On Wed, Nov 13, 2019 at 2:52 PM Al Viro <viro@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Wed, Nov 13, 2019 at 09:01:36AM +0200, Amir Goldstein wrote: > > > - if (d_really_is_negative(lower_dentry)) { > > > + /* > > > + * negative dentry can go positive under us here - its parent is not > > > + * locked. That's OK and that could happen just as we return from > > > + * ecryptfs_lookup() anyway. Just need to be careful and fetch > > > + * ->d_inode only once - it's not stable here. > > > + */ > > > + lower_inode = READ_ONCE(lower_dentry->d_inode); > > > + > > > + if (!lower_inode) { > > > /* We want to add because we couldn't find in lower */ > > > d_add(dentry, NULL); > > > return NULL; > > > > Sigh! > > > > Open coding a human readable macro to solve a subtle lookup race. > > That doesn't sound like a scalable solution. > > I have a feeling this is not the last patch we will be seeing along > > those lines. > > > > Seeing that developers already confused about when they should use > > d_really_is_negative() over d_is_negative() [1] and we probably > > don't want to add d_really_really_is_negative(), how about > > applying that READ_ONCE into d_really_is_negative() and > > re-purpose it as a macro to be used when races with lookup are > > a concern? > > Would you care to explain what that "fix" would've achieved here, > considering the fact that barriers are no-ops on UP and this is > *NOT* an SMP race? > > And it's very much present on UP - we have > fetch ->d_inode into local variable > do blocking allocation > check if ->d_inode is NULL now > if it is not, use the value in local variable and expect it to be non-NULL > > That's not a case of missing barriers. At all. And no redefinition of > d_really_is_negative() is going to help - it can't retroactively affect > the value explicitly fetched into a local variable some time prior to > that. > Indeed. I missed that part of your commit message and didn't realize the variable was being used later. The language in the comment "can go positive under us" implied SMP race so I misunderstood the reason for READ_ONCE(). Sorry for the noise. Amir.