On Fri, Mar 01, 2024 at 09:51:18AM -0800, Linus Torvalds wrote: > Right. I think the natural and logical way to deal with this is to > just say "we account when we add the file to the fdtable". > > IOW, just have fd_install() do it. That's the really natural point, > and also makes it very logical why alloc_empty_file_noaccount() > wouldn't need to do the GFP_KERNEL_ACCOUNT. We can have the same file occuring in many slots of many descriptor tables, obviously. So it would have to be a flag (in ->f_mode?) set by it, for "someone's already charged for it", or you'll end up with really insane crap on each fork(), dup(), etc. But there's also MAP_ANON with its setup_shmem_file(), with the resulting file not going into descriptor tables at all, and that's not a rare thing. > > - I don't know how to properly unwind the accounting failure case. It > > seems like a new case because when we succeed the open, there's no > > further error path at least in path_openat(). > > Yeah, let me think about this part. Becasue fd_install() is the right > point, but that too does not really allow for error handling. > > Yes, we could close things and fail it, but it really is much too late > at this point. That as well. For things like O_CREAT even do_dentry_open() would be too late for unrolls. > What I *think* I'd want for this case is > > (a) allow the accounting to go over by a bit > > (b) make sure there's a cheap way to ask (before) about "did we go > over the limit" > > IOW, the accounting never needed to be byte-accurate to begin with, > and making it fail (cheaply and early) on the next file allocation is > fine. > > Just make it really cheap. Can we do that? That might be reasonable, but TBH I would rather combine that with do_dentry_open()/alloc_file() (i.e. the places where we set FMODE_OPENED) as places to do that, rather than messing with fd_install(). How does the following sound? * those who allocate empty files mark them if they are intended to be kernel-internal (see below for how to get the information there) * memcg charge happens when we set FMODE_OPENED, provided that struct file instance is not marked kernel-internal. * exceeding the limit => pretend we'd succeeded and fail the next allocation. As for how to get the information down there... We have 6 functions where "allocate" and "mark it opened" callchains converge - alloc_file() (pipe(2) et.al., mostly), path_openat() (normal opens, but also filp_open() et.al.), dentry_open(), kernel_file_open(), kernel_tmpfile_open(), dentry_create(). The last 3 are all kernel-internal; dentry_open() might or might not be. For path_openat() we can add a bit somewhere in struct open_flags; the places where we set struct open_flags up would be the ones that might need to be annotated. That's file_open_name() file_open_root() do_sys_openat2() (definitely userland) io_openat2() (ditto) sys_uselib() (ditto) do_open_execat() (IMO can be considered userland in all cases) For alloc_file() it's almost always userland. IMO things like dma_buf_export() and setup_shmem_file() should be charged. So it's a matter of propagating the information to dentry_open(), file_open_name() and file_open_root(). That's about 70 callers to annotate, including filp_open() and file_open_root_mnt() into the mix. <greps> 61, actually, and from the quick look it seems that most of them are really obvious... Comments?