also the crypto accelerator sits idle most of time while an encrypted record's pages are handed over to tcp stack for transmission. This patch enables encryption of multiple records in parallel when an async capable crypto accelerator is present in system. This is achieved by allowing the user space application to send more data using sendmsg() even while previously issued data is being processed by crypto accelerator. This requires returning the control back to user space application after submitting encryption request to accelerator. This also means that zero-copy mode of encryption cannot be used with async accelerator as we must be done with user space application buffer before returning from sendmsg(). There can be multiple records in flight to/from the accelerator. Each of the record is represented by 'struct tls_rec'. This is used to store the memory pages for the record. After the records are encrypted, they are added in a linked list called tx_ready_list which contains encrypted tls records sorted as per tls sequence number. The records from tx_ready_list are transmitted using a newly introduced function called tls_tx_records(). The tx_ready_list is polled for any record ready to be transmitted in sendmsg(), sendpage() after initiating encryption of new tls records. This achieves parallel encryption and transmission of records when async accelerator is present. There could be situation when crypto accelerator completes encryption later than polling of tx_ready_list by sendmsg()/sendpage(). Therefore we need a deferred work context to be able to transmit records from tx_ready_list. The deferred work context gets scheduled if applications are not sending much data through the socket. If the applications issue sendmsg()/sendpage() in quick succession, then the scheduling of tx_work_handler gets cancelled as the tx_ready_list would be polled from application's context itself. This saves scheduling overhead of deferred work. The patch also brings some side benefit. We are able to get rid of the concept of CLOSED record. This is because the records once closed are either encrypted and then placed into tx_ready_list or if encryption fails, the socket error is set. This simplifies the kernel tls sendpath. However since tls_device.c is still using macros, accessory functions for CLOSED records have been retained. Signed-off-by: Vakul Garg <vakul.garg@nxp.com> Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2018-09-21 04:16:13 +00:00
unsigned long tx_bitmask;
};
struct tls_strparser {
struct sock *sk;
u32 mark : 8;
u32 stopped : 1;
u32 copy_mode : 1;
u32 mixed_decrypted : 1;
u32 msg_ready : 1;
struct strp_msg stm;
struct sk_buff *anchor;
struct work_struct work;
};
struct tls_sw_context_rx {
struct crypto_aead *aead_recv;
struct crypto_wait async_wait;
struct sk_buff_head rx_list; /* list of decrypted 'data' records */
void (*saved_data_ready)(struct sock *sk);
u8 reader_present;
u8 async_capable:1;
u8 zc_capable:1;
u8 reader_contended:1;
struct tls_strparser strp;
net/tls: Add support for async decryption of tls records When tls records are decrypted using asynchronous acclerators such as NXP CAAM engine, the crypto apis return -EINPROGRESS. Presently, on getting -EINPROGRESS, the tls record processing stops till the time the crypto accelerator finishes off and returns the result. This incurs a context switch and is not an efficient way of accessing the crypto accelerators. Crypto accelerators work efficient when they are queued with multiple crypto jobs without having to wait for the previous ones to complete. The patch submits multiple crypto requests without having to wait for for previous ones to complete. This has been implemented for records which are decrypted in zero-copy mode. At the end of recvmsg(), we wait for all the asynchronous decryption requests to complete. The references to records which have been sent for async decryption are dropped. For cases where record decryption is not possible in zero-copy mode, asynchronous decryption is not used and we wait for decryption crypto api to complete. For crypto requests executing in async fashion, the memory for aead_request, sglists and skb etc is freed from the decryption completion handler. The decryption completion handler wakesup the sleeping user context when recvmsg() flags that it has done sending all the decryption requests and there are no more decryption requests pending to be completed. Signed-off-by: Vakul Garg <vakul.garg@nxp.com> Reviewed-by: Dave Watson <davejwatson@fb.com> Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2018-08-29 09:56:55 +00:00
atomic_t decrypt_pending;
2020-05-22 20:10:31 +00:00
/* protect crypto_wait with decrypt_pending*/
spinlock_t decrypt_compl_lock;
struct sk_buff_head async_hold;
struct wait_queue_head wq;
net/tls: Add support for async decryption of tls records When tls records are decrypted using asynchronous acclerators such as NXP CAAM engine, the crypto apis return -EINPROGRESS. Presently, on getting -EINPROGRESS, the tls record processing stops till the time the crypto accelerator finishes off and returns the result. This incurs a context switch and is not an efficient way of accessing the crypto accelerators. Crypto accelerators work efficient when they are queued with multiple crypto jobs without having to wait for the previous ones to complete. The patch submits multiple crypto requests without having to wait for for previous ones to complete. This has been implemented for records which are decrypted in zero-copy mode. At the end of recvmsg(), we wait for all the asynchronous decryption requests to complete. The references to records which have been sent for async decryption are dropped. For cases where record decryption is not possible in zero-copy mode, asynchronous decryption is not used and we wait for decryption crypto api to complete. For crypto requests executing in async fashion, the memory for aead_request, sglists and skb etc is freed from the decryption completion handler. The decryption completion handler wakesup the sleeping user context when recvmsg() flags that it has done sending all the decryption requests and there are no more decryption requests pending to be completed. Signed-off-by: Vakul Garg <vakul.garg@nxp.com> Reviewed-by: Dave Watson <davejwatson@fb.com> Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2018-08-29 09:56:55 +00:00
};
net/tls: Add generic NIC offload infrastructure This patch adds a generic infrastructure to offload TLS crypto to a network device. It enables the kernel TLS socket to skip encryption and authentication operations on the transmit side of the data path. Leaving those computationally expensive operations to the NIC. The NIC offload infrastructure builds TLS records and pushes them to the TCP layer just like the SW KTLS implementation and using the same API. TCP segmentation is mostly unaffected. Currently the only exception is that we prevent mixed SKBs where only part of the payload requires offload. In the future we are likely to add a similar restriction following a change cipher spec record. The notable differences between SW KTLS and NIC offloaded TLS implementations are as follows: 1. The offloaded implementation builds "plaintext TLS record", those records contain plaintext instead of ciphertext and place holder bytes instead of authentication tags. 2. The offloaded implementation maintains a mapping from TCP sequence number to TLS records. Thus given a TCP SKB sent from a NIC offloaded TLS socket, we can use the tls NIC offload infrastructure to obtain enough context to encrypt the payload of the SKB. A TLS record is released when the last byte of the record is ack'ed, this is done through the new icsk_clean_acked callback. The infrastructure should be extendable to support various NIC offload implementations. However it is currently written with the implementation below in mind: The NIC assumes that packets from each offloaded stream are sent as plaintext and in-order. It keeps track of the TLS records in the TCP stream. When a packet marked for offload is transmitted, the NIC encrypts the payload in-place and puts authentication tags in the relevant place holders. The responsibility for handling out-of-order packets (i.e. TCP retransmission, qdisc drops) falls on the netdev driver. The netdev driver keeps track of the expected TCP SN from the NIC's perspective. If the next packet to transmit matches the expected TCP SN, the driver advances the expected TCP SN, and transmits the packet with TLS offload indication. If the next packet to transmit does not match the expected TCP SN. The driver calls the TLS layer to obtain the TLS record that includes the TCP of the packet for transmission. Using this TLS record, the driver posts a work entry on the transmit queue to reconstruct the NIC TLS state required for the offload of the out-of-order packet. It updates the expected TCP SN accordingly and transmits the now in-order packet. The same queue is used for packet transmission and TLS context reconstruction to avoid the need for flushing the transmit queue before issuing the context reconstruction request. Signed-off-by: Ilya Lesokhin <ilyal@mellanox.com> Signed-off-by: Boris Pismenny <borisp@mellanox.com> Signed-off-by: Aviad Yehezkel <aviadye@mellanox.com> Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2018-04-30 07:16:16 +00:00
