On Fri, Feb 12, 2021 at 3:46 PM Greg KH <gregkh@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Fri, Feb 12, 2021 at 12:44:00PM +0800, Nicolas Boichat wrote: > > Filesystems such as procfs and sysfs generate their content at > > runtime. This implies the file sizes do not usually match the > > amount of data that can be read from the file, and that seeking > > may not work as intended. > > > > This will be useful to disallow copy_file_range with input files > > from such filesystems. > > > > Signed-off-by: Nicolas Boichat <drinkcat@xxxxxxxxxxxx> > > --- > > I first thought of adding a new field to struct file_operations, > > but that doesn't quite scale as every single file creation > > operation would need to be modified. > > Even so, you missed a load of filesystems in the kernel with this patch > series, what makes the ones you did mark here different from the > "internal" filesystems that you did not? Which ones did I miss? (apart from configfs, see the conversation on patch 6/6). Anyway, hopefully auditing all filesystems is an order of magnitude easier task, and easier to maintain in the longer run ,-) > This feels wrong, why is userspace suddenly breaking? What changed in > the kernel that caused this? Procfs has been around for a _very_ long > time :) Some of this is covered in the cover letter 0/6. To expand a bit: copy_file_range has only supported cross-filesystem copies since 5.3 [1], before that the kernel would return EXDEV and userspace application would fall back to a read/write based copy. After 5.3, copy_file_range copies no data as it thinks the input file is empty. [1] I think it makes little sense to try to use copy_file_range between 2 files in /proc, but technically, I think that has been broken since copy_file_range fallback to do_splice_direct was introduced (eac70053a141 ("vfs: Add vfs_copy_file_range() support for pagecache copies", ~4.4). > > thanks, > > greg k-h