On 9/26/23, Linus Torvalds <torvalds@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Tue, 26 Sept 2023 at 09:22, Mateusz Guzik <mjguzik@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> >> +void fput_badopen(struct file *file) >> +{ >> + if (unlikely(file->f_mode & (FMODE_BACKING | FMODE_OPENED))) { >> + fput(file); >> + return; >> + } > > I don't understand. > > Why the FMODE_BACKING test? > > The only thing that sets FMODE_BACKING is alloc_empty_backing_file(), > and we know that isn't involved, because the file that is free'd is > > file = alloc_empty_file(op->open_flag, current_cred()); > > so that test makes no sense. > I tried to future proof by dodging the thing, but I can drop it if you insist. Also see below. > It might make sense as another WARN_ON_ONCE(), but honestly, why even > that? Why worry about FMODE_BACKING? > > Now, the FMODE_OPENED check makes sense to me, in that it most > definitely can be set, and means we need to call the ->release() > callback and a lot more. Although I get the feeling that this test > would make more sense in the caller, since path_openat() _already_ > checks for FMODE_OPENED in the non-error path too. > >> + if (WARN_ON_ONCE(atomic_long_cmpxchg(&file->f_count, 1, 0) != 1)) >> { >> + fput(file); >> + return; >> + } > > Ok, I kind of see why you'd want this safety check. I don't see how > f_count could be validly anything else, but that's what the > WARN_ON_ONCE is all about. > This would be VFSDEBUG or whatever if it was available. But between nobody checking this and production kernels suffering the check when they should not, I take the latter. I wanted to propose debug macros for vfs but could not be bothered to type it up and argue about it, maybe I'll get around to it. > Anyway, I think I'd be happier about this if it was more of a "just > the reverse of alloc_empty_file()", and path_openat() literally did > just > > if (likely(file->f_mode & FMODE_OPENED)) > release_empty_file(file); > else > fput(file); > > instead of having this fput_badopen() helper that feels like it needs > to care about other cases than alloc_empty_file(). > I don't have a strong opinion, I think my variant is cleaner and more generic, but this boils down to taste and this is definitely not the hill I'm willing to die on. I am enable to whatever tidy ups without a fight as long as the core remains (task work and rcu dodged). All that said, I think it is Christian's call on how it should look like. -- Mateusz Guzik <mjguzik gmail.com>