On Fri, Oct 13, 2023 at 12:22 PM Christian Brauner <brauner@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Fri, Oct 13, 2023 at 11:56:08AM -0400, Paul Moore wrote: > > On Fri, Oct 13, 2023 at 11:44 AM Christian Brauner <brauner@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > > On Thu, 12 Oct 2023 14:55:18 -0700, Dan Clash wrote: > > > > An io_uring openat operation can update an audit reference count > > > > from multiple threads resulting in the call trace below. > > > > > > > > A call to io_uring_submit() with a single openat op with a flag of > > > > IOSQE_ASYNC results in the following reference count updates. > > > > > > > > These first part of the system call performs two increments that do not race. > > > > > > > > [...] > > > > > > Picking this up as is. Let me know if this needs another tree. > > > > Whoa. A couple of things: > > > > * Please don't merge patches into an upstream tree if all of the > > affected subsystems haven't ACK'd the patch. I know you've got your > > boilerplate below about ACKs *after* the merge, which is fine, but I > > find it breaks decorum a bit to merge patches without an explicit ACK > > or even just a "looks good to me" from all of the relevant subsystems. > > I simply read your mail: > > X-Date: Fri, 13 Oct 2023 17:43:54 +0200 > X-URI: https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/CAHC9VhQcSY9q=wVT7hOz9y=o3a67BVUnVGNotgAvE6vK7WAkBw@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx > > "I'm not too concerned, either approach works for me, the important bit > is moving to an atomic_t/refcount_t so we can protect ourselves > against the race. The patch looks good to me and I'd like to get this > fix merged." > > including that "The patch looks good to me [...]" part before I sent out > the application message: Some of this is likely due to email races, or far faster than normal responses. When I was writing the email you reference above ("This patch looks good to me...") the last email I had from you was asking for changes to the patch; since you were suggesting a change I made the assumption (which arguably one shouldn't assume things) that you were not planning to merge the patch. > X-Date: Fri, 13 Oct 2023 17:44:36 +0200 > X-URI: https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/20231013-karierte-mehrzahl-6a938035609e@brauner > > > Regardless, as I mentioned in my last email (I think our last emails > > raced a bit), I'm okay with this change, please add my ACK. > > It's before the weekend and we're about to release -rc6. This thing > needs to be in -next, you said it looks good to you in a prior mail. I'm > not sure why I'm receiving this mail apart from the justified > clarification about -stable although that was made explicit in your > prior mail as well. I hope I explained the intent in my last email a bit more clearly with the explanation above. Regardless, I think the lessons to be learned is that I won't assume that your suggestion of changes and merging a patch are mutually exclusive, and just to be on the safe side I would ask that you not merge audit, LSM, or SELinux related patches without an explicit ACK from those subsystems. Hopefully that should prevent things like this from happening again. -- paul-moore.com