On 09/02/2014 11:53 PM, Jeff Layton wrote: > On Tue, 2 Sep 2014 15:43:00 -0400 > "J. Bruce Fields" <bfields@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> On Tue, Sep 02, 2014 at 11:07:14PM +0400, Pavel Emelyanov wrote: >>> On 09/02/2014 10:44 PM, J. Bruce Fields wrote: >>>> On Tue, Sep 02, 2014 at 09:17:34PM +0400, Pavel Emelyanov wrote: >>>>> Hi, >>>>> >>>>> There's a problem with getting information about who has a flock on >>>>> a specific file. The thing is that the "owner" field, that is shown in >>>>> /proc/locks is the pid of the task who created the flock, not the one >>>>> who _may_ hold it. >>>>> >>>>> If the flock creator shared the file with some other task (by forking >>>>> or via scm_rights) and then died or closed the file, the information >>>>> shown in proc no longer corresponds to the reality. >>>>> >>>>> This is critical for CRIU project, that tries to dump (and restore) >>>>> the state of running tasks. For example, let's take two tasks A and B >>>>> both opened a file "/foo", one of tasks places a LOCK_SH lock on the >>>>> file and then "obfuscated" the owner field in /proc/locks. After this >>>>> we have no ways to find out who is the lock holder. >>>>> >>>>> I'd like to note, that for LOCK_EX this problem is not critical -- we >>>>> may go to both tasks and "ask" them to LOCK_EX the file again (we can >>>>> do it in CRIU, I can tell more if required). The one who succeeds is >>>>> the lock holder. >>>> >>>> It could be both, actually, right? >>> >>> Two succeeding with LOCK_EX? AFAIU no. Am I missing something? >> >> After a fork, two processes "own" the lock, right?: >> >> int main(int argc, char *argv[]) >> { >> int fd, ret; >> >> fd = open(argv[1], O_RDWR); >> ret = flock(fd, LOCK_EX); >> if (ret) >> err(1, "flock"); >> ret = fork(); >> if (ret == -1) >> err(1, "flock"); >> ret = flock(fd, LOCK_EX); >> if (ret) >> err(1, "flock"); >> printf("%d got exclusive lock\n", getpid()); >> sleep(1000); >> } >> >> $ touch TMP >> $ ./test TMP >> 15882 got exclusive lock >> 15883 got exclusive lock >> ^C >> >> I may misunderstand what you're doing. >> > > Yeah, I don't understand either. > > Flock locks are owned by the file description. The task that set > them is really irrelevant once they are set. > > In the second flock() call there, you're just "modifying" an existing > lock (which turns out to be a noop here). > > So, I don't quite understand the problem this solves. I get that you're > trying to reestablish the flock "state" after a checkpoint/restore > event, but why does it matter what task actually sets the locks as long > as they're set on the correct set of fds? Sorry for confusion. Let me try to explain it more clearly. First, what I meant talking about two LOCK_EX locks. Let's consider this scenario: pid = fork() fd = open("/foo"); /* both parent and child has _different_ files */ if (pid == 0) /* child only */ flock(fd, LOCK_EX); at this point we have two different files pointing to "/foo" and only one of them has LOCK_EX on it. So if try to LOCK_EX it again, only at child's file this would succeed. So we can distinguish which file is locked using this method. Now, what problem this patch is trying to solve. It's quite tricky, but still. Let's imagine this scenario: pid = fork(); fd = open("/foo"); /* yet again -- two different files */ if (pid == 0) { flock(fd, LOCK_SH); pid2 = fork(); if (pid2 != 0) exit(0); } at this point we have: task A -- the original task with file "/foo" opened task B -- the first child, that exited at the end task C -- the 2nd child, that "inherited" a file with the lock from B Note, that file at A and file at C are two different files (struct file-s). And it's only the C's one that is locked. The problem is that the /proc/locks shows the pid of B in this lock's owner field. And we have no glue to find out who the real lock owner is using the /proc/locks. If we try to do the trickery like the one we did with LOCK_EX above, this is what we would get. If putting the 2nd LOCK_SH from A and from C, both attempts would succeed, so this is not the solution. If we try to LOCK_EX from A and C, only C would succeed, so this seem to be the solution, but it's actually not. If there's another pair of A' and C' tasks holding the same "/foo" and having the LOCK_SH on C', this trick would stop working as none of the tasks would be able to put such lock on this file. Thus, we need some way to find out whether a task X has a lock on file F. This patch is one of the ways of doing this. Hope this explanation is more clear. >>>>> With LOCK_SH this doesn't work. Trying to drop the >>>>> lock doesn't work either, as flock(LOCK_UN) reports 0 in both cases: >>>>> if the file is locked and if it is not. >>>>> >>>>> That said, I'd like to propose the LOCK_TEST flag to the flock call, >>>>> that would check whether the lock of the given type (LOCK_SH or LOCK_EX) >>>>> exists on the file we test. It's not the same as the existing in-kernel >>>>> FL_ACCESS flag, which checks whether the new lock is possible, but >>>>> it's a new FL_TEST flag, that checks whether the existing lock is there. >>>>> >>>>> What do you think? >>>> >>>> I guess I can't see anything really wrong with it. >>>> >>>> It ignores the (poorly documented) LOCK_MAND case, but maybe that's OK. >>> >>> I actually checked it and it seemed to work. What problems do >>> you see with this case? >> >> On its own it just doesn't tell you whether or not LOCK_MAND is set. >> But I guess you can still get that out of /proc/locks. >> >> To be honest I don't really know whether LOCK_MAND works or is used. >> >> --b. > > -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-api" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html