On Sat, Aug 26, 2023 at 03:28:52AM +0100, Al Viro wrote: > I mean, look at claim_swapfile() for example: > p->bdev = blkdev_get_by_dev(inode->i_rdev, > FMODE_READ | FMODE_WRITE | FMODE_EXCL, p); > if (IS_ERR(p->bdev)) { > error = PTR_ERR(p->bdev); > p->bdev = NULL; > return error; > } > p->old_block_size = block_size(p->bdev); > error = set_blocksize(p->bdev, PAGE_SIZE); > if (error < 0) > return error; > we already have the file opened, and we keep it opened all the way until > the swapoff(2); here we have noticed that it's a block device and we > * open the fucker again (by device number), this time claiming > it with our swap_info_struct as holder, to be closed at swapoff(2) time > (just before we close the file) Note that some drivers look at FMODE_EXCL/BLK_OPEN_EXCL in ->open. These are probably bogus and maybe we want to kill them, but that will need an audit first. > BTW, what happens if two threads call ioctl(fd, BLKBSZSET, &n) > for the same descriptor that happens to have been opened O_EXCL? > Without O_EXCL they would've been unable to claim the sucker at the same > time - the holder we are using is the address of a function argument, > i.e. something that points to kernel stack of the caller. Those would > conflict and we either get set_blocksize() calls fully serialized, or > one of the callers would eat -EBUSY. Not so in "opened with O_EXCL" > case - they can very well overlap and IIRC set_blocksize() does *not* > expect that kind of crap... It's all under CAP_SYS_ADMIN, so it's not > as if it was a meaningful security hole anyway, but it does look fishy. The user get to keep the pieces.. BLKBSZSET is kinda bogus anyway as the soft blocksize only matters for buffer_head-like I/O, and there only for file systems. Not idea why anyone would set it manually.