Hi Tejun, On Wed, Jan 30, 2019 at 6:09 PM Tejun Heo <tj@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > Hello, > > On Wed, Jan 30, 2019 at 12:41:50PM +0100, Ondrej Mosnacek wrote: > > @@ -673,6 +698,12 @@ static struct kernfs_node *__kernfs_new_node(struct kernfs_root *root, > > goto err_out3; > > } > > > > + if (parent) { > > + ret = kernfs_node_init_security(parent, kn); > > + if (ret) > > + goto err_out3; > > + } > > So, doing this unconditionally isn't a good idea. kernfs doesn't use > the usual dentry/inode because there are machines with 6, even 7 digit > number of kernfs nodes and some of them even failed to boot due to > memory shortage. Please don't blow it up by default. Hm, I see... basically the only thing that gets allocated in kernfs_node_init_security() by default (at least under SELinux/ no LSM) is the kernfs_iattrs structures, so I assume you are pointing at that. I think this can be easily fixed, if we again use the assumption that whenever the parent node has only default attributes (parent->iattrs == NULL), then the child node should also have just default attributes (and so we don't need to call kernfs_iattrs() on it nor call the security hook). Something along these lines: [...] +static int kernfs_node_init_security(struct kernfs_node *parent, + struct kernfs_node *kn) +{ + struct kernfs_iattrs *attrs, *pattrs; + struct qstr q; + + pattrs = parent->iattrs; + if (!pattrs) + return 0; + + attrs = kernfs_iattrs(kn); + if (!attrs) + return -ENOMEM; + + q.name = kn->name; + q.hash_len = hashlen_string(parent, kn->name); [...] Technically this might make some LSMs unhappy, if they want to set some non-default context even if parent is all default, but this is already impossible now and in this case I think we have no better choice than sacrificing a bit of flexibility for memory efficiency, which is apparently critical here. Tejun, Casey, would the above modification be fine with you? -- Ondrej Mosnacek <omosnace at redhat dot com> Associate Software Engineer, Security Technologies Red Hat, Inc.