Re: [PATCH 3/3] staging: r8188eu: don't accept SIGTERM for cmd thread

From: Phillip Potter
Date: Sun Oct 17 2021 - 06:29:11 EST


On Sat, Oct 16, 2021 at 08:53:15PM +0200, Fabio M. De Francesco wrote:
> On Saturday, October 16, 2021 8:13:43 PM CEST Martin Kaiser wrote:
> > At the moment, our command thread can be killed by user space.
> >
> > [root@host ]# kill `pidof RTW_CMD_THREAD`
> >
> > The driver will then stop working until the module is unloaded
> > and reloaded.
> >
> > Don't process SIGTERM in the command thread. Other drivers that have a
> > command thread don't process SIGTERM either.
>
> Hi Martin,
>
> This is _really_ interesting :)
>
> May be that you have had time to read my last email in reply to a message of
> Phillip P. Soon after writing of the arguments in favor of using
> wait_for_completion_killable() (in patch 2/3 of the series I sent today), I
> read your patch.
>
> If you are right (and I think you are) I'll have to send a v2 that replaces
> the killable wait with an uninterruptible one.
>
> Unfortunately I have not the needed experience to decide whether or not to
> ack your patch, even if I'm strongly tempted to do it.
>
> Let's wait for more experienced people.
>
> Thanks,
>
> Fabio
>

So I myself am a little confused on this one :-)

Based on my understanding, so correct me if I'm wrong, a process (kthread or
otherwise) can still be killed if marked TASK_KILLABLE, even if ignoring
SIGTERM. Indeed, from a userspace perspective, SIGKILL is unblockable
anyway - although of course kernel code can choose how to respond to it.

So in other words, the kthread could still be killed while waiting
in the wait_for_completion_killable() call, even if we are ignoring
SIGTERM. From that perspective I guess, it is therefore not 'incorrect' as
such - if indeed we wanted that behaviour.

That said, killing it would still cause the behaviour Martin mentions -
I guess we don't want it to be either killable or interruptible based on
that logic?

Regards,
Phil