On Tue, Aug 18, 2020 at 3:40 PM Oleg Nesterov <oleg@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On 08/18, Jann Horn wrote: > > > > + if (dump_interrupted()) > > + return 0; > > + n = __kernel_write(file, addr, nr, &pos); > > + if (n != nr) > > + return 0; > > + file->f_pos = pos; > > Just curious, can't we simply do > > __kernel_write(file, addr, nr, &file->f_pos); > > and avoid "loff_t pos" ? Hm... e.g. ksys_write() has the same pattern of copying the value into a local variable and back, but I guess maybe there it's done so that ->f_pos can't change when vfs_write() returns a negative value, or something like that? Or maybe to make the update look more atomic? None of that is a concern for the core-dumping code, so I guess we could change it... but then again, maybe we shouldn't diverge from how it's done in fs/read_write.c (e.g. in ksys_write()) too much. Coredumping is already a bit too special, no need to make it worse... It looks like Al Viro introduced this as part of commit 2507a4fbd48a ("make dump_emit() use vfs_write() instead of banging at ->f_op->write directly"). Before that commit, &file->f_pos was actually passed as a parameter, just like you're proposing. I don't really want to try reverting parts of Al's commits without understanding what exactly is going on...