struct tls_record_info {
struct list_head list;
u32 end_seq;
int len;
int num_frags;
skb_frag_t frags[MAX_SKB_FRAGS];
};
struct tls_offload_context_tx {
net/tls: Add generic NIC offload infrastructure This patch adds a generic infrastructure to offload TLS crypto to a network device. It enables the kernel TLS socket to skip encryption and authentication operations on the transmit side of the data path. Leaving those computationally expensive operations to the NIC. The NIC offload infrastructure builds TLS records and pushes them to the TCP layer just like the SW KTLS implementation and using the same API. TCP segmentation is mostly unaffected. Currently the only exception is that we prevent mixed SKBs where only part of the payload requires offload. In the future we are likely to add a similar restriction following a change cipher spec record. The notable differences between SW KTLS and NIC offloaded TLS implementations are as follows: 1. The offloaded implementation builds "plaintext TLS record", those records contain plaintext instead of ciphertext and place holder bytes instead of authentication tags. 2. The offloaded implementation maintains a mapping from TCP sequence number to TLS records. Thus given a TCP SKB sent from a NIC offloaded TLS socket, we can use the tls NIC offload infrastructure to obtain enough context to encrypt the payload of the SKB. A TLS record is released when the last byte of the record is ack'ed, this is done through the new icsk_clean_acked callback. The infrastructure should be extendable to support various NIC offload implementations. However it is currently written with the implementation below in mind: The NIC assumes that packets from each offloaded stream are sent as plaintext and in-order. It keeps track of the TLS records in the TCP stream. When a packet marked for offload is transmitted, the NIC encrypts the payload in-place and puts authentication tags in the relevant place holders. The responsibility for handling out-of-order packets (i.e. TCP retransmission, qdisc drops) falls on the netdev driver. The netdev driver keeps track of the expected TCP SN from the NIC's perspective. If the next packet to transmit matches the expected TCP SN, the driver advances the expected TCP SN, and transmits the packet with TLS offload indication. If the next packet to transmit does not match the expected TCP SN. The driver calls the TLS layer to obtain the TLS record that includes the TCP of the packet for transmission. Using this TLS record, the driver posts a work entry on the transmit queue to reconstruct the NIC TLS state required for the offload of the out-of-order packet. It updates the expected TCP SN accordingly and transmits the now in-order packet. The same queue is used for packet transmission and TLS context reconstruction to avoid the need for flushing the transmit queue before issuing the context reconstruction request. Signed-off-by: Ilya Lesokhin <ilyal@mellanox.com> Signed-off-by: Boris Pismenny <borisp@mellanox.com> Signed-off-by: Aviad Yehezkel <aviadye@mellanox.com> Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2018-04-30 07:16:16 +00:00
struct crypto_aead *aead_send;
spinlock_t lock; /* protects records list */
struct list_head records_list;
struct tls_record_info *open_record;
struct tls_record_info *retransmit_hint;
u64 hint_record_sn;
u64 unacked_record_sn;
struct scatterlist sg_tx_data[MAX_SKB_FRAGS];
void (*sk_destruct)(struct sock *sk);
struct work_struct destruct_work;
struct tls_context *ctx;
u8 driver_state[] __aligned(8);
net/tls: Add generic NIC offload infrastructure This patch adds a generic infrastructure to offload TLS crypto to a network device. It enables the kernel TLS socket to skip encryption and authentication operations on the transmit side of the data path. Leaving those computationally expensive operations to the NIC. The NIC offload infrastructure builds TLS records and pushes them to the TCP layer just like the SW KTLS implementation and using the same API. TCP segmentation is mostly unaffected. Currently the only exception is that we prevent mixed SKBs where only part of the payload requires offload. In the future we are likely to add a similar restriction following a change cipher spec record. The notable differences between SW KTLS and NIC offloaded TLS implementations are as follows: 1. The offloaded implementation builds "plaintext TLS record", those records contain plaintext instead of ciphertext and place holder bytes instead of authentication tags. 2. The offloaded implementation maintains a mapping from TCP sequence number to TLS records. Thus given a TCP SKB sent from a NIC offloaded TLS socket, we can use the tls NIC offload infrastructure to obtain enough context to encrypt the payload of the SKB. A TLS record is released when the last byte of the record is ack'ed, this is done through the new icsk_clean_acked callback. The infrastructure should be extendable to support various NIC offload implementations. However it is currently written with the implementation below in mind: The NIC assumes that packets from each offloaded stream are sent as plaintext and in-order. It keeps track of the TLS records in the TCP stream. When a packet marked for offload is transmitted, the NIC encrypts the payload in-place and puts authentication tags in the relevant place holders. The responsibility for handling out-of-order packets (i.e. TCP retransmission, qdisc drops) falls on the netdev driver. The netdev driver keeps track of the expected TCP SN from the NIC's perspective. If the next packet to transmit matches the expected TCP SN, the driver advances the expected TCP SN, and transmits the packet with TLS offload indication. If the next packet to transmit does not match the expected TCP SN. The driver calls the TLS layer to obtain the TLS record that includes the TCP of the packet for transmission. Using this TLS record, the driver posts a work entry on the transmit queue to reconstruct the NIC TLS state required for the offload of the out-of-order packet. It updates the expected TCP SN accordingly and transmits the now in-order packet. The same queue is used for packet transmission and TLS context reconstruction to avoid the need for flushing the transmit queue before issuing the context reconstruction request. Signed-off-by: Ilya Lesokhin <ilyal@mellanox.com> Signed-off-by: Boris Pismenny <borisp@mellanox.com> Signed-off-by: Aviad Yehezkel <aviadye@mellanox.com> Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2018-04-30 07:16:16 +00:00
/* The TLS layer reserves room for driver specific state
* Currently the belief is that there is not enough
* driver specific state to justify another layer of indirection
*/
#define TLS_DRIVER_STATE_SIZE_TX 16
net/tls: Add generic NIC offload infrastructure This patch adds a generic infrastructure to offload TLS crypto to a network device. It enables the kernel TLS socket to skip encryption and authentication operations on the transmit side of the data path. Leaving those computationally expensive operations to the NIC. The NIC offload infrastructure builds TLS records and pushes them to the TCP layer just like the SW KTLS implementation and using the same API. TCP segmentation is mostly unaffected. Currently the only exception is that we prevent mixed SKBs where only part of the payload requires offload. In the future we are likely to add a similar restriction following a change cipher spec record. The notable differences between SW KTLS and NIC offloaded TLS implementations are as follows: 1. The offloaded implementation builds "plaintext TLS record", those records contain plaintext instead of ciphertext and place holder bytes instead of authentication tags. 2. The offloaded implementation maintains a mapping from TCP sequence number to TLS records. Thus given a TCP SKB sent from a NIC offloaded TLS socket, we can use the tls NIC offload infrastructure to obtain enough context to encrypt the payload of the SKB. A TLS record is released when the last byte of the record is ack'ed, this is done through the new icsk_clean_acked callback. The infrastructure should be extendable to support various NIC offload implementations. However it is currently written with the implementation below in mind: The NIC assumes that packets from each offloaded stream are sent as plaintext and in-order. It keeps track of the TLS records in the TCP stream. When a packet marked for offload is transmitted, the NIC encrypts the payload in-place and puts authentication tags in the relevant place holders. The responsibility for handling out-of-order packets (i.e. TCP retransmission, qdisc drops) falls on the netdev driver. The netdev driver keeps track of the expected TCP SN from the NIC's perspective. If the next packet to transmit matches the expected TCP SN, the driver advances the expected TCP SN, and transmits the packet with TLS offload indication. If the next packet to transmit does not match the expected TCP SN. The driver calls the TLS layer to obtain the TLS record that includes the TCP of the packet for transmission. Using this TLS record, the driver posts a work entry on the transmit queue to reconstruct the NIC TLS state required for the offload of the out-of-order packet. It updates the expected TCP SN accordingly and transmits the now in-order packet. The same queue is used for packet transmission and TLS context reconstruction to avoid the need for flushing the transmit queue before issuing the context reconstruction request. Signed-off-by: Ilya Lesokhin <ilyal@mellanox.com> Signed-off-by: Boris Pismenny <borisp@mellanox.com> Signed-off-by: Aviad Yehezkel <aviadye@mellanox.com> Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2018-04-30 07:16:16 +00:00
