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authorLinus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>2023-08-05 20:49:31 +0300
committerChristian Brauner <brauner@kernel.org>2023-08-06 16:08:35 +0300
commit0a2c2baafa312ac4cec4f0bababedab3f971f224 (patch)
tree9cf014e0527821d2916eca35a37efc1f2c6bb98e /.rustfmt.toml
parenta0fc452a5d7fed986205539259df1d60546f536c (diff)
downloadlinux-0a2c2baafa312ac4cec4f0bababedab3f971f224.tar.xz
proc: fix missing conversion to 'iterate_shared'
I'm looking at the directory handling due to the discussion about f_pos locking (see commit 797964253d35: "file: reinstate f_pos locking optimization for regular files"), and wanting to clean that up. And one source of ugliness is how we were supposed to move filesystems over to the '->iterate_shared()' function that only takes the inode lock for reading many many years ago, but several filesystems still use the bad old '->iterate()' that takes the inode lock for exclusive access. See commit 6192269444eb ("introduce a parallel variant of ->iterate()") that also added some documentation stating Old method is only used if the new one is absent; eventually it will be removed. Switch while you still can; the old one won't stay. and that was back in April 2016. Here we are, many years later, and the old version is still clearly sadly alive and well. Now, some of those old style iterators are probably just because the filesystem may end up having per-inode mutable data that it uses for iterating a directory, but at least one case is just a mistake. Al switched over most filesystems to use '->iterate_shared()' back when it was introduced. In particular, the /proc filesystem was converted as one of the first ones in commit f50752eaa0b0 ("switch all procfs directories ->iterate_shared()"). But then later one new user of '->iterate()' was then re-introduced by commit 6d9c939dbe4d ("procfs: add smack subdir to attrs"). And that's clearly not what we wanted, since that new case just uses the same 'proc_pident_readdir()' and 'proc_pident_lookup()' helper functions that other /proc pident directories use, and they are most definitely safe to use with the inode lock held shared. So just fix it. This still leaves a fair number of oddball filesystems using the old-style directory iterator (ceph, coda, exfat, jfs, ntfs, ocfs2, overlayfs, and vboxsf), but at least we don't have any remaining in the core filesystems. I'm going to add a wrapper function that just drops the read-lock and takes it as a write lock, so that we can clean up the core vfs layer and make all the ugly 'this filesystem needs exclusive inode locking' be just filesystem-internal warts. I just didn't want to make that conversion when we still had a core user left. Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> Signed-off-by: Christian Brauner <brauner@kernel.org>
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