On Tue, Aug 15, 2023 at 08:56:50PM +0200, Bartosz Golaszewski wrote: > From: Bartosz Golaszewski <bartosz.golaszewski@xxxxxxxxxx> > > The GPIO subsystem has a serious problem with undefined behavior and > use-after-free bugs on hot-unplug of GPIO chips. This can be considered a > corner-case by some as most GPIO controllers are enabled early in the > boot process and live until the system goes down but most GPIO drivers > do allow unbind over sysfs, many are loadable modules that can be (force) > unloaded and there are also GPIO devices that can be dynamically detached, > for instance CP2112 which is a USB GPIO expender. > > Bugs can be triggered both from user-space as well as by in-kernel users. > We have the means of testing it from user-space via the character device > but the issues manifest themselves differently in the kernel. > > This is a proposition of adding a new virtual driver - a configurable > GPIO consumer that can be configured over configfs (similarly to > gpio-sim). > > The configfs interface allows users to create dynamic GPIO lookup tables > that are registered with the GPIO subsystem. Every config group > represents a consumer device. Every sub-group represents a single GPIO > lookup. The device can work in three modes: just keeping the line > active, toggling it every second or requesting its interrupt and > reporting edges. Every lookup allows to specify the key, offset and > flags as per the lookup struct defined in linux/gpio/machine.h. > > The module together with gpio-sim allows to easily trigger kernel > hot-unplug errors. A simple use-case is to create a simulated chip, > setup the consumer to lookup one of its lines in 'monitor' mode, unbind > the simulator, unbind the consumer and observe the fireworks in dmesg. > > This driver is aimed as a helper in tackling the hot-unplug problem in > GPIO as well as basis for future regression testing once the fixes are > upstream. ... > + struct gpio_consumer_device *dev = lookup->parent; > + > + guard(mutex)(&dev->lock); > + > + return sprintf(page, "%s\n", lookup->key); ... > +static ssize_t > +gpio_consumer_lookup_config_offset_show(struct config_item *item, char *page) > +{ > + struct gpio_consumer_lookup *lookup = to_gpio_consumer_lookup(item); > + struct gpio_consumer_device *dev = lookup->parent; > + unsigned int offset; > + > + scoped_guard(mutex, &dev->lock) > + offset = lookup->offset; > + > + return sprintf(page, "%d\n", offset); Consistently it can be simplified same way guard(mutex)(&dev->lock); return sprintf(page, "%d\n", lookup->offset); BUT. Thinking about this more. With guard() we put sprintf() inside the lock, which is suboptimal from runtime point of view. So, I think now that all these should actually use scoped_guard() rather than guard(). > +} ... > + guard(mutex)(&dev->lock); > + > + return lookup->flags; ... > +static ssize_t > +gpio_consumer_lookup_config_transitory_show(struct config_item *item, > + char *page) > +{ > + enum gpio_lookup_flags flags; > + > + flags = gpio_consumer_lookup_get_flags(item); This is perfectly one line < 80 characters. > + return sprintf(page, "%s\n", flags & GPIO_TRANSITORY ? "1" : "0"); > +} -- With Best Regards, Andy Shevchenko