};
#define TLS_OFFLOAD_CONTEXT_SIZE_TX \
(sizeof(struct tls_offload_context_tx) + TLS_DRIVER_STATE_SIZE_TX)
net/tls: Add generic NIC offload infrastructure This patch adds a generic infrastructure to offload TLS crypto to a network device. It enables the kernel TLS socket to skip encryption and authentication operations on the transmit side of the data path. Leaving those computationally expensive operations to the NIC. The NIC offload infrastructure builds TLS records and pushes them to the TCP layer just like the SW KTLS implementation and using the same API. TCP segmentation is mostly unaffected. Currently the only exception is that we prevent mixed SKBs where only part of the payload requires offload. In the future we are likely to add a similar restriction following a change cipher spec record. The notable differences between SW KTLS and NIC offloaded TLS implementations are as follows: 1. The offloaded implementation builds "plaintext TLS record", those records contain plaintext instead of ciphertext and place holder bytes instead of authentication tags. 2. The offloaded implementation maintains a mapping from TCP sequence number to TLS records. Thus given a TCP SKB sent from a NIC offloaded TLS socket, we can use the tls NIC offload infrastructure to obtain enough context to encrypt the payload of the SKB. A TLS record is released when the last byte of the record is ack'ed, this is done through the new icsk_clean_acked callback. The infrastructure should be extendable to support various NIC offload implementations. However it is currently written with the implementation below in mind: The NIC assumes that packets from each offloaded stream are sent as plaintext and in-order. It keeps track of the TLS records in the TCP stream. When a packet marked for offload is transmitted, the NIC encrypts the payload in-place and puts authentication tags in the relevant place holders. The responsibility for handling out-of-order packets (i.e. TCP retransmission, qdisc drops) falls on the netdev driver. The netdev driver keeps track of the expected TCP SN from the NIC's perspective. If the next packet to transmit matches the expected TCP SN, the driver advances the expected TCP SN, and transmits the packet with TLS offload indication. If the next packet to transmit does not match the expected TCP SN. The driver calls the TLS layer to obtain the TLS record that includes the TCP of the packet for transmission. Using this TLS record, the driver posts a work entry on the transmit queue to reconstruct the NIC TLS state required for the offload of the out-of-order packet. It updates the expected TCP SN accordingly and transmits the now in-order packet. The same queue is used for packet transmission and TLS context reconstruction to avoid the need for flushing the transmit queue before issuing the context reconstruction request. Signed-off-by: Ilya Lesokhin <ilyal@mellanox.com> Signed-off-by: Boris Pismenny <borisp@mellanox.com> Signed-off-by: Aviad Yehezkel <aviadye@mellanox.com> Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2018-04-30 07:16:16 +00:00
enum tls_context_flags {
net/tls: Fix use-after-free after the TLS device goes down and up When a netdev with active TLS offload goes down, tls_device_down is called to stop the offload and tear down the TLS context. However, the socket stays alive, and it still points to the TLS context, which is now deallocated. If a netdev goes up, while the connection is still active, and the data flow resumes after a number of TCP retransmissions, it will lead to a use-after-free of the TLS context. This commit addresses this bug by keeping the context alive until its normal destruction, and implements the necessary fallbacks, so that the connection can resume in software (non-offloaded) kTLS mode. On the TX side tls_sw_fallback is used to encrypt all packets. The RX side already has all the necessary fallbacks, because receiving non-decrypted packets is supported. The thing needed on the RX side is to block resync requests, which are normally produced after receiving non-decrypted packets. The necessary synchronization is implemented for a graceful teardown: first the fallbacks are deployed, then the driver resources are released (it used to be possible to have a tls_dev_resync after tls_dev_del). A new flag called TLS_RX_DEV_DEGRADED is added to indicate the fallback mode. It's used to skip the RX resync logic completely, as it becomes useless, and some objects may be released (for example, resync_async, which is allocated and freed by the driver). Fixes: e8f69799810c ("net/tls: Add generic NIC offload infrastructure") Signed-off-by: Maxim Mikityanskiy <maximmi@nvidia.com> Reviewed-by: Tariq Toukan <tariqt@nvidia.com> Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2021-06-01 12:08:00 +00:00
/* tls_device_down was called after the netdev went down, device state
* was released, and kTLS works in software, even though rx_conf is
* still TLS_HW (needed for transition).
*/
TLS_RX_DEV_DEGRADED = 0,
/* Unlike RX where resync is driven entirely by the core in TX only
* the driver knows when things went out of sync, so we need the flag
* to be atomic.
*/
TLS_TX_SYNC_SCHED = 1,
/* tls_dev_del was called for the RX side, device state was released,
* but tls_ctx->netdev might still be kept, because TX-side driver
* resources might not be released yet. Used to prevent the second
* tls_dev_del call in tls_device_down if it happens simultaneously.
*/
TLS_RX_DEV_CLOSED = 2,
};
struct cipher_context {
char *iv;
char rec_seq[TLS_MAX_REC_SEQ_SIZE];
};
union tls_crypto_context {
struct tls_crypto_info info;
union {
struct tls12_crypto_info_aes_gcm_128 aes_gcm_128;
struct tls12_crypto_info_aes_gcm_256 aes_gcm_256;
struct tls12_crypto_info_chacha20_poly1305 chacha20_poly1305;
struct tls12_crypto_info_sm4_gcm sm4_gcm;
struct tls12_crypto_info_sm4_ccm sm4_ccm;
};
};
struct tls_prot_info {
u16 version;
u16 cipher_type;
u16 prepend_size;
u16 tag_size;
u16 overhead_size;
u16 iv_size;
u16 salt_size;
u16 rec_seq_size;
u16 aad_size;
u16 tail_size;
};
struct tls_context {
/* read-only cache line */
struct tls_prot_info prot_info;
u8 tx_conf:3;
u8 rx_conf:3;
tls: Add opt-in zerocopy mode of sendfile() TLS device offload copies sendfile data to a bounce buffer before transmitting. It allows to maintain the valid MAC on TLS records when the file contents change and a part of TLS record has to be retransmitted on TCP level. In many common use cases (like serving static files over HTTPS) the file contents are not changed on the fly. In many use cases breaking the connection is totally acceptable if the file is changed during transmission, because it would be received corrupted in any case. This commit allows to optimize performance for such use cases to providing a new optional mode of TLS sendfile(), in which the extra copy is skipped. Removing this copy improves performance significantly, as TLS and TCP sendfile perform the same operations, and the only overhead is TLS header/trailer insertion. The new mode can only be enabled with the new socket option named TLS_TX_ZEROCOPY_SENDFILE on per-socket basis. It preserves backwards compatibility with existing applications that rely on the copying behavior. The new mode is safe, meaning that unsolicited modifications of the file being sent can't break integrity of the kernel. The worst thing that can happen is sending a corrupted TLS record, which is in any case not forbidden when using regular TCP sockets. Sockets other than TLS device offload are not affected by the new socket option. The actual status of zerocopy sendfile can be queried with sock_diag. Performance numbers in a single-core test with 24 HTTPS streams on nginx, under 100% CPU load: * non-zerocopy: 33.6 Gbit/s * zerocopy: 79.92 Gbit/s CPU: Intel(R) Xeon(R) Platinum 8380 CPU @ 2.30GHz Signed-off-by: Boris Pismenny <borisp@nvidia.com> Signed-off-by: Tariq Toukan <tariqt@nvidia.com> Signed-off-by: Maxim Mikityanskiy <maximmi@nvidia.com> Reviewed-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220518092731.1243494-1-maximmi@nvidia.com Signed-off-by: Paolo Abeni <pabeni@redhat.com>
