Jann Horn <jannh@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > It might make sense to require that the path points to the root inode > of the superblock? That way you wouldn't be able to do this on a bind > mount that exposes part of a shared filesystem to a container. Why prevent that? It doesn't prevent the container denizen from watching a bind mount that exposes the root of a shared filesystem into a container. It probably makes sense to permit the LSM to rule on whether a watch may be emplaced, however. > > + ret = add_watch_to_object(watch, s->s_watchers); > > + if (ret == 0) { > > + spin_lock(&sb_lock); > > + s->s_count++; > > + spin_unlock(&sb_lock); > > Why do watches hold references on the superblock they're watching? Fair point. It was necessary at one point, but I don't think it is now. I'll see if I can remove it. Note that it doesn't stop a superblock from being unmounted and destroyed. > > + } > > + } > > + up_write(&s->s_umount); > > + if (ret < 0) > > + kfree(watch); > > + } else if (s->s_watchers) { > > This should probably have something like a READ_ONCE() for clarity? Note that I think I'll rearrange this to: } else { ret = -EBADSLT; if (s->s_watchers) { down_write(&s->s_umount); ret = remove_watch_from_object(s->s_watchers, wqueue, s->s_unique_id, false); up_write(&s->s_umount); } } I'm not sure READ_ONCE() is necessary, since s_watchers can only be instantiated once and the watch list then persists until the superblock is deactivated. Furthermore, by the time deactivate_locked_super() is called, we can't be calling sb_notify() on it as it's become inaccessible. So if we see s->s_watchers as non-NULL, we should not see anything different inside the lock. In fact, I should be able to rewrite the above to: } else { ret = -EBADSLT; wlist = s->s_watchers; if (wlist) { down_write(&s->s_umount); ret = remove_watch_from_object(wlist, wqueue, s->s_unique_id, false); up_write(&s->s_umount); } } David