Re: [PATCH] coredump: Limit what can interrupt coredumps
From: Eric W. Biederman
Date: Mon Jun 14 2021 - 12:38:16 EST
Oleg Nesterov <oleg@xxxxxxxxxx> writes:
> Eric, et al, sorry for delay, I didn't read emails several days.
>
> On 06/10, Eric W. Biederman wrote:
>>
>> v2: Don't remove the now unnecessary code in prepare_signal.
>
> No, that code is still needed. Otherwise any fatal signal will be
> turned into SIGKILL.
>
>> --- a/fs/coredump.c
>> +++ b/fs/coredump.c
>> @@ -519,7 +519,7 @@ static bool dump_interrupted(void)
>> * but then we need to teach dump_write() to restart and clear
>> * TIF_SIGPENDING.
>> */
>> - return signal_pending(current);
>> + return fatal_signal_pending(current) || freezing(current);
>> }
>
>
> Well yes, this is what the comment says.
>
> But note that there is another reason why dump_interrupted() returns true
> if signal_pending(), it assumes thagt __dump_emit()->__kernel_write() may
> fail anyway if signal_pending() is true. Say, pipe_write(), or iirc nfs,
> perhaps something else...
The pipe_write case is a good case to consider. In general filesystems
are only allowed to stop if fatal_signal_pending. It is an ancient
unix/posix thing.
> That is why zap_threads() clears TIF_SIGPENDING. Perhaps it should clear
> TIF_NOTIFY_SIGNAL as well and we should change io-uring to not abuse the
> dumping threads?
I would very much like some clarity on TIF_NOTIFY_SIGNAL. At the very
least it would be nice if it could get renamed TIF_NOTIFY_TASK_WORK.
I don't know what it has to do with signals.
> Or perhaps we should change __dump_emit() to clear signal_pending() and
> restart __kernel_write() if it fails or returns a short write.
Given that the code needs to handle pipes that seems a reasonable thing
to do. Note. All of the blocking of new signals in prepare_signal
is still in place. So only a SIGKILL can come in set TIF_SIGPENDING.
So I would say that the current fix is correct (and safe to backport).
But still requires some magic in prepare_signal until we do more.
I don't understand the logic with well enough of adding work to
non-io_uring threads with task_work_add to understand why that happens
in the first place.
There are a lot of silly corners here. Yes please let's keep on
digging.
Eric