2022-05-18 09:27:31 +00:00
u8 zerocopy_sendfile:1;
u8 rx_no_pad:1;
int (*push_pending_record)(struct sock *sk, int flags);
void (*sk_write_space)(struct sock *sk);
void *priv_ctx_tx;
void *priv_ctx_rx;
net/tls: Use RCU API to access tls_ctx->netdev Currently, tls_device_down synchronizes with tls_device_resync_rx using RCU, however, the pointer to netdev is stored using WRITE_ONCE and loaded using READ_ONCE. Although such approach is technically correct (rcu_dereference is essentially a READ_ONCE, and rcu_assign_pointer uses WRITE_ONCE to store NULL), using special RCU helpers for pointers is more valid, as it includes additional checks and might change the implementation transparently to the callers. Mark the netdev pointer as __rcu and use the correct RCU helpers to access it. For non-concurrent access pass the right conditions that guarantee safe access (locks taken, refcount value). Also use the correct helper in mlx5e, where even READ_ONCE was missing. The transition to RCU exposes existing issues, fixed by this commit: 1. bond_tls_device_xmit could read netdev twice, and it could become NULL the second time, after the NULL check passed. 2. Drivers shouldn't stop processing the last packet if tls_device_down just set netdev to NULL, before tls_dev_del was called. This prevents a possible packet drop when transitioning to the fallback software mode. Fixes: 89df6a810470 ("net/bonding: Implement TLS TX device offload") Fixes: c55dcdd435aa ("net/tls: Fix use-after-free after the TLS device goes down and up") Signed-off-by: Maxim Mikityanskiy <maximmi@nvidia.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220810081602.1435800-1-maximmi@nvidia.com Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
2022-08-10 08:16:02 +00:00
struct net_device __rcu *netdev;
/* rw cache line */
struct cipher_context tx;
struct cipher_context rx;
struct scatterlist *partially_sent_record;
u16 partially_sent_offset;
net/tls: Add support for async encryption of records for performance In current implementation, tls records are encrypted & transmitted serially. Till the time the previously submitted user data is encrypted, the implementation waits and on finish starts transmitting the record. This approach of encrypt-one record at a time is inefficient when asynchronous crypto accelerators are used. For each record, there are overheads of interrupts, driver softIRQ scheduling etc. Also the crypto accelerator sits idle most of time while an encrypted record's pages are handed over to tcp stack for transmission. This patch enables encryption of multiple records in parallel when an async capable crypto accelerator is present in system. This is achieved by allowing the user space application to send more data using sendmsg() even while previously issued data is being processed by crypto accelerator. This requires returning the control back to user space application after submitting encryption request to accelerator. This also means that zero-copy mode of encryption cannot be used with async accelerator as we must be done with user space application buffer before returning from sendmsg(). There can be multiple records in flight to/from the accelerator. Each of the record is represented by 'struct tls_rec'. This is used to store the memory pages for the record. After the records are encrypted, they are added in a linked list called tx_ready_list which contains encrypted tls records sorted as per tls sequence number. The records from tx_ready_list are transmitted using a newly introduced function called tls_tx_records(). The tx_ready_list is polled for any record ready to be transmitted in sendmsg(), sendpage() after initiating encryption of new tls records. This achieves parallel encryption and transmission of records when async accelerator is present. There could be situation when crypto accelerator completes encryption later than polling of tx_ready_list by sendmsg()/sendpage(). Therefore we need a deferred work context to be able to transmit records from tx_ready_list. The deferred work context gets scheduled if applications are not sending much data through the socket. If the applications issue sendmsg()/sendpage() in quick succession, then the scheduling of tx_work_handler gets cancelled as the tx_ready_list would be polled from application's context itself. This saves scheduling overhead of deferred work. The patch also brings some side benefit. We are able to get rid of the concept of CLOSED record. This is because the records once closed are either encrypted and then placed into tx_ready_list or if encryption fails, the socket error is set. This simplifies the kernel tls sendpath. However since tls_device.c is still using macros, accessory functions for CLOSED records have been retained. Signed-off-by: Vakul Garg <vakul.garg@nxp.com> Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2018-09-21 04:16:13 +00:00
bool splicing_pages;
tls: convert to generic sk_msg interface Convert kTLS over to make use of sk_msg interface for plaintext and encrypted scattergather data, so it reuses all the sk_msg helpers and data structure which later on in a second step enables to glue this to BPF. This also allows to remove quite a bit of open coded helpers which are covered by the sk_msg API. Recent changes in kTLs 80ece6a03aaf ("tls: Remove redundant vars from tls record structure") and 4e6d47206c32 ("tls: Add support for inplace records encryption") changed the data path handling a bit; while we've kept the latter optimization intact, we had to undo the former change to better fit the sk_msg model, hence the sg_aead_in and sg_aead_out have been brought back and are linked into the sk_msg sgs. Now the kTLS record contains a msg_plaintext and msg_encrypted sk_msg each. In the original code, the zerocopy_from_iter() has been used out of TX but also RX path. For the strparser skb-based RX path, we've left the zerocopy_from_iter() in decrypt_internal() mostly untouched, meaning it has been moved into tls_setup_from_iter() with charging logic removed (as not used from RX). Given RX path is not based on sk_msg objects, we haven't pursued setting up a dummy sk_msg to call into sk_msg_zerocopy_from_iter(), but it could be an option to prusue in a later step. Joint work with John. Signed-off-by: Daniel Borkmann <daniel@iogearbox.net> Signed-off-by: John Fastabend <john.fastabend@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org>
2018-10-13 00:45:59 +00:00
bool pending_open_record_frags;
net/tls: add a TX lock TLS TX needs to release and re-acquire the socket lock if send buffer fills up. TLS SW TX path currently depends on only allowing one thread to enter the function by the abuse of sk_write_pending. If another writer is already waiting for memory no new ones are allowed in. This has two problems: - writers don't wake other threads up when they leave the kernel; meaning that this scheme works for single extra thread (second application thread or delayed work) because memory becoming available will send a wake up request, but as Mallesham and Pooja report with larger number of threads it leads to threads being put to sleep indefinitely; - the delayed work does not get _scheduled_ but it may _run_ when other writers are present leading to crashes as writers don't expect state to change under their feet (same records get pushed and freed multiple times); it's hard to reliably bail from the work, however, because the mere presence of a writer does not guarantee that the writer will push pending records before exiting. Ensuring wakeups always happen will make the code basically open code a mutex. Just use a mutex. The TLS HW TX path does not have any locking (not even the sk_write_pending hack), yet it uses a per-socket sg_tx_data array to push records. Fixes: a42055e8d2c3 ("net/tls: Add support for async encryption of records for performance") Reported-by: Mallesham Jatharakonda <mallesh537@gmail.com> Reported-by: Pooja Trivedi <poojatrivedi@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <jakub.kicinski@netronome.com> Reviewed-by: Simon Horman <simon.horman@netronome.com> Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2019-11-05 22:24:35 +00:00
struct mutex tx_lock; /* protects partially_sent_* fields and
* per-type TX fields
*/
unsigned long flags;
/* cache cold stuff */
