There is quite a bit of tribal knowledge around proper use of try_module_get() and that it must be used only in a context which can ensure the module won't be gone during the operation. Document this little bit of tribal knowledge. Signed-off-by: Luis Chamberlain <mcgrof@xxxxxxxxxx> --- kernel/module.c | 22 ++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 22 insertions(+) diff --git a/kernel/module.c b/kernel/module.c index ed13917ea5f3..0d609647a54d 100644 --- a/kernel/module.c +++ b/kernel/module.c @@ -1066,6 +1066,28 @@ void __module_get(struct module *module) } EXPORT_SYMBOL(__module_get); +/** + * try_module_get - yields to module removal and bumps reference count otherwise + * @module: the module we should check for + * + * This can be used to check if userspace has requested to remove a module, + * and if so let the caller give up. Otherwise it takes a reference count to + * ensure a request from userspace to remove the module cannot happen. + * + * Care must be taken to ensure the module cannot be removed during + * try_module_get(). This can be done by having another entity other than the + * module itself increment the module reference count, or through some other + * means which gaurantees the module could not be removed during an operation. + * An example of this later case is using this call in a sysfs file which the + * module created. The sysfs store / read file operation is ensured to exist + * and still be present by kernfs's active reference. If a sysfs file operation + * is being run, the module which created it must still exist as the module is + * in charge of removal of the sysfs file. + * + * The real value to try_module_get() is the module_is_live() check which + * ensures this the caller of try_module_get() can yields to userspace module + * removal requests and fail whatever it was about to process. + */ bool try_module_get(struct module *module) { bool ret = true; -- 2.30.2