On Tue, Mar 15, 2022 at 12:02 PM Al Viro <viro@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Tue, Mar 15, 2022 at 10:27:39AM -0700, Hao Luo wrote: > > > Option 1: We can put restrictions on the pathname passed into this > > helper. We can explicitly require the parameter dirfd to be in bpffs > > (we can verify). In addition, we check pathname to be not containing > > any dot or dotdot, so the resolved path will end up inside bpffs, > > therefore won't take ->i_rwsem that is in the callchain of > > cgroup_mkdir(). > > Won't be enough - mount --bind the parent under itself and there you go... > Sure, you could prohibit mountpoint crossing, etc., but at that point > I'd question the usefulness of pathname resolution in the first place. [Apologies for resend, my response did not get delivered to mail list] I don't see a use case where we need to bind mount the directories in bpffs, right now. So in option 1, we can also prohibit mountpoint crossing. Pathname resolution is still useful in this case. Imagine we want to put all the created dirs under a base dir, we can open the base dir and reuse its fd for multiple mkdirs, for example: Userspace: fd = openat(..., "/sys/fs/bpf", ...); pass fd to the bpf prog bpf prog: bpf_mkdirat(fd, "common1", ...); bpf_mkdirat(fd, "common1/a", ...); bpf_mkdirat(fd, "common1/b", ...); bpf_mkdirat(fd, "common2", ...); ... It would be very inconvenient if we can't resolve multi-level paths. As Alexei said, another option is to delegate syscall to a worker thread. IMHO, we could do that in future if we find there is a need for the full feature of pathname resolution. Al, does that sound good?