On Wed, Nov 13, 2019 at 01:44:14PM +1100, Aleksa Sarai wrote: > On 2019-11-13, Al Viro <viro@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Tue, Nov 05, 2019 at 08:05:49PM +1100, Aleksa Sarai wrote: > > > > > @@ -2277,12 +2277,20 @@ static const char *path_init(struct nameidata *nd, unsigned flags) > > > > > > nd->m_seq = read_seqbegin(&mount_lock); > > > > > > - /* Figure out the starting path and root (if needed). */ > > > - if (*s == '/') { > > > + /* Absolute pathname -- fetch the root. */ > > > + if (flags & LOOKUP_IN_ROOT) { > > > + /* With LOOKUP_IN_ROOT, act as a relative path. */ > > > + while (*s == '/') > > > + s++; > > > > Er... Why bother skipping slashes? I mean, not only link_path_walk() > > will skip them just fine, you are actually risking breakage in this: > > if (*s && unlikely(!d_can_lookup(dentry))) { > > fdput(f); > > return ERR_PTR(-ENOTDIR); > > } > > which is downstream from there with you patch, AFAICS. > > I switched to stripping the slashes at your suggestion a few revisions > ago[1], and had (wrongly) assumed we needed to handle "/" somehow in > path_init(). But you're quite right about link_path_walk() -- and I'd be > more than happy to drop it. That, IIRC, was about untangling the weirdness around multiple calls of dirfd_path_init() and basically went "we might want just strip the slashes in case of that flag very early in the entire thing, so that later the normal logics for absolute/relative would DTRT". Since your check is right next to checking for absolute pathnames (and not in the very beginning of path_init()), we might as well turn the check for absolute pathname into *s == '/' && !(flags & LOOKUP_IN_ROOT) and be done with that.