Re: [PATCH v4 2/2] IMA: Call workqueue functions to measure queued keys

From: James Bottomley
Date: Mon Dec 16 2019 - 01:53:58 EST


On Sun, 2019-12-15 at 17:12 -0800, Lakshmi Ramasubramanian wrote:
> On 12/15/2019 7:22 AM, James Bottomley wrote:
>
> Hi James,
>
> >
> > This is the problem:
> >
> > if (!flag)
> > pre()
> > .
> > .
> > .
> > if (!flag)
> > post()
> >
> > And your pre and post function either have to both run or neither
> > must.
> > However, the flag is set asynchronously, so if it gets set while
> > another thread is running through the above code, it can change
> > after
> > pre is run but before post is.
> >
> > James
>
> The pre() and post() functions you have referenced above including
> the
> check for the flag are executed with the mutex held.
>
> Please see Mimi's response to the v3 email. I have copied it below:
>
> ************************************
> Reading the flag IS lock protected, just spread across two functions.
> For performance, ima_post_key_create_or_update() checks
> ima_process_keys, before calling ima_queue_key(), which takes the
> mutex before checking ima_process_keys again.
>
> As long as both the reader and writer, take the mutex before checking
> the flag, the locking is fine. The additional check, before taking
> the mutex, is simply for performance.
> ************************************
>
> The flag is checked with the mutex held in the "reader" -
> ima_queue_key(). The key is queued with the mutex held only if the
> flag
> is false.
>
> The flag is protected in the "writer" also -
> ima_process_queued_keys().
> The flag is checked with the mutex held, set to true, and queued
> keys
> (if any) are transferred to the temp list.
>
> As Mimi has pointed out the additional check of the flag, before
> taking
> the mutex in ima_post_key_create_or_update() and in
> ima_process_queued_keys(), is for performance reason.
>
> If the flag is true, there is no need to take the mutex to check it
> again in those functions.

That doesn't matter ... the question is, is the input assumption that
both pre/post have to be called or neither must correct? If so, the
code is wrong, if not, explain why.

James