On Thu, Sep 12, 2024 at 06:35:39PM +0200, Oleg Nesterov wrote:
> On 09/09, Jiri Olsa wrote:
> >
> >  handle_uretprobe_chain(struct return_instance *ri, struct pt_regs *regs)
> >  {
> > +   struct return_consumer *ric = NULL;
> >     struct uprobe *uprobe = ri->uprobe;
> >     struct uprobe_consumer *uc;
> > -   int srcu_idx;
> > +   int srcu_idx, iter = 0;
> >
> >     srcu_idx = srcu_read_lock(&uprobes_srcu);
> >     list_for_each_entry_srcu(uc, &uprobe->consumers, cons_node,
> >                              srcu_read_lock_held(&uprobes_srcu)) {
> > +           /*
> > +            * If we don't find return consumer, it means uprobe consumer
> > +            * was added after we hit uprobe and return consumer did not
> > +            * get registered in which case we call the ret_handler only
> > +            * if it's not session consumer.
> > +            */
> > +           ric = return_consumer_find(ri, &iter, uc->id);
> > +           if (!ric && uc->session)
> > +                   continue;
> >             if (uc->ret_handler)
> > -                   uc->ret_handler(uc, ri->func, regs);
> > +                   uc->ret_handler(uc, ri->func, regs, ric ? &ric->cookie 
> > : NULL);
> 
> So why do we need the new uc->session member and the uc->session above ?
> 
> If return_consumer_find() returns NULL, uc->ret_handler(..., NULL) can handle
> this case itself?

I tried to explain that in the comment above.. we do not want to
execute session ret_handler at all in this case, because its entry
counterpart did not run

jirka

> 
> Oleg.
> 

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