On Mon, Sep 9, 2024 at 11:29 PM Andrii Nakryiko <andrii.nakryiko@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Mon, Sep 9, 2024 at 6:13 AM Jann Horn <jannh@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Fri, Sep 6, 2024 at 7:12 AM Andrii Nakryiko <andrii@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > +static struct uprobe *find_active_uprobe_speculative(unsigned long bp_vaddr) > > > +{ > > > + const vm_flags_t flags = VM_HUGETLB | VM_MAYEXEC | VM_MAYSHARE; > > > + struct mm_struct *mm = current->mm; > > > + struct uprobe *uprobe; > > > + struct vm_area_struct *vma; > > > + struct file *vm_file; > > > + struct inode *vm_inode; > > > + unsigned long vm_pgoff, vm_start; > > > + int seq; > > > + loff_t offset; > > > + > > > + if (!mmap_lock_speculation_start(mm, &seq)) > > > + return NULL; > > > + > > > + rcu_read_lock(); > > > + > > > + vma = vma_lookup(mm, bp_vaddr); > > > + if (!vma) > > > + goto bail; > > > + > > > + vm_file = data_race(vma->vm_file); > > > > A plain "data_race()" says "I'm fine with this load tearing", but > > you're relying on this load not tearing (since you access the vm_file > > pointer below). > > You're also relying on the "struct file" that vma->vm_file points to > > being populated at this point, which means you need CONSUME semantics > > here, which READ_ONCE() will give you, and something like RELEASE > > semantics on any pairing store that populates vma->vm_file, which > > means they'd all have to become something like smp_store_release()). > > vma->vm_file should be set in VMA before it is installed and is never > modified afterwards, isn't that the case? So maybe no extra barrier > are needed and READ_ONCE() would be enough. Ah, right, I'm not sure what I was thinking there. I... guess you only _really_ need the READ_ONCE() if something can actually ever change the ->vm_file pointer, otherwise just a plain load with no annotation whatsoever would be good enough? I'm fairly sure nothing can ever change the ->vm_file pointer of a live VMA, and I think _currently_ it looks like nothing will NULL out the ->vm_file pointer on free either... though that last part is probably not something you should rely on...