On Tue, Jun 27, 2023 at 6:54 PM Tejun Heo <tj@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > Hello, > > On Tue, Jun 27, 2023 at 02:58:08PM -0700, Suren Baghdasaryan wrote: > > Ok in kernfs_generic_poll() we are using kernfs_open_node.poll > > waitqueue head for polling and kernfs_open_node is freed from inside > > kernfs_unlink_open_file() which is called from kernfs_fop_release(). > > So, it is destroyed only when the last fput() is done, unlike the > > ops->release() operation which we are using for destroying PSI > > trigger's waitqueue. So, it seems we still need an operation which > > would indicate that the file is truly going away. > > If we want to stay consistent with how kernfs behaves w.r.t. severing, the > right thing to do would be preventing any future polling at severing and > waking up everyone currently waiting, which sounds fine from cgroup behavior > POV too. That's actually what we are currently doing for PSI triggers. ->release() is handled by cgroup_pressure_release() which signals the waiters, waits for RCU grace period to pass (per https://elixir.bootlin.com/linux/latest/source/include/linux/wait.h#L258) and then releases all the trigger resources including the waitqueue head. However as reported in https://lore.kernel.org/all/20230613062306.101831-1-lujialin4@xxxxxxxxxx this does not save us from the synchronous polling case: do_select vfs_poll cgroup_pressure_release psi_trigger_destroy wake_up_pollfree(&t->event_wait) -> unblocks vfs_poll synchronize_rcu() kfree(t) -> frees waitqueue head poll_freewait() -> uses waitqueue head This happens because we release the resources associated with the file while there are still file users (the file's refcount is non-zero). And that happens because kernfs can call ->release() before the last fput(). > > Now, the challenge is designing an interface which is difficult to make > mistake with. IOW, it'd be great if kernfs wraps poll call so that severing > is implemented without kernfs users doing anything, or at least make it > pretty obvious what the correct usage pattern is. > > > Christian's suggestion to rename current ops->release() operation into > > ops->drain() (or ops->flush() per Matthew's request) and introduce a > > "new" ops->release() which is called only when the last fput() is done > > seems sane to me. Would everyone be happy with that approach? > > I'm not sure I'd go there. The contract is that once ->release() is called, > the code backing that file can go away (e.g. rmmod'd). It really should > behave just like the last put from kernfs users' POV. I 100% agree with the above statement. > For this specific fix, > it's safe because we know the ops is always built into the kernel and won't > go away but it'd be really bad if the interface says "this is a normal thing > to do". We'd be calling into rmmod'd text pages in no time. > > So, I mean, even for temporary fix, we have to make it abundantly clear that > this is not for usual usage and can only be used if the code backing the ops > is built into the kernel and so on. I think the root cause of this problem is that ->release() in kernfs does not adhere to the common rule that ->release() is called only when the file is going away and has no users left. Am I wrong? Thanks, Suren. > > Thanks. > > -- > tejun