net/tls: fix transition through disconnect with close It is possible (via shutdown()) for TCP socks to go through TCP_CLOSE state via tcp_disconnect() without actually calling tcp_close which would then call the tls close callback. Because of this a user could disconnect a socket then put it in a LISTEN state which would break our assumptions about sockets always being ESTABLISHED state. More directly because close() can call unhash() and unhash is implemented by sockmap if a sockmap socket has TLS enabled we can incorrectly destroy the psock from unhash() and then call its close handler again. But because the psock (sockmap socket representation) is already destroyed we call close handler in sk->prot. However, in some cases (TLS BASE/BASE case) this will still point at the sockmap close handler resulting in a circular call and crash reported by syzbot. To fix both above issues implement the unhash() routine for TLS. v4: - add note about tls offload still needing the fix; - move sk_proto to the cold cache line; - split TX context free into "release" and "free", otherwise the GC work itself is in already freed memory; - more TX before RX for consistency; - reuse tls_ctx_free(); - schedule the GC work after we're done with context to avoid UAF; - don't set the unhash in all modes, all modes "inherit" TLS_BASE's callbacks anyway; - disable the unhash hook for TLS_HW. Fixes: 3c4d7559159bf ("tls: kernel TLS support") Reported-by: Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com> Signed-off-by: John Fastabend <john.fastabend@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <jakub.kicinski@netronome.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel Borkmann <daniel@iogearbox.net>
2019-07-19 17:29:18 +00:00
struct proto *sk_proto;
net/tls: Fix use-after-free after the TLS device goes down and up When a netdev with active TLS offload goes down, tls_device_down is called to stop the offload and tear down the TLS context. However, the socket stays alive, and it still points to the TLS context, which is now deallocated. If a netdev goes up, while the connection is still active, and the data flow resumes after a number of TCP retransmissions, it will lead to a use-after-free of the TLS context. This commit addresses this bug by keeping the context alive until its normal destruction, and implements the necessary fallbacks, so that the connection can resume in software (non-offloaded) kTLS mode. On the TX side tls_sw_fallback is used to encrypt all packets. The RX side already has all the necessary fallbacks, because receiving non-decrypted packets is supported. The thing needed on the RX side is to block resync requests, which are normally produced after receiving non-decrypted packets. The necessary synchronization is implemented for a graceful teardown: first the fallbacks are deployed, then the driver resources are released (it used to be possible to have a tls_dev_resync after tls_dev_del). A new flag called TLS_RX_DEV_DEGRADED is added to indicate the fallback mode. It's used to skip the RX resync logic completely, as it becomes useless, and some objects may be released (for example, resync_async, which is allocated and freed by the driver). Fixes: e8f69799810c ("net/tls: Add generic NIC offload infrastructure") Signed-off-by: Maxim Mikityanskiy <maximmi@nvidia.com> Reviewed-by: Tariq Toukan <tariqt@nvidia.com> Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2021-06-01 12:08:00 +00:00
struct sock *sk;
net/tls: fix transition through disconnect with close It is possible (via shutdown()) for TCP socks to go through TCP_CLOSE state via tcp_disconnect() without actually calling tcp_close which would then call the tls close callback. Because of this a user could disconnect a socket then put it in a LISTEN state which would break our assumptions about sockets always being ESTABLISHED state. More directly because close() can call unhash() and unhash is implemented by sockmap if a sockmap socket has TLS enabled we can incorrectly destroy the psock from unhash() and then call its close handler again. But because the psock (sockmap socket representation) is already destroyed we call close handler in sk->prot. However, in some cases (TLS BASE/BASE case) this will still point at the sockmap close handler resulting in a circular call and crash reported by syzbot. To fix both above issues implement the unhash() routine for TLS. v4: - add note about tls offload still needing the fix; - move sk_proto to the cold cache line; - split TX context free into "release" and "free", otherwise the GC work itself is in already freed memory; - more TX before RX for consistency; - reuse tls_ctx_free(); - schedule the GC work after we're done with context to avoid UAF; - don't set the unhash in all modes, all modes "inherit" TLS_BASE's callbacks anyway; - disable the unhash hook for TLS_HW. Fixes: 3c4d7559159bf ("tls: kernel TLS support") Reported-by: Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com> Signed-off-by: John Fastabend <john.fastabend@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <jakub.kicinski@netronome.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel Borkmann <daniel@iogearbox.net>
2019-07-19 17:29:18 +00:00
void (*sk_destruct)(struct sock *sk);
union tls_crypto_context crypto_send;
union tls_crypto_context crypto_recv;
struct list_head list;
refcount_t refcount;
struct rcu_head rcu;
};
enum tls_offload_ctx_dir {
TLS_OFFLOAD_CTX_DIR_RX,
TLS_OFFLOAD_CTX_DIR_TX,
};
struct tlsdev_ops {
int (*tls_dev_add)(struct net_device *netdev, struct sock *sk,
enum tls_offload_ctx_dir direction,
struct tls_crypto_info *crypto_info,
u32 start_offload_tcp_sn);
void (*tls_dev_del)(struct net_device *netdev,
struct tls_context *ctx,
enum tls_offload_ctx_dir direction);
int (*tls_dev_resync)(struct net_device *netdev,
struct sock *sk, u32 seq, u8 *rcd_sn,
enum tls_offload_ctx_dir direction);
};
net/tls: add kernel-driven TLS RX resync TLS offload device may lose sync with the TCP stream if packets arrive out of order. Drivers can currently request a resync at a specific TCP sequence number. When a record is found starting at that sequence number kernel will inform the device of the corresponding record number. This requires the device to constantly scan the stream for a known pattern (constant bytes of the header) after sync is lost. This patch adds an alternative approach which is entirely under the control of the kernel. Kernel tracks records it had to fully decrypt, even though TLS socket is in TLS_HW mode. If multiple records did not have any decrypted parts - it's a pretty strong indication that the device is out of sync. We choose the min number of fully encrypted records to be 2, which should hopefully be more than will get retransmitted at a time. After kernel decides the device is out of sync it schedules a resync request. If the TCP socket is empty the resync gets performed immediately. If socket is not empty we leave the record parser to resync when next record comes. Before resync in message parser we peek at the TCP socket and don't attempt the sync if the socket already has some of the next record queued. On resync failure (encrypted data continues to flow in) we retry with exponential backoff, up to once every 128 records (with a 16k record thats at most once every 2M of data). Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <jakub.kicinski@netronome.com> Reviewed-by: Dirk van der Merwe <dirk.vandermerwe@netronome.com> Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2019-06-11 04:40:02 +00:00
enum tls_offload_sync_type {
TLS_OFFLOAD_SYNC_TYPE_DRIVER_REQ = 0,
TLS_OFFLOAD_SYNC_TYPE_CORE_NEXT_HINT = 1,
TLS_OFFLOAD_SYNC_TYPE_DRIVER_REQ_ASYNC = 2,
net/tls: add kernel-driven TLS RX resync TLS offload device may lose sync with the TCP stream if packets arrive out of order. Drivers can currently request a resync at a specific TCP sequence number. When a record is found starting at that sequence number kernel will inform the device of the corresponding record number. This requires the device to constantly scan the stream for a known pattern (constant bytes of the header) after sync is lost. This patch adds an alternative approach which is entirely under the control of the kernel. Kernel tracks records it had to fully decrypt, even though TLS socket is in TLS_HW mode. If multiple records did not have any decrypted parts - it's a pretty strong indication that the device is out of sync. We choose the min number of fully encrypted records to be 2, which should hopefully be more than will get retransmitted at a time. After kernel decides the device is out of sync it schedules a resync request. If the TCP socket is empty the resync gets performed immediately. If socket is not empty we leave the record parser to resync when next record comes. Before resync in message parser we peek at the TCP socket and don't attempt the sync if the socket already has some of the next record queued. On resync failure (encrypted data continues to flow in) we retry with exponential backoff, up to once every 128 records (with a 16k record thats at most once every 2M of data). Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <jakub.kicinski@netronome.com> Reviewed-by: Dirk van der Merwe <dirk.vandermerwe@netronome.com> Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2019-06-11 04:40:02 +00:00
