On Thu, Oct 1, 2020 at 11:05 AM Jann Horn <jannh@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Yeah. > > The ONE() entry you're adding to tgid_base_stuff is used to help > instantiate a "struct inode" when someone looks up the path > "/proc/$tgid/seccomp_cache"; then when that path is opened, a "struct > file" is created that holds a reference to the inode; and while that > file exists, your proc_pid_seccomp_cache() can be invoked. > > proc_pid_seccomp_cache() is invoked from proc_single_show() > ("PROC_I(inode)->op.proc_show" is proc_pid_seccomp_cache), and > proc_single_show() obtains a temporary reference to the task_struct > using get_pid_task() on a "struct pid" and drops that reference > afterwards with put_task_struct(). The "struct pid" is obtained from > the "struct proc_inode", which is essentially a subclass of "struct > inode". The "struct pid" is kept refererenced until the inode goes > away, via proc_pid_evict_inode(), called by proc_evict_inode(). > > By looking at put_task_struct() and its callees, you can figure out > which parts of the "struct task" are kept alive by the reference to > it. Ah I see. Thanks for the explanation. > By the way, maybe it'd make sense to add this to tid_base_stuff as > well? That should just be one extra line of code. Seccomp filters are > technically per-thread, so it would make sense to have them visible in > the per-thread subdirectories /proc/$pid/task/$tid/. Right. Will do. YiFei Zhu