diff options
author | Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk> | 2023-11-20 04:25:58 +0300 |
---|---|---|
committer | Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk> | 2023-11-25 10:53:20 +0300 |
commit | 22e111ed6c83dcde3037fc81176012721bc34c0b (patch) | |
tree | 181661e1eca27aa01a7badad00a0e11b936aafc5 /Documentation/filesystems/porting.rst | |
parent | 7deee77b993a2234acb123b8ec477bd56f2e3be3 (diff) | |
download | linux-22e111ed6c83dcde3037fc81176012721bc34c0b.tar.xz |
rename(): fix the locking of subdirectories
We should never lock two subdirectories without having taken
->s_vfs_rename_mutex; inode pointer order or not, the "order" proposed
in 28eceeda130f "fs: Lock moved directories" is not transitive, with
the usual consequences.
The rationale for locking renamed subdirectory in all cases was
the possibility of race between rename modifying .. in a subdirectory to
reflect the new parent and another thread modifying the same subdirectory.
For a lot of filesystems that's not a problem, but for some it can lead
to trouble (e.g. the case when short directory contents is kept in the
inode, but creating a file in it might push it across the size limit
and copy its contents into separate data block(s)).
However, we need that only in case when the parent does change -
otherwise ->rename() doesn't need to do anything with .. entry in the
first place. Some instances are lazy and do a tautological update anyway,
but it's really not hard to avoid.
Amended locking rules for rename():
find the parent(s) of source and target
if source and target have the same parent
lock the common parent
else
lock ->s_vfs_rename_mutex
lock both parents, in ancestor-first order; if neither
is an ancestor of another, lock the parent of source
first.
find the source and target.
if source and target have the same parent
if operation is an overwriting rename of a subdirectory
lock the target subdirectory
else
if source is a subdirectory
lock the source
if target is a subdirectory
lock the target
lock non-directories involved, in inode pointer order if both
source and target are such.
That way we are guaranteed that parents are locked (for obvious reasons),
that any renamed non-directory is locked (nfsd relies upon that),
that any victim is locked (emptiness check needs that, among other things)
and subdirectory that changes parent is locked (needed to protect the update
of .. entries). We are also guaranteed that any operation locking more
than one directory either takes ->s_vfs_rename_mutex or locks a parent
followed by its child.
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Fixes: 28eceeda130f "fs: Lock moved directories"
Reviewed-by: Jan Kara <jack@suse.cz>
Signed-off-by: Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk>
Diffstat (limited to 'Documentation/filesystems/porting.rst')
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/filesystems/porting.rst | 18 |
1 files changed, 18 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/filesystems/porting.rst b/Documentation/filesystems/porting.rst index 878e72b2f8b7..9100969e7de6 100644 --- a/Documentation/filesystems/porting.rst +++ b/Documentation/filesystems/porting.rst @@ -1061,3 +1061,21 @@ export_operations ->encode_fh() no longer has a default implementation to encode FILEID_INO32_GEN* file handles. Filesystems that used the default implementation may use the generic helper generic_encode_ino32_fh() explicitly. + +--- + +**mandatory** + +If ->rename() update of .. on cross-directory move needs an exclusion with +directory modifications, do *not* lock the subdirectory in question in your +->rename() - it's done by the caller now [that item should've been added in +28eceeda130f "fs: Lock moved directories"]. + +--- + +**mandatory** + +On same-directory ->rename() the (tautological) update of .. is not protected +by any locks; just don't do it if the old parent is the same as the new one. +We really can't lock two subdirectories in same-directory rename - not without +deadlocks. |