Re: strange interaction between fuse + pidns
From: Tycho Andersen
Date: Mon Jul 11 2022 - 18:54:43 EST
On Mon, Jul 11, 2022 at 04:37:12PM -0500, Eric W. Biederman wrote:
> Tycho Andersen <tycho@tycho.pizza> writes:
>
> > Hi all,
> >
> > On Mon, Jul 11, 2022 at 03:59:15PM +0200, Miklos Szeredi wrote:
> >> On Mon, 11 Jul 2022 at 12:35, Miklos Szeredi <miklos@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> >> >
> >> > Can you try the attached untested patch?
> >>
> >> Updated patch to avoid use after free on req->args.
> >>
> >> Still mostly untested.
> >
> > Thanks, when I applied your patch, I still ended up with tasks stuck
> > waiting with a SIGKILL pending. So I looked into that and came up with
> > the patch below. With both your patch and mine, my testcase exits
> > cleanly.
> >
> > Eric (or Christian, or anyone), can you comment on the patch below? I
> > have no idea what this will break. Maybe instead a better approach is
> > some additional special case in __send_signal_locked()?
> >
> > Tycho
> >
> > From b7ea26adcf3546be5745063cc86658acb5ed37e9 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
> > From: Tycho Andersen <tycho@tycho.pizza>
> > Date: Mon, 11 Jul 2022 11:26:58 -0600
> > Subject: [PATCH] sched: __fatal_signal_pending() should also check shared
> > signals
> >
> > The wait_* code uses signal_pending_state() to test whether a thread has
> > been interrupted, which ultimately uses __fatal_signal_pending() to detect
> > if there is a fatal signal.
> >
> > When a pid ns dies, in zap_pid_ns_processes() it does:
> >
> > group_send_sig_info(SIGKILL, SEND_SIG_PRIV, task, PIDTYPE_MAX);
> >
> > for all the tasks in the pid ns. That calls through:
> >
> > group_send_sig_info() ->
> > do_send_sig_info() ->
> > send_signal_locked() ->
> > __send_signal_locked()
> >
> > which does:
> >
> > pending = (type != PIDTYPE_PID) ? &t->signal->shared_pending : &t->pending;
> >
> > which puts sigkill in the set of shared signals, but not the individual
> > pending ones. If tasks are stuck in a killable wait (e.g. a fuse flush
> > operation), they won't see this shared signal, and will hang forever, since
> > TIF_SIGPENDING is set, but the fatal signal can't be detected.
>
> Hmm.
>
> That is perplexing.
Thanks for taking a look.
> __send_signal_locked calls complete_signal. Then if any of the tasks of
> the process can receive the signal, complete_signal will loop through
> all of the tasks of the process and set the per thread SIGKILL. Pretty
> much by definition tasks can always receive SIGKILL.
>
> Is complete_signal not being able to do that?
In my specific case it was because my testcase was already trying to
exit and had set PF_EXITING when the signal is delivered, so
complete_signal() was indeed not able to do that since PF_EXITING is
checked before SIGKILL in wants_signal().
But I changed my testacase to sleep instead of exit, and I get the
same hang behavior, even though complete_signal() does add SIGKILL to
the set. So there's something else going on there...
> The patch below really should not be necessary, and I have pending work
> that if I can push over the finish line won't even make sense.
>
> As it is currently an abuse to use the per thread SIGKILL to indicate
> that a fatal signal has been short circuit delivered. That abuse as
> well as being unclean tends to confuse people reading the code.
How close is your work? I'm wondering if it's worth investigating the
non-PF_EXITING case further, or if we should just land this since it
fixes the PF_EXITING case as well. Or maybe just do something like
this in addition:
diff --git a/kernel/signal.c b/kernel/signal.c
index 6f86fda5e432..0f71dfb1c3d2 100644
--- a/kernel/signal.c
+++ b/kernel/signal.c
@@ -982,12 +982,12 @@ static inline bool wants_signal(int sig, struct task_struct *p)
if (sigismember(&p->blocked, sig))
return false;
- if (p->flags & PF_EXITING)
- return false;
-
if (sig == SIGKILL)
return true;
+ if (p->flags & PF_EXITING)
+ return false;
+
if (task_is_stopped_or_traced(p))
return false;
?
Tycho