On Wed 2019-06-26 09:16:11, John Ogness wrote:
> On 2019-06-26, Sergey Senozhatsky <sergey.senozhatsky.w...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > [..]
> >> > CPU0                                                             CPU1
> >> > printk(...)
> >> >  sz = vscprintf(NULL, "Comm %s\n", current->comm);
> >> >                                                          
> >> > ia64_mca_modify_comm()
> >> >                                                            
> >> > snprintf(comm, sizeof(comm), "%s %d", current->comm, 
> >> > previous_current->pid);
> >> >                                                            
> >> > memcpy(current->comm, comm, sizeof(current->comm));
> >> >  if ((buf = prb_reserve(... sz))) {
> >> >    vscnprintf(buf, "Comm %s\n", current->comm);
> >> >                          ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ->comm has changed.
> >> >                                         Nothing critical, we
> >> >                                         should not corrupt
> >> >                                         anything, but we will
> >> >                                         truncate ->comm if its
> >> >                                         new size is larger than
> >> >                                         what it used to be when
> >> >                                         we did vscprintf(NULL).
> >> >    prb_commit(...);
> >> >  }

Great catch.

> After we get a lockless ringbuffer that we are happy with, my next
> series to integrate the buffer into printk will again use the sprint_rb
> solution to avoid the issue discussed in this thread. Perhaps it would
> be best to continue this discussion after I've posted that series.

We should keep it in head. But I fully agree with postponing
the discussion.

I personally think that this is a corner case. I would start with
a simple vscprintf(NULL, ...) and vscprintf(reserved_buf, ...)
approach. We could always make it more complex when it causes
real life problems.

If the data might change under the hood then we have bigger
problems. For example, there might be a race when the trailing
"\0" has not been written yet.

Best Regards,
Petr

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