Re: [PATCH RFC 00/15] decouple pagefault_disable() from preempt_disable()

From: Christian Borntraeger
Date: Thu May 07 2015 - 06:51:40 EST


Am 07.05.2015 um 11:48 schrieb Ingo Molnar:
>
> * Andrew Morton <akpm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
>> On Wed, 6 May 2015 19:50:24 +0200 David Hildenbrand <dahi@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>
>>> As Peter asked me to also do the decoupling in one shot, this is
>>> the new series.
>>>
>>> I recently discovered that might_fault() doesn't call might_sleep()
>>> anymore. Therefore bugs like:
>>>
>>> spin_lock(&lock);
>>> rc = copy_to_user(...);
>>> spin_unlock(&lock);
>>>
>>> would not be detected with CONFIG_DEBUG_ATOMIC_SLEEP. The code was
>>> changed to disable false positives for code like:
>>>
>>> pagefault_disable();
>>> rc = copy_to_user(...);
>>> pagefault_enable();
>>>
>>> Whereby the caller wants do deal with failures.
>>
>> hm, that was a significant screwup. I wonder how many bugs we
>> subsequently added.
>
> So I'm wondering what the motivation was to allow things like:
>
> pagefault_disable();
> rc = copy_to_user(...);
> pagefault_enable();
>
> and to declare it a false positive?
>
> AFAICS most uses are indeed atomic:
>
> pagefault_disable();
> ret = futex_atomic_cmpxchg_inatomic(curval, uaddr, uval, newval);
> pagefault_enable();
>
> so why not make it explicitly atomic again?

Hmm, I am probably misreading that, but it sound as you suggest to go back
to Davids first proposal
https://lkml.org/lkml/2014/11/25/436
which makes might_fault to also contain might_sleep. Correct?

Christian

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