On Fri, 16 Mar 2007 12:16:13 +0300 Alexey Dobriyan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Thu, Mar 15, 2007 at 05:53:04PM -0800, Andrew Morton wrote: > > My, what a lot of code you have here. I note that nobody can be assed even > > reviewing it. Now why is that? > > I hope, Al could find some time again. > > > On Sun, 11 Mar 2007 20:04:56 +0300 Alexey Dobriyan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > > wrote: > > > Fix following races: > > > =========================================== > > > 1. Write via ->write_proc sleeps in copy_from_user(). Module disappears > > > meanwhile. Or, more generically, system call done on /proc file, method > > > supplied by module is called, module dissapeares meanwhile. > > > > > > pde = create_proc_entry() > > > if (!pde) > > > return -ENOMEM; > > > pde->write_proc = ... > > > open > > > write > > > copy_from_user > > > pde = create_proc_entry(); > > > if (!pde) { > > > remove_proc_entry(); > > > return -ENOMEM; > > > /* module unloaded */ > > > } > > > > We usually fix that race by pinning the module: make whoever registered the > > proc entries also register their THIS_MODULE, do a try_module_get() on it > > before we start to play with data structures which the module owns. > > > > Can we do that here? > > We can, but it will be unreliable: > > Typical proc entry creation sequence is > > pde = create_proc_entry(...); > if (pde) > pde->owner = THIS_MODULE; > > Right after create_proc_entry() ->owner is NULL, so try_module_get() > won't do anything, but proc_delete_inode() could put module which was > never getted. > > This should fixable by always setting ->owner before proc entry is > glued to proc entries tree. Something like this: > > #define create_proc_entry(...) __create_proc_entry(..., THIS_MODULE) Yes, I was thinking of something like that. > However, I think it's not enough: delete_module(2) first waits for > refcount becoming zero, only then calls modules's exit function which > starts removing proc entries. In between, proc entries are accessible > and fully-functional, so try_module_get() can again get module and > module_put(pde->owner) can happen AFTER module dissapears. > What will it put? > > And how can you fix that? The only way I know is to REMOVE ->owner > completely, once we agree on this pde_users/pde_unload_lock stuff. I think the rmmod code will take care of that. Once delete_module() has called try_stop_module(), no following try_module_get() will succeed. And see that wait_for_zero_refcount() call in there which waits for any present users of the module to go away. _______________________________________________ Devel mailing list Devel@openvz.org https://openvz.org/mailman/listinfo/devel