Re: synchronous signal in the blocked signal context
From: Paul E. McKenney
Date: Tue Aug 01 2006 - 14:10:42 EST
On Tue, Aug 01, 2006 at 08:25:12AM -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote:
>
>
> On Tue, 1 Aug 2006, Paul E. McKenney wrote:
> > >
> > > Paul? Should I just revert, or did you have some deeper reason for it?
> >
> > I cannot claim any deep thought on this one, so please do revert it.
>
> Well, I do have to say that I like the notion of trying to have the _same_
> semantics for "force_sig_info()" and "force_sig_specific()", so in that
> way your patch is fine - I just missed the fact that it changed it back to
> the old broken ones (that results in endless SIGSEGV's if the SIGSEGV
> happens when setting up the handler for the SIGSEGV and other
> "interesting" issues, where a bug can result in the user process hanging
> instead of just killing it outright).
I guess I am glad I was not -totally- insane when submitting the
original patch. ;-)
> However, I wonder if the _proper_ fix is to just either remove
> "force_sig_specific()" entirely, or just make that one match the semantics
> of "force_sig_info()" instead (rather than doing it the other way - change
> for_sig_specific() to match force_sig_info()).
One question -- the original (2.6.14 or thereabouts) version of
force_sig_info() would do the sigdelset() and recalc_sig_pending()
even if the signal was not blocked, while your patch below would
do sigdelset()/recalc_sig_pending() only if the signal was blocked,
even if it was not ignored. Not sure this matters, but thought I
should ask.
> force_sig_info() has only two uses, and both should be ok with the
s/force_sig_info/force_sig_specific/? I see >100 uses of force_sig_info().
> force_sig_specific() semantics, since they are for SIGSTOP and SIGKILL
> respectively, and those should not be blockable unless you're a kernel
> thread (and I don't think either of them could validly ever be used with
> kernel threads anyway), so doing it the other way around _should_ be ok.
OK, SIGSTOP and SIGKILL cannot be ignored or blocked. So wouldn't
they end up skipping the recalc_sig_pending() in the new code,
where they would have ended up executing it in the 2.6.14 version
of force_sig_specific()?
Assuming I am at least semi-sane, one possible way to fix shown below.
Thanx, Paul
> Paul, Suresh, would something like this work for you instead?
>
> Linus
> ----
> diff --git a/kernel/signal.c b/kernel/signal.c
> index 7fe874d..bfdb568 100644
> --- a/kernel/signal.c
> +++ b/kernel/signal.c
> @@ -791,22 +791,31 @@ out:
> /*
> * Force a signal that the process can't ignore: if necessary
> * we unblock the signal and change any SIG_IGN to SIG_DFL.
> + *
> + * Note: If we unblock the signal, we always reset it to SIG_DFL,
> + * since we do not want to have a signal handler that was blocked
> + * be invoked when user space had explicitly blocked it.
> + *
> + * We don't want to have recursive SIGSEGV's etc, for example.
> */
> -
> int
> force_sig_info(int sig, struct siginfo *info, struct task_struct *t)
> {
> unsigned long int flags;
> - int ret;
> + int ret, blocked, ignored;
int alwaysfatal;
> + struct k_sigaction *action;
>
> spin_lock_irqsave(&t->sighand->siglock, flags);
> - if (t->sighand->action[sig-1].sa.sa_handler == SIG_IGN) {
> - t->sighand->action[sig-1].sa.sa_handler = SIG_DFL;
> - }
> - if (sigismember(&t->blocked, sig)) {
> - sigdelset(&t->blocked, sig);
> + action = &t->sighand->action[sig-1];
> + ignored = action->sa.sa_handler == SIG_IGN;
alwaysfatal = sig == SIGKILL || sig == SIGSTOP;
> + blocked = sigismember(&t->blocked, sig);
> + if (blocked || ignored) {
if (blocked || ignored || alwaysfatal) {
> + action->sa.sa_handler = SIG_DFL;
> + if (blocked) {
if (blocked || alwaysfatal) {
> + sigdelset(&t->blocked, sig);
> + recalc_sigpending_tsk(t);
> + }
> }
> - recalc_sigpending_tsk(t);
> ret = specific_send_sig_info(sig, info, t);
> spin_unlock_irqrestore(&t->sighand->siglock, flags);
>
-
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