Hello! I've some across an interesting issue that was spotted by syzbot [1]. The report is against UDF but AFAICS the problem exists for ext4 as well and possibly other filesystems. The problem is the following: When we are renaming directory 'dir' say rename("foo/dir", "bar/") we lock 'foo' and 'bar' but 'dir' is unlocked because the locking done by vfs_rename() is if (!is_dir || (flags & RENAME_EXCHANGE)) lock_two_nondirectories(source, target); else if (target) inode_lock(target); However some filesystems (e.g. UDF but ext4 as well, I suspect XFS may be hurt by this as well because it converts among multiple dir formats) need to update parent pointer in 'dir' and nothing protects this update against a race with someone else modifying 'dir'. Now this is mostly harmless because the parent pointer (".." directory entry) is at the beginning of the directory and stable however if for example the directory is converted from packed "in-inode" format to "expanded" format as a result of concurrent operation on 'dir', the filesystem gets corrupted (or crashes as in case of UDF). So we'd need to lock 'source' if it is a directory. Ideally this would happen in VFS as otherwise I bet a lot of filesystems will get this wrong so could vfs_rename() lock 'source' if it is a dir as well? Essentially this would amount to calling lock_two_nondirectories(source, target) unconditionally but that would become a serious misnomer ;). Al, any thought? Honza [1] https://lore.kernel.org/all/000000000000261eb005f2191696@xxxxxxxxxx -- Jan Kara <jack@xxxxxxxx> SUSE Labs, CR