From: Wendy Cheng <wcheng@redhat.com>
To: nfs@lists.sourceforge.net
Cc: NeilBrown <neilb@suse.de>
Subject: Re: Question about f_count in struct nlm_file
Date: Thu, 22 Mar 2007 23:29:00 -0500 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <4603578C.6070200@redhat.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <4603506D.5040807@redhat.com>
Wendy Cheng wrote:
>
>client does posix lock -->
> server calls nlm4svc_proc_lock() ->
> * server lookup file (f_count++)
> * server lock the file
> * server calls nlm_release_host
> * server calls nlm_release_file (f_count--)
> * server return to client with status 0
>
>This will cause any call into nlm_traverse_files() to crash in the
>following path, if the file happens to be of "no interest" of the search
>(for example, the "match" function returns FALSE in all cases). Is this
>intentional or oversight ? Would 2.6.21-rc4 be a good base to do NLM
>development work ?
>
> 260 /*
> 261 * Loop over all files in the file table.
> 262 */
> 263 static int
> 264 nlm_traverse_files(struct nlm_host *host, nlm_host_match_fn_t match)
> 265 {
> .............
> 271 for (i = 0; i < FILE_NRHASH; i++) {
> 272 hlist_for_each_entry_safe(file, pos, next,
>&nlm_files[i] , f_list) {
> ....
> 274 file->f_count++;
> 275 mutex_unlock(&nlm_file_mutex);
> 276
> 277 /* Traverse locks, blocks and shares of
>this fil e
> 278 * and update file->f_locks count */
> 279 if (nlm_inspect_file(host, file, match))
> 280 ret = 1;
> 281
> 282 mutex_lock(&nlm_file_mutex);
> 283 file->f_count--;
> 284 /* No more references to this file. Let
>go of it . */
> 285 if (list_empty(&file->f_blocks) &&
>!file->f_lock s
> 286 && !file->f_shares && !file->f_count) {
> 287 hlist_del(&file->f_list);
> 288 nlmsvc_ops->fclose(file->f_file);
> 289 kfree(file);
>
>I can make the nlm_inspect_file() loops back (instead of trying to clean
>up the hash) to avoid this crash. But somehow the f_count logic sounds
>wrong to me. Why would a file that is still locked has a f_count zero in
>the hash ?
>
>
>
I should have made it clear... after nlm_inspect_file(), the logic
unconditionally checks for possible removing of this file. Since the
file is not blocked, nothing to do with shares, and f_count is zero, it
will get removed from hash and fclose() invoked (even it still owns a
plock). This will make VFS very unhappy and BUG() in fs/locks.c:1988 in
the middle of __fput -> locks_remove_flock.
On the other hand, the more I think (about this issue), maybe just
looping back after nlm_inspect_file finds no match would be good enough.
Anyway, that's what I'm going to do. Any objection ? Please let me know.
-- Wendy
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next prev parent reply other threads:[~2007-03-23 3:19 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 4+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2007-03-23 3:58 Question about f_count in struct nlm_file Wendy Cheng
2007-03-23 4:29 ` Wendy Cheng [this message]
2007-03-23 4:38 ` Neil Brown
2007-03-23 22:11 ` Wendy Cheng
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