Re: [PATCH v4 2/3] mm: introduce put_user_page*(), placeholder versions

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 



On Mon 08-10-18 17:14:42, Andrew Morton wrote:
> On Mon,  8 Oct 2018 14:16:22 -0700 john.hubbard@xxxxxxxxx wrote:
> > +		put_user_page(pages[index]);
> > +	}
> > +}
> > +
> > +static inline void put_user_pages(struct page **pages,
> > +				  unsigned long npages)
> > +{
> > +	unsigned long index;
> > +
> > +	for (index = 0; index < npages; index++)
> > +		put_user_page(pages[index]);
> > +}
> > +
> 
> Otherwise looks OK.  Ish.  But it would be nice if that comment were to
> explain *why* get_user_pages() pages must be released with
> put_user_page().

The reason is that eventually we want to track reference from GUP
separately but you're right that it would be good to have a comment about
that somewhere.

> Also, maintainability.  What happens if someone now uses put_page() by
> mistake?  Kernel fails in some mysterious fashion?  How can we prevent
> this from occurring as code evolves?  Is there a cheap way of detecting
> this bug at runtime?

The same will happen as with any other reference counting bug - the special
user reference will leak. It will be pretty hard to debug I agree. I was
thinking about whether we could provide some type safety against such bugs
such as get_user_pages() not returning struct page pointers but rather some
other special type but it would result in a big amount of additional churn
as we'd have to propagate this different type e.g. through the IO path so
that IO completion routines could properly call put_user_pages(). So I'm
not sure it's really worth it.

								Honza
-- 
Jan Kara <jack@xxxxxxxx>
SUSE Labs, CR



[Index of Archives]     [Linux USB Devel]     [Video for Linux]     [Linux Audio Users]     [Photo]     [Yosemite News]     [Yosemite Photos]     [Linux Kernel]     [Linux SCSI]     [XFree86]

  Powered by Linux