From: Al Viro <viro@ZenIV.linux.org.uk>
To: NeilBrown <neilb@suse.de>
Cc: "J. Bruce Fields" <bfields@fieldses.org>,
NFS <linux-nfs@vger.kernel.org>
Subject: Re: [patch/rfc] allow exported (and *not* exported) filesystems to be unmounted.
Date: Wed, 5 Jun 2013 04:41:15 +0100 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <20130605034115.GD13110@ZenIV.linux.org.uk> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <20130605130541.5968d5c2@notabene.brown>
On Wed, Jun 05, 2013 at 01:05:41PM +1000, NeilBrown wrote:
>
> Hi Bruce,
> this is a little issue that seems to keep coming up so I thought it might be
> time to fix it.
>
> As you know, a filesystem that is exported cannot be unmounted as the export
> cache holds a reference to it. Though if it hasn't been accessed for a
> while then it can.
>
> As I hadn't realised before sometimes *non* exported filesystems can be
> pinned to. A negative entry in the cache can pin a filesystem just as
> easily as a positive entry.
> An amusing, if somewhat contrived, example is that if you export '/' with
> crossmnt and:
>
> mount localhost:/ /mnt
> ls -l /
> umount /mnt
>
> the umount might fail. This is because the "ls -l" tried to export every
> filesystem found mounted in '/'. The export of "/mnt" failed of course
> because you cannot re-export an NFS filesystem. But it is still in the
> cache.
> An 'exportfs -f' fixes this, but shouldn't be necessary.
>
> So this RFC patch makes it possible to register a notifier which gets
> called on unmount, and links the export table in to the notifier chain.
>
> The "atomic" flavour is used so that notifiers can be registered under a
> spin_lock. This is needed for "expkey_update" as ->update is called under a
> lock.
>
> As notifier callees cannot unregister themselves, the unregister needs to
> happen in a workqueue item, and the unmount will wait for that.
>
> It seems to work for me (once I figured out all the locking issues and found
> a way to make it work without deadlocking).
>
> If you are OK with in in general I'll make it into a proper patch series and
> include Al Viro for the VFS bits.
> @@ -1201,6 +1234,11 @@ static int do_umount(struct mount *mnt, int flags)
> sb->s_op->umount_begin(sb);
> }
>
> + /* Some in-kernel users (nfsd) might need to be asked to release
> + * the filesystem
> + */
> + umount_notifier_call(mnt);
NAK. I'm sorry, but it's a fundamentally wrong approach - there are _tons_
of places where vfsmount could get evicted (consider shared-subtree umount
propagation, for starters), not to mention that notifiers tend to be
the wrong answer to just about any question.
I'd suggest looking at what kernel/acct.c is doing; I'm absolutely serious
about notifiers being unacceptable BS. If you want something generic,
consider turning ->mnt_pinned into a list of callbacks, with mntput_no_expire
calling them one by one; calling acct_auto_close_mnt() would be replaced with
callbacks, each doing single acct_file_reopen(acct, NULL, NULL).
I'm about to fall asleep right now, so any further details will have to wait
until tomorrow; sorry...
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2013-06-05 3:41 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 10+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2013-06-05 3:05 [patch/rfc] allow exported (and *not* exported) filesystems to be unmounted NeilBrown
2013-06-05 3:41 ` Al Viro [this message]
2013-06-05 6:19 ` NeilBrown
2013-06-05 13:36 ` J. Bruce Fields
2013-06-06 0:05 ` NeilBrown
2013-07-01 19:12 ` J. Bruce Fields
2013-07-01 22:24 ` NeilBrown
2013-07-02 15:50 ` J. Bruce Fields
2013-07-08 7:30 ` NeilBrown
2013-07-08 20:04 ` J. Bruce Fields
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