Re: kernel BUG at fs/sysfs/group.c:65!

From: Greg KH
Date: Sun Mar 10 2013 - 17:39:33 EST


On Sun, Mar 10, 2013 at 01:35:12PM -0700, Eric W. Biederman wrote:
> Greg KH <gregkh@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes:
>
> > On Sun, Mar 10, 2013 at 04:53:11PM +0800, Ming Lei wrote:
> >> On Sun, Mar 10, 2013 at 12:36 AM, Tommi Rantala <tt.rantala@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> >> > [ 40.089036] [<ffffffff81222e29>] sysfs_get_dirent+0x39/0x80
> >> > [ 40.089036] [<ffffffff81224ad9>] sysfs_remove_group+0x29/0x100
> >> > [ 40.089036] [<ffffffff8113f2c4>] blk_trace_remove_sysfs+0x14/0x20
> >> > [ 40.089036] [<ffffffff813453ae>] blk_unregister_queue+0x5e/0x90
> >> > [ 40.089036] [<ffffffff8134d417>] del_gendisk+0x107/0x250
> >> > [ 40.089036] [<ffffffff814f66b8>] loop_remove+0x18/0x40
> >>
> >> Then the crash is triggered in device release path, which should have
> >> been avoided in device add path.
> >>
> >> If we want to fix the problem completely, add_disk() must handle failure
> >> path correctly and return error code on failures, which may involve big
> >> work, since add_disk() are called by 50+ drivers.
> >
> > Ok, but the root problem here is add_disk() is being called to create a
> > disk that was already created, right? Surely the caller should have
> > detected this before it called to the block core?
> >
> > Who is calling add_disk() here? Is this a fuse device? If so, then any
> > user can trigger this, right?
> >
> > That should be the "easier" fix at the moment to resolve this issue.
>
> At first glance this looks like rances in the loop driver.

Then that should be easy to fix, only allow one loop device to be
created / removed at a time?

greg k-h
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