On Thu, Apr 08, 2021 at 04:45:37PM +0000, Al Viro wrote: > On Wed, Apr 07, 2021 at 02:46:11PM -0700, Daniel Xu wrote: > > > +static void fini_seq_pagecache(void *priv_data) > > +{ > > + struct bpf_iter_seq_pagecache_info *info = priv_data; > > + struct radix_tree_iter iter; > > + struct super_block *sb; > > + void **slot; > > + > > + radix_tree_for_each_slot(slot, &info->superblocks, &iter, 0) { > > + sb = (struct super_block *)iter.index; > > + atomic_dec(&sb->s_active); > > + radix_tree_delete(&info->superblocks, iter.index); > > + } > > ... and if in the meanwhile all other contributors to ->s_active have > gone away, that will result in...? Ah right, sorry. Nobody will clean up the super_block. > IOW, NAK. The objects you are playing with have non-trivial lifecycle > and poking into the guts of data structures without bothering to > understand it is not a good idea. > > Rule of the thumb: if your code ends up using fields that are otherwise > handled by a small part of codebase, the odds are that you need to be > bloody careful. In particular, ->ns_lock has 3 users - all in > fs/namespace.c. ->list/->mnt_list: all users in fs/namespace.c and > fs/pnode.c. ->s_active: majority in fs/super.c, with several outliers > in filesystems and safety of those is not trivial. > > Any time you see that kind of pattern, you are risking to reprise > a scene from The Modern Times - the one with Charlie taking a trip > through the guts of machinery. I'll take a closer look at the lifetime semantics. Hopefully the overall goal of the patch is ok. Happy to iterate on the implementation details until it's correct. Thanks, Daniel