};
#define TLS_DEVICE_RESYNC_NH_START_IVAL 2
#define TLS_DEVICE_RESYNC_NH_MAX_IVAL 128
#define TLS_DEVICE_RESYNC_ASYNC_LOGMAX 13
struct tls_offload_resync_async {
atomic64_t req;
u16 loglen;
u16 rcd_delta;
u32 log[TLS_DEVICE_RESYNC_ASYNC_LOGMAX];
};
struct tls_offload_context_rx {
/* sw must be the first member of tls_offload_context_rx */
struct tls_sw_context_rx sw;
net/tls: add kernel-driven TLS RX resync TLS offload device may lose sync with the TCP stream if packets arrive out of order. Drivers can currently request a resync at a specific TCP sequence number. When a record is found starting at that sequence number kernel will inform the device of the corresponding record number. This requires the device to constantly scan the stream for a known pattern (constant bytes of the header) after sync is lost. This patch adds an alternative approach which is entirely under the control of the kernel. Kernel tracks records it had to fully decrypt, even though TLS socket is in TLS_HW mode. If multiple records did not have any decrypted parts - it's a pretty strong indication that the device is out of sync. We choose the min number of fully encrypted records to be 2, which should hopefully be more than will get retransmitted at a time. After kernel decides the device is out of sync it schedules a resync request. If the TCP socket is empty the resync gets performed immediately. If socket is not empty we leave the record parser to resync when next record comes. Before resync in message parser we peek at the TCP socket and don't attempt the sync if the socket already has some of the next record queued. On resync failure (encrypted data continues to flow in) we retry with exponential backoff, up to once every 128 records (with a 16k record thats at most once every 2M of data). Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <jakub.kicinski@netronome.com> Reviewed-by: Dirk van der Merwe <dirk.vandermerwe@netronome.com> Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2019-06-11 04:40:02 +00:00
enum tls_offload_sync_type resync_type;
/* this member is set regardless of resync_type, to avoid branches */
u8 resync_nh_reset:1;
/* CORE_NEXT_HINT-only member, but use the hole here */
u8 resync_nh_do_now:1;
union {
/* TLS_OFFLOAD_SYNC_TYPE_DRIVER_REQ */
struct {
atomic64_t resync_req;
};
/* TLS_OFFLOAD_SYNC_TYPE_CORE_NEXT_HINT */
struct {
u32 decrypted_failed;
u32 decrypted_tgt;
} resync_nh;
/* TLS_OFFLOAD_SYNC_TYPE_DRIVER_REQ_ASYNC */
struct {
struct tls_offload_resync_async *resync_async;
};
net/tls: add kernel-driven TLS RX resync TLS offload device may lose sync with the TCP stream if packets arrive out of order. Drivers can currently request a resync at a specific TCP sequence number. When a record is found starting at that sequence number kernel will inform the device of the corresponding record number. This requires the device to constantly scan the stream for a known pattern (constant bytes of the header) after sync is lost. This patch adds an alternative approach which is entirely under the control of the kernel. Kernel tracks records it had to fully decrypt, even though TLS socket is in TLS_HW mode. If multiple records did not have any decrypted parts - it's a pretty strong indication that the device is out of sync. We choose the min number of fully encrypted records to be 2, which should hopefully be more than will get retransmitted at a time. After kernel decides the device is out of sync it schedules a resync request. If the TCP socket is empty the resync gets performed immediately. If socket is not empty we leave the record parser to resync when next record comes. Before resync in message parser we peek at the TCP socket and don't attempt the sync if the socket already has some of the next record queued. On resync failure (encrypted data continues to flow in) we retry with exponential backoff, up to once every 128 records (with a 16k record thats at most once every 2M of data). Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <jakub.kicinski@netronome.com> Reviewed-by: Dirk van der Merwe <dirk.vandermerwe@netronome.com> Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2019-06-11 04:40:02 +00:00
};
u8 driver_state[] __aligned(8);
/* The TLS layer reserves room for driver specific state
* Currently the belief is that there is not enough
* driver specific state to justify another layer of indirection
*/
#define TLS_DRIVER_STATE_SIZE_RX 8
};
#define TLS_OFFLOAD_CONTEXT_SIZE_RX \
(sizeof(struct tls_offload_context_rx) + TLS_DRIVER_STATE_SIZE_RX)
struct tls_record_info *tls_get_record(struct tls_offload_context_tx *context,
net/tls: Add generic NIC offload infrastructure This patch adds a generic infrastructure to offload TLS crypto to a network device. It enables the kernel TLS socket to skip encryption and authentication operations on the transmit side of the data path. Leaving those computationally expensive operations to the NIC. The NIC offload infrastructure builds TLS records and pushes them to the TCP layer just like the SW KTLS implementation and using the same API. TCP segmentation is mostly unaffected. Currently the only exception is that we prevent mixed SKBs where only part of the payload requires offload. In the future we are likely to add a similar restriction following a change cipher spec record. The notable differences between SW KTLS and NIC offloaded TLS implementations are as follows: 1. The offloaded implementation builds "plaintext TLS record", those records contain plaintext instead of ciphertext and place holder bytes instead of authentication tags. 2. The offloaded implementation maintains a mapping from TCP sequence number to TLS records. Thus given a TCP SKB sent from a NIC offloaded TLS socket, we can use the tls NIC offload infrastructure to obtain enough context to encrypt the payload of the SKB. A TLS record is released when the last byte of the record is ack'ed, this is done through the new icsk_clean_acked callback. The infrastructure should be extendable to support various NIC offload implementations. However it is currently written with the implementation below in mind: The NIC assumes that packets from each offloaded stream are sent as plaintext and in-order. It keeps track of the TLS records in the TCP stream. When a packet marked for offload is transmitted, the NIC encrypts the payload in-place and puts authentication tags in the relevant place holders. The responsibility for handling out-of-order packets (i.e. TCP retransmission, qdisc drops) falls on the netdev driver. The netdev driver keeps track of the expected TCP SN from the NIC's perspective. If the next packet to transmit matches the expected TCP SN, the driver advances the expected TCP SN, and transmits the packet with TLS offload indication. If the next packet to transmit does not match the expected TCP SN. The driver calls the TLS layer to obtain the TLS record that includes the TCP of the packet for transmission. Using this TLS record, the driver posts a work entry on the transmit queue to reconstruct the NIC TLS state required for the offload of the out-of-order packet. It updates the expected TCP SN accordingly and transmits the now in-order packet. The same queue is used for packet transmission and TLS context reconstruction to avoid the need for flushing the transmit queue before issuing the context reconstruction request. Signed-off-by: Ilya Lesokhin <ilyal@mellanox.com> Signed-off-by: Boris Pismenny <borisp@mellanox.com> Signed-off-by: Aviad Yehezkel <aviadye@mellanox.com> Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2018-04-30 07:16:16 +00:00
u32 seq, u64 *p_record_sn);
static inline bool tls_record_is_start_marker(struct tls_record_info *rec)
{
return rec->len == 0;
}
static inline u32 tls_record_start_seq(struct tls_record_info *rec)
{
return rec->end_seq - rec->len;
}
struct sk_buff *
tls_validate_xmit_skb(struct sock *sk, struct net_device *dev,
struct sk_buff *skb);
