Re: [PATCH 1/3] comm: Introduce comm_lock seqlock to protecttask->comm access

From: John Stultz
Date: Fri May 13 2011 - 14:28:12 EST


On Fri, 2011-05-13 at 20:13 +0900, KOSAKI Motohiro wrote:
> Hi
>
> Sorry for the long delay.
>
> > char *get_task_comm(char *buf, struct task_struct *tsk)
> > {
> > - /* buf must be at least sizeof(tsk->comm) in size */
> > - task_lock(tsk);
> > - strncpy(buf, tsk->comm, sizeof(tsk->comm));
> > - task_unlock(tsk);
> > + unsigned long seq;
> > +
> > + do {
> > + seq = read_seqbegin(&tsk->comm_lock);
> > +
> > + strncpy(buf, tsk->comm, sizeof(tsk->comm));
> > +
> > + } while (read_seqretry(&tsk->comm_lock, seq));
> > +
> > return buf;
> > }
>
> Can you please explain why we should use seqlock? That said,
> we didn't use seqlock for /proc items. because, plenty seqlock
> write may makes readers busy wait. Then, if we don't have another
> protection, we give the local DoS attack way to attackers.

So you're saying that heavy write contention can cause reader
starvation?

> task->comm is used for very fundamentally. then, I doubt we can
> assume write is enough rare. Why can't we use normal spinlock?

I think writes are likely to be fairly rare. Tasks can only name
themselves or sibling threads, so I'm not sure I see the risk here.

Mind going into more detail?

thanks
-john


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