2024-12-16, 15:09:17 +0100, Antonio Quartulli wrote: > On 16/12/2024 14:59, Sabrina Dubroca wrote: > > 2024-12-11, 22:15:15 +0100, Antonio Quartulli wrote: > > > +static void ovpn_tcp_close(struct sock *sk, long timeout) > > > +{ > > > + struct ovpn_socket *sock; > > > + > > > + rcu_read_lock(); > > > > [can't sleep until unlock] > > > > > + sock = rcu_dereference_sk_user_data(sk); > > > + > > > + strp_stop(&sock->peer->tcp.strp); > > > + > > > + tcp_close(sk, timeout); > > > > > > void tcp_close(struct sock *sk, long timeout) > > { > > lock_sock(sk); > > > > but this can sleep. > > Ouch.. I wonder why I have never seen the might_sleep() trigger this, but > probably that's due to the fact that we hardly hit this cb in the classic > use case. Probably. You'd only see it when you close the TCP socket before detaching (otherwise the close CB is restored to tcp_close), which I guess ovpn never does. > > > > > Is there anything that prevents delaying tcp_close until after > > ovpn_peer_del and rcu_read_unlock? > > not really. > > > > > > + ovpn_peer_del(sock->peer, OVPN_DEL_PEER_REASON_TRANSPORT_ERROR); > > > + rcu_read_unlock(); > > I will move the tcp_close() here. Thanks. -- Sabrina