Le 09/10/2018 à 18:15, Kirill Tkhai a écrit : > On 09.10.2018 13:37, Laurent Vivier wrote: >> This patch allows to have a different binfmt_misc configuration >> for each new user namespace. By default, the binfmt_misc configuration >> is the one of the previous level, but if the binfmt_misc filesystem is >> mounted in the new namespace a new empty binfmt instance is created and >> used in this namespace. >> >> For instance, using "unshare" we can start a chroot of an another >> architecture and configure the binfmt_misc interpreter without being root >> to run the binaries in this chroot. >> >> Signed-off-by: Laurent Vivier <laurent@xxxxxxxxx> >> --- >> fs/binfmt_misc.c | 106 ++++++++++++++++++++++++--------- >> include/linux/user_namespace.h | 13 ++++ >> kernel/user.c | 13 ++++ >> kernel/user_namespace.c | 3 + >> 4 files changed, 107 insertions(+), 28 deletions(-) >> >> diff --git a/fs/binfmt_misc.c b/fs/binfmt_misc.c >> index aa4a7a23ff99..1e0029d097d9 100644 >> --- a/fs/binfmt_misc.c >> +++ b/fs/binfmt_misc.c ... >> @@ -80,18 +74,32 @@ static int entry_count; >> */ >> #define MAX_REGISTER_LENGTH 1920 >> >> +static struct binfmt_namespace *binfmt_ns(struct user_namespace *ns) >> +{ >> + struct binfmt_namespace *b_ns; >> + >> + while (ns) { >> + b_ns = READ_ONCE(ns->binfmt_ns); >> + if (b_ns) >> + return b_ns; >> + ns = ns->parent; >> + } >> + WARN_ON_ONCE(1); >> + return NULL; >> +} >> + ... >> @@ -823,12 +847,34 @@ static const struct super_operations s_ops = { >> static int bm_fill_super(struct super_block *sb, void *data, int silent) >> { >> int err; >> + struct user_namespace *ns = sb->s_user_ns; >> static const struct tree_descr bm_files[] = { >> [2] = {"status", &bm_status_operations, S_IWUSR|S_IRUGO}, >> [3] = {"register", &bm_register_operations, S_IWUSR}, >> /* last one */ {""} >> }; >> >> + /* create a new binfmt namespace >> + * if we are not in the first user namespace >> + * but the binfmt namespace is the first one >> + */ >> + if (READ_ONCE(ns->binfmt_ns) == NULL) { >> + struct binfmt_namespace *new_ns; >> + >> + new_ns = kmalloc(sizeof(struct binfmt_namespace), >> + GFP_KERNEL); >> + if (new_ns == NULL) >> + return -ENOMEM; >> + INIT_LIST_HEAD(&new_ns->entries); >> + new_ns->enabled = 1; >> + rwlock_init(&new_ns->entries_lock); >> + new_ns->bm_mnt = NULL; >> + new_ns->entry_count = 0; >> + /* ensure new_ns is completely initialized before sharing it */ >> + smp_wmb(); > > (I haven't dived into patch logic, here just small barrier remark from quick sight). > smp_wmb() has no sense without paired smp_rmb() on the read side. Possible, > you want something like below in read hunk: > > + b_ns = READ_ONCE(ns->binfmt_ns); > + if (b_ns) { > + smp_rmb(); > + return b_ns; > + } > > The write barrier is here to ensure the structure is fully written before we set the pointer. I don't understand how read barrier can change something at this level, IMHO the couple WRITE_ONCE()/READ_ONCE() should be enough to ensure we have correctly initialized the pointer and the structure when we read the pointer back. I think the pointer itself is the "barrier" to access the memory modified before. Thanks, Laurent