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Re: RFC: Fix f_flags races without the BKL

To: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@xxxxxxx>
Subject: Re: RFC: Fix f_flags races without the BKL
From: Al Viro <viro@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Fri, 2 Jan 2009 18:42:32 +0000
Cc: LKML <linux-kernel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, Andi Kleen <andi@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, Alan Cox <alan@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, Oleg Nesterov <oleg@xxxxxxxxxx>, bfields@xxxxxxxxxxxx, xfs-masters@xxxxxxxxxxx
In-reply-to: <20081229041352.6bbdf57c@tpl>
References: <20081229041352.6bbdf57c@tpl>
Sender: Al Viro <viro@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
User-agent: Mutt/1.5.17 (2007-11-01)
On Mon, Dec 29, 2008 at 04:13:52AM -0700, Jonathan Corbet wrote:
> Accesses to the f_flags field have always involved a read-modify-write
> operation, and have always been racy in the absence of the BKL.  The recent
> BKL-removal work made this problem worse, but it has been there for a very
> long time.  The race is quite small, and, arguably, has never affected
> anybody, but it's still worth fixing.
> 
> After pondering for a while, I couldn't come up with anything better than a
> global file->f_flags mutex.  There's no point in bloating struct file with
> a mutex just for this purpose; it's hard to imagine that there will be any
> real contention for this lock.

Bloating with mutex is over the top, indeed, but why can't we simply keep
a pointer to fasync_struct in there?  Do we ever have a struct file with
several fasync_struct?  They'd have to be on different queues and I don't
see any cases where that would happen...

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