Hi, Oleg: Thanks for your review. Please see my replies inline. On 10/23/18 2:23 AM, Oleg Nesterov wrote: > On 10/22, Enke Chen wrote: >> >> As the coredump of a process may take time, in certain time-sensitive >> applications it is necessary for a parent process (e.g., a process >> manager) to be notified of a child's imminent death before the coredump >> so that the parent process can act sooner, such as re-spawning an >> application process, or initiating a control-plane fail-over. > > Personally I still do not like this feature, but I won't argue. > >> --- a/fs/coredump.c >> +++ b/fs/coredump.c >> @@ -546,6 +546,7 @@ void do_coredump(const kernel_siginfo_t *siginfo) >> struct cred *cred; >> int retval = 0; >> int ispipe; >> + bool notify; >> struct files_struct *displaced; >> /* require nonrelative corefile path and be extra careful */ >> bool need_suid_safe = false; >> @@ -590,6 +591,15 @@ void do_coredump(const kernel_siginfo_t *siginfo) >> if (retval < 0) >> goto fail_creds; >> >> + /* >> + * Send the pre-coredump signal to the parent if requested. >> + */ >> + read_lock(&tasklist_lock); >> + notify = do_notify_parent_predump(current); >> + read_unlock(&tasklist_lock); >> + if (notify) >> + cond_resched(); > > Hmm. I do not understand why do we need cond_resched(). And even if we need it, > why we can't call it unconditionally? Remember the goal is to allow the parent (e.g., a process manager) to take early action. The "yield" before doing coredump will help. The yield is made conditional because the notification is conditional. Is that ok? > > I'd also suggest to move read_lock/unlock(tasklist) into do_notify_parent_predump() > and remove the "task_struct *tsk" argument, tsk is always current. > > Yes, do_notify_parent() and do_notify_parent_cldstop() are called with tasklist_lock > held, but there are good reasons for that. Sure I will make the suggested changes. This function is only called in one place. > > >> +static inline int valid_predump_signal(int sig) >> +{ >> + return (sig == SIGCHLD) || (sig == SIGUSR1) || (sig == SIGUSR2); >> +} > > I still do not understand why do we need to restrict predump_signal. > > PR_SET_PREDUMP_SIG can only change the caller's ->predump_signal, so to me > even PR_SET_PREDUMP_SIG(SIGKILL) is fine. I will remove it to reduce the code size and give more flexibility to the application. > > And once again, SIGCHLD/SIGUSR do not queue, this means that PR_SET_PREDUMP_SIG > is pointless if you have 2 or more children. Hmm, could you point me to the code where SIGCHLD/SIGUSR is treated differently w.r.t. queuing? That does not sound right to me. > >> +bool do_notify_parent_predump(struct task_struct *tsk) >> +{ >> + struct sighand_struct *sighand; >> + struct kernel_siginfo info; >> + struct task_struct *parent; >> + unsigned long flags; >> + pid_t pid; >> + int sig; >> + >> + parent = tsk->parent; >> + sighand = parent->sighand; >> + pid = task_tgid_vnr(tsk); >> + >> + spin_lock_irqsave(&sighand->siglock, flags); >> + sig = parent->signal->predump_signal; >> + if (!valid_predump_signal(sig)) { >> + spin_unlock_irqrestore(&sighand->siglock, flags); >> + return false; >> + } > > Why do we need to check parent->signal->predump_signal under ->siglock? > This complicates the code for no reason, afaics. > >> + clear_siginfo(&info); >> + info.si_pid = pid; >> + info.si_signo = sig; >> + if (sig == SIGCHLD) >> + info.si_code = CLD_PREDUMP; >> + >> + __group_send_sig_info(sig, &info, parent); >> + __wake_up_parent(tsk, parent); > > Why __wake_up_parent() ? not needed, and will remove. > > do_notify_parent() does this to wake up the parent sleeping in do_wait(), to > report the event. But predump_signal has nothing to do with wait(). > > Now. This version sends the signal to ->parent, not ->real_parent. OK, but this > means that real_parent won't be notified if its child is traced. > > >> + case PR_SET_PREDUMP_SIG: >> + if (arg3 || arg4 || arg5) >> + return -EINVAL; >> + >> + /* 0 is valid for disabling the feature */ >> + if (arg2 && !valid_predump_signal((int)arg2)) >> + return -EINVAL; >> + me->signal->predump_signal = (int)arg2; >> + break; > > Again, I do not understand why do we need valid_predump_signal(). But even > if we need it, I don't understand why should we check it twice. IOW, why > do_notify_parent_predump() can't simply check ->predump_signal != 0? > > Whatever we do, PR_SET_PREDUMP_SIG should validate arg2 anyway. Who else can > change ->predump_signal after that? Ok, will relax. > >> + case PR_GET_PREDUMP_SIG: >> + if (arg3 || arg4 || arg5) >> + return -EINVAL; >> + error = put_user(me->signal->predump_signal, >> + (int __user *)arg2); > > To me it would be better to simply return ->predump_signal, iow > > error = me->signal->predump_signal; > break; > > but I won't insist, this is subjective and cosmetic. Vast majority of system calls returns 0 or -1. So does PR_GET_PDEATHSIG. I would like to keep them consistent. Thanks again. -- Enke