Re: Question about do_mmap changes
From: Al Viro
Date: Mon Jun 04 2012 - 02:57:03 EST
On Mon, Jun 04, 2012 at 01:37:33AM -0500, Larry Finger wrote:
> Oh, shit. I was hoping for an easy conversion of this code to work
> with 3.5 so that I could use VB while testing 3.5. Clearly, the
> fixes will not be quick.
>
> As you have likely gathered, I am not a VB developer. Is it OK if I
> pass your comments on to the real developers and let them do the
> work?
Sure. BTW, if they are doing that munmap() *not* to current->mm, they
are in for serious analysis (and very likely - fixing unpleasant races)
in earlier versions as well; these races hadn't appeared just now.
Note that aio (another place that used to do such munmap()) had been
racy all way back to original merge. Moreover, access of task->mm
becomes really interesting when it's another task - note that execve(2)
changes the sucker, so you are risking up_write() done to mm->mmap_sem
that gets freed under you or up_write() on a _different_ mm_struct
->mmap_sem. And then there's the fact that exit_mm() is done without
->mmap_sem (it's done when no active users should've been left, after
all), so munmap() done on it will do nasty things. So will munmap()
racing with do_coredump() (again, no ->mmap_sem there - all threads
are already not running in userland by that point, so the kernel
just goes ahead and assumes that nobody will touch that mm_struct).
Conversion to vm_mmap()/vm_munmap() was done, in a large part, to simplify
the analysis and to make damn sure we are doing that to current->mm.
There are users of do_munmap() outside of mm/* (ipc/shm.c), but they
are also working on current->mm and the code in question is really
a misplaced piece of mm/* to start with.
_IF_ this is done not to current->mm, these guys are in for a world of
hurt, probably going all way back.
--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/