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    USB: EHCI: fix bug in iTD/siTD DMA pool allocation · 85ecd032
    Soeren Moch 提交于
    [Description written by Alan Stern]
    
    Soeren tracked down a very difficult bug in ehci-hcd's DMA pool
    management of iTD and siTD structures.  Some background: ehci-hcd
    gives each isochronous endpoint its own set of active and free itd's
    (or sitd's for full-speed devices).  When a new itd is needed, it is
    taken from the head of the free list, if possible.  However, itd's
    must not be used twice in a single frame because the hardware
    continues to access the data structure for the entire duration of a
    frame.  Therefore if the itd at the head of the free list has its
    "frame" member equal to the current value of ehci->now_frame, it
    cannot be reused and instead a new itd is allocated from the DMA pool.
    The entries on the free list are not released back to the pool until
    the endpoint is no longer in use.
    
    The bug arises from the fact that sometimes an itd can be moved back
    onto the free list before itd->frame has been set properly.  In
    Soeren's case, this happened because ehci-hcd can allocate one more
    itd than it actually needs for an URB; the extra itd may or may not be
    required depending on how the transfer aligns with a frame boundary.
    For example, an URB with 8 isochronous packets will cause two itd's to
    be allocated.  If the URB is scheduled to start in microframe 3 of
    frame N then it will require both itds: one for microframes 3 - 7 of
    frame N and one for microframes 0 - 2 of frame N+1.  But if the URB
    had been scheduled to start in microframe 0 then it would require only
    the first itd, which could cover microframes 0 - 7 of frame N.  The
    second itd would be returned to the end of the free list.
    
    The itd allocation routine initializes the entire structure to 0, so
    the extra itd ends up on the free list with itd->frame set to 0
    instead of a meaningful value.  After a while the itd reaches the head
    of the list, and occasionally this happens when ehci->now_frame is
    equal to 0.  Then, even though it would be okay to reuse this itd, the
    driver thinks it must get another itd from the DMA pool.
    
    For as long as the isochronous endpoint remains in use, this flaw in
    the mechanism causes more and more itd's to be taken slowly from the
    DMA pool.  Since none are released back, the pool eventually becomes
    exhausted.
    
    This reuslts in memory allocation failures, which typically show up
    during a long-running audio stream.  Video might suffer the same
    effect.
    
    The fix is very simple.  To prevent allocations from the pool when
    they aren't needed, make sure that itd's sent back to the free list
    prematurely have itd->frame set to an invalid value which can never be
    equal to ehci->now_frame.
    
    This should be applied to -stable kernels going back to 3.6.
    Signed-off-by: NSoeren Moch <smoch@web.de>
    Signed-off-by: NAlan Stern <stern@rowland.harvard.edu>
    Cc: stable <stable@vger.kernel.org>
    Signed-off-by: NGreg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
    85ecd032
ehci-sched.c 60.7 KB