From: Peter Xu <pet...@redhat.com> On the incoming migration side, QEMU uses a coroutine to load all the VM states. Inside, it may reference MigrationState on global states like migration capabilities, parameters, error state, shared mutexes and more.
However there's nothing yet to make sure MigrationState won't get destroyed (e.g. after migration_shutdown()). Meanwhile there's also no API available to remove the incoming coroutine in migration_shutdown(), avoiding it to access the freed elements. There's a bug report showing this can happen and crash dest QEMU when migration is cancelled on source. When it happens, the dest main thread is trying to cleanup everything: #0 qemu_aio_coroutine_enter #1 aio_dispatch_handler #2 aio_poll #3 monitor_cleanup #4 qemu_cleanup #5 qemu_default_main Then it found the migration incoming coroutine, schedule it (even after migration_shutdown()), causing crash: #0 __pthread_kill_implementation #1 __pthread_kill_internal #2 __GI_raise #3 __GI_abort #4 __assert_fail_base #5 __assert_fail #6 qemu_mutex_lock_impl #7 qemu_lockable_mutex_lock #8 qemu_lockable_lock #9 qemu_lockable_auto_lock #10 migrate_set_error #11 process_incoming_migration_co #12 coroutine_trampoline To fix it, take a refcount after an incoming setup is properly done when qmp_migrate_incoming() succeeded the 1st time. As it's during a QMP handler which needs BQL, it means the main loop is still alive (without going into cleanups, which also needs BQL). Releasing the refcount now only until the incoming migration coroutine finished or failed. Hence the refcount is valid for both (1) setup phase of incoming ports, mostly IO watches (e.g. qio_channel_add_watch_full()), and (2) the incoming coroutine itself (process_incoming_migration_co()). Note that we can't unref in migration_incoming_state_destroy(), because both qmp_xen_load_devices_state() and load_snapshot() will use it without an incoming migration. Those hold BQL so they're not prone to this issue. PS: I suspect nobody uses Xen's command at all, as it didn't register yank, hence AFAIU the command should crash on master when trying to unregister yank in migration_incoming_state_destroy().. but that's another story. Also note that in some incoming failure cases we may not always unref the MigrationState refcount, which is a trade-off to keep things simple. We could make it accurate, but it can be an overkill. Some examples: - Unlike most of the rest protocols, socket_start_incoming_migration() may create net listener after incoming port setup sucessfully. It means we can't unref in migration_channel_process_incoming() as a generic path because socket protocol might keep using MigrationState. - For either socket or file, multiple IO watches might be created, it means logically each IO watch needs to take one refcount for MigrationState so as to be 100% accurate on ownership of refcount taken. In general, we at least need per-protocol handling to make it accurate, which can be an overkill if we know incoming failed after all. Add a short comment to explain that when taking the refcount in qmp_migrate_incoming(). Bugzilla: https://issues.redhat.com/browse/RHEL-69775 Tested-by: Yan Fu <y...@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Peter Xu <pet...@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Fabiano Rosas <faro...@suse.de> Message-ID: <20250220132459.512610-1-pet...@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Fabiano Rosas <faro...@suse.de> --- migration/migration.c | 40 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++-- 1 file changed, 38 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) diff --git a/migration/migration.c b/migration/migration.c index 1833cfe358..d46e776e24 100644 --- a/migration/migration.c +++ b/migration/migration.c @@ -116,6 +116,27 @@ static void migration_downtime_start(MigrationState *s) s->downtime_start = qemu_clock_get_ms(QEMU_CLOCK_REALTIME); } +/* + * This is unfortunate: incoming migration actually needs the outgoing + * migration state (MigrationState) to be there too, e.g. to query + * capabilities, parameters, using locks, setup errors, etc. + * + * NOTE: when calling this, making sure current_migration exists and not + * been freed yet! Otherwise trying to access the refcount is already + * an use-after-free itself.. + * + * TODO: Move shared part of incoming / outgoing out into separate object. + * Then this is not needed. + */ +static void migrate_incoming_ref_outgoing_state(void) +{ + object_ref(migrate_get_current()); +} +static void migrate_incoming_unref_outgoing_state(void) +{ + object_unref(migrate_get_current()); +} + static void migration_downtime_end(MigrationState *s) { int64_t now = qemu_clock_get_ms(QEMU_CLOCK_REALTIME); @@ -863,7 +884,7 @@ process_incoming_migration_co(void *opaque) * postcopy thread. */ trace_process_incoming_migration_co_postcopy_end_main(); - return; + goto out; } /* Else if something went wrong then just fall out of the normal exit */ } @@ -879,7 +900,8 @@ process_incoming_migration_co(void *opaque) } migration_bh_schedule(process_incoming_migration_bh, mis); - return; + goto out; + fail: migrate_set_state(&mis->state, MIGRATION_STATUS_ACTIVE, MIGRATION_STATUS_FAILED); @@ -896,6 +918,9 @@ fail: exit(EXIT_FAILURE); } +out: + /* Pairs with the refcount taken in qmp_migrate_incoming() */ + migrate_incoming_unref_outgoing_state(); } /** @@ -1901,6 +1926,17 @@ void qmp_migrate_incoming(const char *uri, bool has_channels, return; } + /* + * Making sure MigrationState is available until incoming migration + * completes. + * + * NOTE: QEMU _might_ leak this refcount in some failure paths, but + * that's OK. This is the minimum change we need to at least making + * sure success case is clean on the refcount. We can try harder to + * make it accurate for any kind of failures, but it might be an + * overkill and doesn't bring us much benefit. + */ + migrate_incoming_ref_outgoing_state(); once = false; } -- 2.35.3