On Wed, Dec 10, 2025 at 04:00:19PM +0100, Melbin K Mathew wrote:
The virtio vsock transport currently derives its TX credit directly
from peer_buf_alloc, which is set from the remote endpoint's
SO_VM_SOCKETS_BUFFER_SIZE value.

Why removing the target tree [net] from the tags?

Also this is a v2, so the tags should have been [PATCH net v2], please check it in next versions, more info:

https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/process/submitting-patches.html#subject-line


On the host side this means that the amount of data we are willing to
queue for a connection is scaled by a guest-chosen buffer size,
rather than the host's own vsock configuration. A malicious guest can
advertise a large buffer and read slowly, causing the host to allocate
a correspondingly large amount of sk_buff memory.

Introduce a small helper, virtio_transport_peer_buf_alloc(), that
returns min(peer_buf_alloc, buf_alloc), and use it wherever we consume
peer_buf_alloc:

 - virtio_transport_get_credit()
 - virtio_transport_has_space()
 - virtio_transport_seqpacket_enqueue()

This ensures the effective TX window is bounded by both the peer's
advertised buffer and our own buf_alloc (already clamped to
buffer_max_size via SO_VM_SOCKETS_BUFFER_MAX_SIZE), so a remote guest
cannot force the host to queue more data than allowed by the host's
own vsock settings.

On an unpatched Ubuntu 22.04 host (~64 GiB RAM), running a PoC with
32 guest vsock connections advertising 2 GiB each and reading slowly
drove Slab/SUnreclaim from ~0.5 GiB to ~57 GiB and the system only
recovered after killing the QEMU process.

With this patch applied, rerunning the same PoC yields:

 Before:
   MemFree:        ~61.6 GiB
   MemAvailable:   ~62.3 GiB
   Slab:           ~142 MiB
   SUnreclaim:     ~117 MiB

 After 32 high-credit connections:
   MemFree:        ~61.5 GiB
   MemAvailable:   ~62.3 GiB
   Slab:           ~178 MiB
   SUnreclaim:     ~152 MiB

i.e. only ~35 MiB increase in Slab/SUnreclaim, no host OOM, and the
guest remains responsive.

I think we should include here a summary of what you replied to Michael about other transports.

I can't find your reply in the archive, but I mean the reply to
https://lore.kernel.org/netdev/[email protected]/


Fixes: 06a8fc78367d ("VSOCK: Introduce virtio_vsock_common.ko")
Suggested-by: Stefano Garzarella <[email protected]>
Signed-off-by: Melbin K Mathew <[email protected]>
---
net/vmw_vsock/virtio_transport_common.c | 27 ++++++++++++++++++++++---
1 file changed, 24 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)

diff --git a/net/vmw_vsock/virtio_transport_common.c 
b/net/vmw_vsock/virtio_transport_common.c
index dcc8a1d58..02eeb96dd 100644
--- a/net/vmw_vsock/virtio_transport_common.c
+++ b/net/vmw_vsock/virtio_transport_common.c
@@ -491,6 +491,25 @@ void virtio_transport_consume_skb_sent(struct sk_buff 
*skb, bool consume)
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(virtio_transport_consume_skb_sent);

+/*
+ * Return the effective peer buffer size for TX credit computation.

nit: block comment in this file doesn't leave empty line, so I'd follow
it:

@@ -491,8 +491,7 @@ void virtio_transport_consume_skb_sent(struct sk_buff *skb, 
bool consume)
 }
 EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(virtio_transport_consume_skb_sent);

-/*
- * Return the effective peer buffer size for TX credit computation.
+/* Return the effective peer buffer size for TX credit computation.
  *
  * The peer advertises its receive buffer via peer_buf_alloc, but we
  * cap that to our local buf_alloc (derived from

+ *
+ * The peer advertises its receive buffer via peer_buf_alloc, but we
+ * cap that to our local buf_alloc (derived from
+ * SO_VM_SOCKETS_BUFFER_SIZE and already clamped to buffer_max_size)
+ * so that a remote endpoint cannot force us to queue more data than
+ * our own configuration allows.
+ */
+static u32 virtio_transport_tx_buf_alloc(struct virtio_vsock_sock *vvs)
+{
+       u32 peer  = vvs->peer_buf_alloc;
+       u32 local = vvs->buf_alloc;
+
+       if (peer > local)
+               return local;
+       return peer;
+}
+

I think here Michael was suggesting this:

@@ -502,12 +502,7 @@ EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(virtio_transport_consume_skb_sent);
  */
 static u32 virtio_transport_tx_buf_alloc(struct virtio_vsock_sock *vvs)
 {
-       u32 peer  = vvs->peer_buf_alloc;
-       u32 local = vvs->buf_alloc;
-
-       if (peer > local)
-               return local;
-       return peer;
+       return min(vvs->peer_buf_alloc, vvs->buf_alloc);
 }


u32 virtio_transport_get_credit(struct virtio_vsock_sock *vvs, u32 credit)
{
        u32 ret;
@@ -499,7 +518,8 @@ u32 virtio_transport_get_credit(struct virtio_vsock_sock 
*vvs, u32 credit)
                return 0;

        spin_lock_bh(&vvs->tx_lock);
-       ret = vvs->peer_buf_alloc - (vvs->tx_cnt - vvs->peer_fwd_cnt);
+       ret = virtio_transport_tx_buf_alloc(vvs) -
+             (vvs->tx_cnt - vvs->peer_fwd_cnt);
        if (ret > credit)
                ret = credit;
        vvs->tx_cnt += ret;
@@ -831,7 +851,7 @@ virtio_transport_seqpacket_enqueue(struct vsock_sock *vsk,

        spin_lock_bh(&vvs->tx_lock);

-       if (len > vvs->peer_buf_alloc) {
+       if (len > virtio_transport_tx_buf_alloc(vvs)) {
                spin_unlock_bh(&vvs->tx_lock);
                return -EMSGSIZE;
        }
@@ -882,7 +902,8 @@ static s64 virtio_transport_has_space(struct vsock_sock 
*vsk)
        struct virtio_vsock_sock *vvs = vsk->trans;
        s64 bytes;

-       bytes = (s64)vvs->peer_buf_alloc - (vvs->tx_cnt - vvs->peer_fwd_cnt);
+       bytes = (s64)virtio_transport_tx_buf_alloc(vvs) -
+             (vvs->tx_cnt - vvs->peer_fwd_cnt);

nit: please align this:

@@ -903,7 +898,7 @@ static s64 virtio_transport_has_space(struct vsock_sock 
*vsk)
        s64 bytes;

        bytes = (s64)virtio_transport_tx_buf_alloc(vvs) -
-             (vvs->tx_cnt - vvs->peer_fwd_cnt);
+               (vvs->tx_cnt - vvs->peer_fwd_cnt);
        if (bytes < 0)
                bytes = 0;


Just minor things, but the patch LGTM, thanks!
Stefano

        if (bytes < 0)
                bytes = 0;

--
2.34.1



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