On Thu, 2005-11-17 at 11:19, William H. Taber wrote: > Ian Kent wrote: > > On Wed, 16 Nov 2005, Ram Pai wrote: > > > >> > >>The question is: Who is the culprit? stubfs? VFS? or > >> autofs4? > > > > > > I'm happy to fix it in autofs unless you feel we need to address the wider > > issue. > > > > I'll put together a patch which takes account of this and pushes the > > hold/release down into try_to_fill_dentry. But I would like a little > > time to think about whether there may be other implications. > > > > Ian, > I don't think that you can fix this in the autofs by tinkering with > holding and releasing the parent i_sem. The reason for this is that you > don't have any way of knowing if you hold that lock or not. The easy > case is that nobody holds the lock. But if the lock is held you have no > way to know that you are the person holding the lock and you cannot > unlock someone elses lock without serious consequences. > > The only way to fix the lock handling is to fix the VFS. This means > either changing all calls to the d_revalidate functions (or all calls to > d_revalidate itself) so that the parent i_sem is obtained first, or to > change lookup_one_len (or actually lookup_hash) to only get the lock > around the filesystem lookup call, matching what is done in real_lookup. > I don't know which is better from a locking correctness perspective. > I would have to defer to the VFS experts on that one. I do know that > lookup_one_len is called from about 40 places in kernel tree and > probably from every filesystem outside the tree as well. Either way, it > is a non-trivial piece of work. > > If you take the inconsistant locking as a given, then the fix has to > involve not doing the d_add on the new dentry until after the mount > completes. This would eliminate the need for revalidate to wait. You > would have to provide a mechanism for keeping track of the outstanding > mount requests and looking for a a mount in progress before starting a > new request. This would take the waiting out of revalidate and put it > into the lookup request itself where you are guaranteed that the parent > i_sem lock is held.
Even this has a issue I think. Because later when the automounter attempts to mount, VFS wont' find the corresponding dentry in the dcache and will allocate a new dentry. And this dentry is not the one which autofs4 is waiting to be mounted on. No? RP > > I hope this is helps. > > Will Taber > > _______________________________________________ autofs mailing list [email protected] http://linux.kernel.org/mailman/listinfo/autofs