net/tls: Fix use-after-free after the TLS device goes down and up When a netdev with active TLS offload goes down, tls_device_down is called to stop the offload and tear down the TLS context. However, the socket stays alive, and it still points to the TLS context, which is now deallocated. If a netdev goes up, while the connection is still active, and the data flow resumes after a number of TCP retransmissions, it will lead to a use-after-free of the TLS context. This commit addresses this bug by keeping the context alive until its normal destruction, and implements the necessary fallbacks, so that the connection can resume in software (non-offloaded) kTLS mode. On the TX side tls_sw_fallback is used to encrypt all packets. The RX side already has all the necessary fallbacks, because receiving non-decrypted packets is supported. The thing needed on the RX side is to block resync requests, which are normally produced after receiving non-decrypted packets. The necessary synchronization is implemented for a graceful teardown: first the fallbacks are deployed, then the driver resources are released (it used to be possible to have a tls_dev_resync after tls_dev_del). A new flag called TLS_RX_DEV_DEGRADED is added to indicate the fallback mode. It's used to skip the RX resync logic completely, as it becomes useless, and some objects may be released (for example, resync_async, which is allocated and freed by the driver). Fixes: e8f69799810c ("net/tls: Add generic NIC offload infrastructure") Signed-off-by: Maxim Mikityanskiy <maximmi@nvidia.com> Reviewed-by: Tariq Toukan <tariqt@nvidia.com> Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2021-06-01 12:08:00 +00:00
struct sk_buff *
tls_validate_xmit_skb_sw(struct sock *sk, struct net_device *dev,
struct sk_buff *skb);
static inline bool tls_is_skb_tx_device_offloaded(const struct sk_buff *skb)
net/tls: Add generic NIC offload infrastructure This patch adds a generic infrastructure to offload TLS crypto to a network device. It enables the kernel TLS socket to skip encryption and authentication operations on the transmit side of the data path. Leaving those computationally expensive operations to the NIC. The NIC offload infrastructure builds TLS records and pushes them to the TCP layer just like the SW KTLS implementation and using the same API. TCP segmentation is mostly unaffected. Currently the only exception is that we prevent mixed SKBs where only part of the payload requires offload. In the future we are likely to add a similar restriction following a change cipher spec record. The notable differences between SW KTLS and NIC offloaded TLS implementations are as follows: 1. The offloaded implementation builds "plaintext TLS record", those records contain plaintext instead of ciphertext and place holder bytes instead of authentication tags. 2. The offloaded implementation maintains a mapping from TCP sequence number to TLS records. Thus given a TCP SKB sent from a NIC offloaded TLS socket, we can use the tls NIC offload infrastructure to obtain enough context to encrypt the payload of the SKB. A TLS record is released when the last byte of the record is ack'ed, this is done through the new icsk_clean_acked callback. The infrastructure should be extendable to support various NIC offload implementations. However it is currently written with the implementation below in mind: The NIC assumes that packets from each offloaded stream are sent as plaintext and in-order. It keeps track of the TLS records in the TCP stream. When a packet marked for offload is transmitted, the NIC encrypts the payload in-place and puts authentication tags in the relevant place holders. The responsibility for handling out-of-order packets (i.e. TCP retransmission, qdisc drops) falls on the netdev driver. The netdev driver keeps track of the expected TCP SN from the NIC's perspective. If the next packet to transmit matches the expected TCP SN, the driver advances the expected TCP SN, and transmits the packet with TLS offload indication. If the next packet to transmit does not match the expected TCP SN. The driver calls the TLS layer to obtain the TLS record that includes the TCP of the packet for transmission. Using this TLS record, the driver posts a work entry on the transmit queue to reconstruct the NIC TLS state required for the offload of the out-of-order packet. It updates the expected TCP SN accordingly and transmits the now in-order packet. The same queue is used for packet transmission and TLS context reconstruction to avoid the need for flushing the transmit queue before issuing the context reconstruction request. Signed-off-by: Ilya Lesokhin <ilyal@mellanox.com> Signed-off-by: Boris Pismenny <borisp@mellanox.com> Signed-off-by: Aviad Yehezkel <aviadye@mellanox.com> Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2018-04-30 07:16:16 +00:00
{
#ifdef CONFIG_TLS_DEVICE
struct sock *sk = skb->sk;
return sk && sk_fullsock(sk) &&
(smp_load_acquire(&sk->sk_validate_xmit_skb) ==
&tls_validate_xmit_skb);
#else
return false;
#endif
net/tls: Add generic NIC offload infrastructure This patch adds a generic infrastructure to offload TLS crypto to a network device. It enables the kernel TLS socket to skip encryption and authentication operations on the transmit side of the data path. Leaving those computationally expensive operations to the NIC. The NIC offload infrastructure builds TLS records and pushes them to the TCP layer just like the SW KTLS implementation and using the same API. TCP segmentation is mostly unaffected. Currently the only exception is that we prevent mixed SKBs where only part of the payload requires offload. In the future we are likely to add a similar restriction following a change cipher spec record. The notable differences between SW KTLS and NIC offloaded TLS implementations are as follows: 1. The offloaded implementation builds "plaintext TLS record", those records contain plaintext instead of ciphertext and place holder bytes instead of authentication tags. 2. The offloaded implementation maintains a mapping from TCP sequence number to TLS records. Thus given a TCP SKB sent from a NIC offloaded TLS socket, we can use the tls NIC offload infrastructure to obtain enough context to encrypt the payload of the SKB. A TLS record is released when the last byte of the record is ack'ed, this is done through the new icsk_clean_acked callback. The infrastructure should be extendable to support various NIC offload implementations. However it is currently written with the implementation below in mind: The NIC assumes that packets from each offloaded stream are sent as plaintext and in-order. It keeps track of the TLS records in the TCP stream. When a packet marked for offload is transmitted, the NIC encrypts the payload in-place and puts authentication tags in the relevant place holders. The responsibility for handling out-of-order packets (i.e. TCP retransmission, qdisc drops) falls on the netdev driver. The netdev driver keeps track of the expected TCP SN from the NIC's perspective. If the next packet to transmit matches the expected TCP SN, the driver advances the expected TCP SN, and transmits the packet with TLS offload indication. If the next packet to transmit does not match the expected TCP SN. The driver calls the TLS layer to obtain the TLS record that includes the TCP of the packet for transmission. Using this TLS record, the driver posts a work entry on the transmit queue to reconstruct the NIC TLS state required for the offload of the out-of-order packet. It updates the expected TCP SN accordingly and transmits the now in-order packet. The same queue is used for packet transmission and TLS context reconstruction to avoid the need for flushing the transmit queue before issuing the context reconstruction request. Signed-off-by: Ilya Lesokhin <ilyal@mellanox.com> Signed-off-by: Boris Pismenny <borisp@mellanox.com> Signed-off-by: Aviad Yehezkel <aviadye@mellanox.com> Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2018-04-30 07:16:16 +00:00
}
static inline struct tls_context *tls_get_ctx(const struct sock *sk)
{
struct inet_connection_sock *icsk = inet_csk(sk);
/* Use RCU on icsk_ulp_data only for sock diag code,
* TLS data path doesn't need rcu_dereference().
*/
return (__force void *)icsk->icsk_ulp_data;
}
static inline struct tls_sw_context_rx *tls_sw_ctx_rx(
const struct tls_context *tls_ctx)
{
return (struct tls_sw_context_rx *)tls_ctx->priv_ctx_rx;
}
static inline struct tls_sw_context_tx *tls_sw_ctx_tx(
const struct tls_context *tls_ctx)
{
return (struct tls_sw_context_tx *)tls_ctx->priv_ctx_tx;
}
static inline struct tls_offload_context_tx *
tls_offload_ctx_tx(const struct tls_context *tls_ctx)
{
return (struct tls_offload_context_tx *)tls_ctx->priv_ctx_tx;
}
