Re: [PATCH 1/1] NFSv4: can_open_cached needs to be called with so_lock

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On 4/30/21 10:56 AM, Trond Myklebust wrote:
On Fri, 2021-04-30 at 10:24 -0700, dai.ngo@xxxxxxxxxx wrote:
Hi Trond,

I have a question below:

On 4/30/21 5:42 AM, Trond Myklebust wrote:
On Fri, 2021-04-30 at 01:09 -0400, Dai Ngo wrote:
Currently can_open_cached accesses the openstate's flags without
the
so_lock and also does not update the flags of the cached state.
This
results in the openstate's flags be out of sync which can cause
the
file to be closed prematurely.

This patch adds the missing so_lock around the call to
can_open_cached
and also updates the openstate's flags if the cached openstate is
used.

Signed-off-by: Dai Ngo <dai.ngo@xxxxxxxxxx>
---
   fs/nfs/nfs4proc.c | 8 +++++++-
   1 file changed, 7 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-)

diff --git a/fs/nfs/nfs4proc.c b/fs/nfs/nfs4proc.c
index c65c4b41e2c1..2464e77c51f9 100644
--- a/fs/nfs/nfs4proc.c
+++ b/fs/nfs/nfs4proc.c
@@ -2410,9 +2410,15 @@ static void nfs4_open_prepare(struct
rpc_task
*task, void *calldata)
          if (data->state != NULL) {
                  struct nfs_delegation *delegation;
+               spin_lock(&data->state->owner->so_lock);
                  if (can_open_cached(data->state, data-
o_arg.fmode,
-                                       data->o_arg.open_flags,
claim))
+                               data->o_arg.open_flags, claim)) {
+                       update_open_stateflags(data->state, data-
o_arg.fmode);
+                       spin_unlock(&data->state->owner-
so_lock);
                          goto out_no_action;
+               }
+               spin_unlock(&data->state->owner->so_lock);
+
                  rcu_read_lock();
                  delegation = nfs4_get_valid_delegation(data-
state-
inode);
                  if (can_open_delegated(delegation, data-
o_arg.fmode,
claim))
This is going to introduce stateid leaks. The actual update of the
open
state flags happens in nfs4_try_open_cached(), which is called from
nfs4_opendata_to_nfs4_state().

While we could put spinlocks around the call to can_open_cached()
here,
there is little point in doing so, since this is just a read-only
advisory check. The real check is performed, as I said, in
nfs4_try_open_cached().
If we wait to update the flags in _nfs4_opendata_to_nfs4_state after
the
RPC thread decides to use the cached state, the file could be closed
by
another thread before _nfs4_opendata_to_nfs4_state is called by
another
thread. The client in this case will retry the open from nfs4_do_open
and
everything is ok.

However, if we update the flags nfs4_open_prepare then it will
prevent
the file from being closed and this saves one CLOSE and one OPEN rpc
request to the server.  Is this correct and is it worth it to
consider
doing anything since this is a rare scenario?
If you're in a scenario where several processes are accessing the same
file on the same NFS client, you probably want to see the server hand
out a delegation for that file rather than keep relying on OPEN/CLOSE.
That's actually why we started using nfs4_try_open_cached(). The
intention was that it mainly manages the delegated open case. We then
added support for the non-delegated case mainly because the Linux
server doesn't support write delegations and because there were corner
cases where files were being opened/closed by multiple processes
without a delegation.

So what I'm saying is that ideally we really want to concentrate on
fixing the Linux server to support write delegations so that we can
relegate most of this code to handling corner cases.

Make sense?

Yes, I agreed. It's not worth the effort to look and fix corner cases
on the client side that rarely happen. Support for write delegations
provides much more benefits and it's worth to spend the effort on.

Thanks,
-Dai




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