Hello. On Tue, Jan 21, 2020 at 04:48:43PM +0100, Christian Brauner <christian.brauner@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > +static int cgroup_css_set_fork(struct kernel_clone_args *kargs) > + __acquires(&cgroup_mutex) __acquires(&cgroup_threadgroup_rwsem) > +{ > + int ret; > + struct cgroup *dst_cgrp = NULL; > + struct css_set *cset; > + struct super_block *sb; > + struct file *f; > + > + if (kargs->flags & CLONE_INTO_CGROUP) > + mutex_lock(&cgroup_mutex); > + > + cgroup_threadgroup_change_begin(current); > + > + spin_lock_irq(&css_set_lock); > + cset = task_css_set(current); > + get_css_set(cset); > + spin_unlock_irq(&css_set_lock); > + > + if (!(kargs->flags & CLONE_INTO_CGROUP)) { > + kargs->cset = cset; Where is this css_set put when CLONE_INTO_CGROUP isn't used? (Aha, it's passed to child's tsk->cgroups but see my other note below.) > + dst_cgrp = cgroup_get_from_file(f); > + if (IS_ERR(dst_cgrp)) { > + ret = PTR_ERR(dst_cgrp); > + dst_cgrp = NULL; > + goto err; > + } > + > + /* > + * Verify that we the target cgroup is writable for us. This is > + * usually done by the vfs layer but since we're not going through > + * the vfs layer here we need to do it "manually". > + */ > + ret = cgroup_may_write(dst_cgrp, sb); > + if (ret) > + goto err; > + > + ret = cgroup_attach_permissions(cset->dfl_cgrp, dst_cgrp, sb, > + !!(kargs->flags & CLONE_THREAD)); > + if (ret) > + goto err; > + > + kargs->cset = find_css_set(cset, dst_cgrp); > + if (!kargs->cset) { > + ret = -ENOMEM; > + goto err; > + } > + > + if (cgroup_is_dead(dst_cgrp)) { > + ret = -ENODEV; > + goto err; > + } I'd move this check right after cgroup_get_from_file. The fork-migration path is synchrinized via cgroup_mutex with cgroup_destroy_locked and there's no need checking permissions on cgroup that's going away anyway. > +static void cgroup_css_set_put_fork(struct kernel_clone_args *kargs) > + __releases(&cgroup_threadgroup_rwsem) __releases(&cgroup_mutex) > +{ > + cgroup_threadgroup_change_end(current); > + > + if (kargs->flags & CLONE_INTO_CGROUP) { > + struct cgroup *cgrp = kargs->cgrp; > + struct css_set *cset = kargs->cset; > + > + mutex_unlock(&cgroup_mutex); > + > + if (cset) { > + put_css_set(cset); > + kargs->cset = NULL; > + } > + > + if (cgrp) { > + cgroup_put(cgrp); > + kargs->cgrp = NULL; > + } > + } I don't see any function problem with this ordering, however, I'd prefer symmetry with the "allocation" path (in cgroup_css_set_fork), i.e. cgroup_put, put_css_set and lastly mutex_unlock. > +void cgroup_post_fork(struct task_struct *child, > + struct kernel_clone_args *kargs) > + __releases(&cgroup_threadgroup_rwsem) __releases(&cgroup_mutex) > { > struct cgroup_subsys *ss; > - struct css_set *cset; > + struct css_set *cset = kargs->cset; > int i; > > spin_lock_irq(&css_set_lock); > > WARN_ON_ONCE(!list_empty(&child->cg_list)); > - cset = task_css_set(current); /* current is @child's parent */ > - get_css_set(cset); > cset->nr_tasks++; > css_set_move_task(child, NULL, cset, false); So, the reference is passed over from kargs->cset to task->cgroups. I think it's necessary to zero kargs->cset in order to prevent droping the reference in cgroup_css_set_put_fork. Perhaps, a general comment about css_set whereabouts during fork and kargs passing would be useful. > @@ -6016,6 +6146,17 @@ void cgroup_post_fork(struct task_struct *child) > } while_each_subsys_mask(); > > cgroup_threadgroup_change_end(current); > + > + if (kargs->flags & CLONE_INTO_CGROUP) { > + mutex_unlock(&cgroup_mutex); > + > + cgroup_put(kargs->cgrp); > + kargs->cgrp = NULL; > + } > + > + /* Make the new cset the root_cset of the new cgroup namespace. */ > + if (kargs->flags & CLONE_NEWCGROUP) > + child->nsproxy->cgroup_ns->root_cset = cset; root_cset reference (from copy_cgroup_ns) seems leaked here and where is the additional reference to new cset obtained? Thanks, Michal