bpf: sk_msg, sock{map|hash} redirect through ULP A sockmap program that redirects through a kTLS ULP enabled socket will not work correctly because the ULP layer is skipped. This fixes the behavior to call through the ULP layer on redirect to ensure any operations required on the data stream at the ULP layer continue to be applied. To do this we add an internal flag MSG_SENDPAGE_NOPOLICY to avoid calling the BPF layer on a redirected message. This is required to avoid calling the BPF layer multiple times (possibly recursively) which is not the current/expected behavior without ULPs. In the future we may add a redirect flag if users _do_ want the policy applied again but this would need to work for both ULP and non-ULP sockets and be opt-in to avoid breaking existing programs. Also to avoid polluting the flag space with an internal flag we reuse the flag space overlapping MSG_SENDPAGE_NOPOLICY with MSG_WAITFORONE. Here WAITFORONE is specific to recv path and SENDPAGE_NOPOLICY is only used for sendpage hooks. The last thing to verify is user space API is masked correctly to ensure the flag can not be set by user. (Note this needs to be true regardless because we have internal flags already in-use that user space should not be able to set). But for completeness we have two UAPI paths into sendpage, sendfile and splice. In the sendfile case the function do_sendfile() zero's flags, ./fs/read_write.c: static ssize_t do_sendfile(int out_fd, int in_fd, loff_t *ppos, size_t count, loff_t max) { ... fl = 0; #if 0 /* * We need to debate whether we can enable this or not. The * man page documents EAGAIN return for the output at least, * and the application is arguably buggy if it doesn't expect * EAGAIN on a non-blocking file descriptor. */ if (in.file->f_flags & O_NONBLOCK) fl = SPLICE_F_NONBLOCK; #endif file_start_write(out.file); retval = do_splice_direct(in.file, &pos, out.file, &out_pos, count, fl); } In the splice case the pipe_to_sendpage "actor" is used which masks flags with SPLICE_F_MORE. ./fs/splice.c: static int pipe_to_sendpage(struct pipe_inode_info *pipe, struct pipe_buffer *buf, struct splice_desc *sd) { ... more = (sd->flags & SPLICE_F_MORE) ? MSG_MORE : 0; ... } Confirming what we expect that internal flags are in fact internal to socket side. Fixes: d3b18ad31f93 ("tls: add bpf support to sk_msg handling") Signed-off-by: John Fastabend <john.fastabend@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel Borkmann <daniel@iogearbox.net>
2018-12-20 19:35:35 +00:00
static inline bool tls_sw_has_ctx_tx(const struct sock *sk)
{
struct tls_context *ctx = tls_get_ctx(sk);
if (!ctx)
return false;
return !!tls_sw_ctx_tx(ctx);
}
bpf: Fix running sk_skb program types with ktls KTLS uses a stream parser to collect TLS messages and send them to the upper layer tls receive handler. This ensures the tls receiver has a full TLS header to parse when it is run. However, when a socket has BPF_SK_SKB_STREAM_VERDICT program attached before KTLS is enabled we end up with two stream parsers running on the same socket. The result is both try to run on the same socket. First the KTLS stream parser runs and calls read_sock() which will tcp_read_sock which in turn calls tcp_rcv_skb(). This dequeues the skb from the sk_receive_queue. When this is done KTLS code then data_ready() callback which because we stacked KTLS on top of the bpf stream verdict program has been replaced with sk_psock_start_strp(). This will in turn kick the stream parser again and eventually do the same thing KTLS did above calling into tcp_rcv_skb() and dequeuing a skb from the sk_receive_queue. At this point the data stream is broke. Part of the stream was handled by the KTLS side some other bytes may have been handled by the BPF side. Generally this results in either missing data or more likely a "Bad Message" complaint from the kTLS receive handler as the BPF program steals some bytes meant to be in a TLS header and/or the TLS header length is no longer correct. We've already broke the idealized model where we can stack ULPs in any order with generic callbacks on the TX side to handle this. So in this patch we do the same thing but for RX side. We add a sk_psock_strp_enabled() helper so TLS can learn a BPF verdict program is running and add a tls_sw_has_ctx_rx() helper so BPF side can learn there is a TLS ULP on the socket. Then on BPF side we omit calling our stream parser to avoid breaking the data stream for the KTLS receiver. Then on the KTLS side we call BPF_SK_SKB_STREAM_VERDICT once the KTLS receiver is done with the packet but before it posts the msg to userspace. This gives us symmetry between the TX and RX halfs and IMO makes it usable again. On the TX side we process packets in this order BPF -> TLS -> TCP and on the receive side in the reverse order TCP -> TLS -> BPF. Discovered while testing OpenSSL 3.0 Alpha2.0 release. Fixes: d829e9c4112b5 ("tls: convert to generic sk_msg interface") Signed-off-by: John Fastabend <john.fastabend@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/159079361946.5745.605854335665044485.stgit@john-Precision-5820-Tower Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org>
2020-05-29 23:06:59 +00:00
static inline bool tls_sw_has_ctx_rx(const struct sock *sk)
{
struct tls_context *ctx = tls_get_ctx(sk);
if (!ctx)
return false;
return !!tls_sw_ctx_rx(ctx);
}
static inline struct tls_offload_context_rx *
tls_offload_ctx_rx(const struct tls_context *tls_ctx)
{
return (struct tls_offload_context_rx *)tls_ctx->priv_ctx_rx;
}
static inline void *__tls_driver_ctx(struct tls_context *tls_ctx,
enum tls_offload_ctx_dir direction)
{
if (direction == TLS_OFFLOAD_CTX_DIR_TX)
return tls_offload_ctx_tx(tls_ctx)->driver_state;
else
return tls_offload_ctx_rx(tls_ctx)->driver_state;
}
static inline void *
tls_driver_ctx(const struct sock *sk, enum tls_offload_ctx_dir direction)
{
return __tls_driver_ctx(tls_get_ctx(sk), direction);
}
#define RESYNC_REQ BIT(0)
#define RESYNC_REQ_ASYNC BIT(1)
/* The TLS context is valid until sk_destruct is called */
static inline void tls_offload_rx_resync_request(struct sock *sk, __be32 seq)
{
struct tls_context *tls_ctx = tls_get_ctx(sk);
struct tls_offload_context_rx *rx_ctx = tls_offload_ctx_rx(tls_ctx);
atomic64_set(&rx_ctx->resync_req, ((u64)ntohl(seq) << 32) | RESYNC_REQ);
}
/* Log all TLS record header TCP sequences in [seq, seq+len] */
static inline void
tls_offload_rx_resync_async_request_start(struct sock *sk, __be32 seq, u16 len)
{
struct tls_context *tls_ctx = tls_get_ctx(sk);
struct tls_offload_context_rx *rx_ctx = tls_offload_ctx_rx(tls_ctx);
atomic64_set(&rx_ctx->resync_async->req, ((u64)ntohl(seq) << 32) |
((u64)len << 16) | RESYNC_REQ | RESYNC_REQ_ASYNC);
rx_ctx->resync_async->loglen = 0;
rx_ctx->resync_async->rcd_delta = 0;
}
static inline void
tls_offload_rx_resync_async_request_end(struct sock *sk, __be32 seq)
{
struct tls_context *tls_ctx = tls_get_ctx(sk);
struct tls_offload_context_rx *rx_ctx = tls_offload_ctx_rx(tls_ctx);
atomic64_set(&rx_ctx->resync_async->req,
((u64)ntohl(seq) << 32) | RESYNC_REQ);
}
net/tls: add kernel-driven TLS RX resync TLS offload device may lose sync with the TCP stream if packets arrive out of order. Drivers can currently request a resync at a specific TCP sequence number. When a record is found starting at that sequence number kernel will inform the device of the corresponding record number. This requires the device to constantly scan the stream for a known pattern (constant bytes of the header) after sync is lost. This patch adds an alternative approach which is entirely under the control of the kernel. Kernel tracks records it had to fully decrypt, even though TLS socket is in TLS_HW mode. If multiple records did not have any decrypted parts - it's a pretty strong indication that the device is out of sync. We choose the min number of fully encrypted records to be 2, which should hopefully be more than will get retransmitted at a time. After kernel decides the device is out of sync it schedules a resync request. If the TCP socket is empty the resync gets performed immediately. If socket is not empty we leave the record parser to resync when next record comes. Before resync in message parser we peek at the TCP socket and don't attempt the sync if the socket already has some of the next record queued. On resync failure (encrypted data continues to flow in) we retry with exponential backoff, up to once every 128 records (with a 16k record thats at most once every 2M of data). Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <jakub.kicinski@netronome.com> Reviewed-by: Dirk van der Merwe <dirk.vandermerwe@netronome.com> Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
2019-06-11 04:40:02 +00:00
static inline void
tls_offload_rx_resync_set_type(struct sock *sk, enum tls_offload_sync_type type)
{
struct tls_context *tls_ctx = tls_get_ctx(sk);
tls_offload_ctx_rx(tls_ctx)->resync_type = type;
}
/* Driver's seq tracking has to be disabled until resync succeeded */
static inline bool tls_offload_tx_resync_pending(struct sock *sk)
{
struct tls_context *tls_ctx = tls_get_ctx(sk);
bool ret;
ret = test_bit(TLS_TX_SYNC_SCHED, &tls_ctx->flags);
smp_mb__after_atomic();
return ret;
}
struct sk_buff *tls_encrypt_skb(struct sk_buff *skb);
#ifdef CONFIG_TLS_DEVICE
void tls_device_sk_destruct(struct sock *sk);
void tls_offload_tx_resync_request(struct sock *sk, u32 got_seq, u32 exp_seq);
static inline bool tls_is_sk_rx_device_offloaded(struct sock *sk)
{
if (!sk_fullsock(sk) ||
smp_load_acquire(&sk->sk_destruct) != tls_device_sk_destruct)
return false;
return tls_get_ctx(sk)->rx_conf == TLS_HW;
}
#endif
#endif /* _TLS_OFFLOAD_H */