On Wed, Jul 15, 2026 at 03:50:33PM +0200, Pratyush Yadav wrote:
> Hi David,
> 
> On Tue, Jul 14 2026, David Matlack wrote:
> 
> > Remove the single-opener restriction for /dev/liveupdate by removing the
> > atomic in_use tracking and the exclusive open check in luo_open() that
> > returned -EBUSY. Protect luo_session_deserialize() with a mutex guard so
> > that concurrent open attempts by multiple processes safely executes
> > deserialization only once. Update liveupdate selftest to verify that
> > multiple concurrent openers succeed.
> >
> > LUO does not inherently require a single opener. There is some
> > documentation about it simplifying state management, but the only thing
> > it actually protects is the session deserialization during first open,
> > which can be easily handled with a mutex.
> >
> > Relaxing the single-opener requirement avoids the kernel forcing a
> > design pattern on userspace that it itself does not require, e.g.
> > allowing multiple userspace processes to create and manage sessions.
> 
> Agreed. When the kernel had a global state machine in the early versions
> of LUO, this might have been more relevant. With sessions, even if we
> later add a state machine, it likely will be per-session instead of
> being global. So I think letting userspace open /dev/liveupdate multiple
> times makes a lot of sense.
> 
> Also, today's systemd only supports preserving individual files, and
> does not hand out sessions. To get sessions, userspace must open
> /dev/liveupdate and create a session. This opens up room for one bad
> process to block every other process from creating sessions. It also
> imposes a need for userspace to add a polling/retry logic for getting
> sessions and serializes their execution around this point.

Shouldn't systemd open and own /dev/liveupdate? That was at least what
I originally expected here, you'd talk to it and get a session FD
through dbus.

Moving to multi-opening /dev/liveupdate and removing visibility of
what sessions are open from systemd is a different model

Not saying this patch is wrong or anything, but that I don't really
understand what kind of model you are going for now.

Jason

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