On Thu, 19 Jan 2017, Josh Poimboeuf wrote: > From: Miroslav Benes <mbenes@xxxxxxx> > > Currently we do not allow patch module to unload since there is no > method to determine if a task is still running in the patched code. > > The consistency model gives us the way because when the unpatching > finishes we know that all tasks were marked as safe to call an original > function. Thus every new call to the function calls the original code > and at the same time no task can be somewhere in the patched code, > because it had to leave that code to be marked as safe. > > We can safely let the patch module go after that. > > Completion is used for synchronization between module removal and sysfs > infrastructure in a similar way to commit 942e443127e9 ("module: Fix > mod->mkobj.kobj potentially freed too early"). > > Note that we still do not allow the removal for immediate model, that is > no consistency model. The module refcount may increase in this case if > somebody disables and enables the patch several times. This should not > cause any harm. > > With this change a call to try_module_get() is moved to > __klp_enable_patch from klp_register_patch to make module reference > counting symmetric (module_put() is in a patch disable path) and to > allow to take a new reference to a disabled module when being enabled. > > Finally, we need to be very careful about possible races between > klp_unregister_patch(), kobject_put() functions and operations > on the related sysfs files. > > kobject_put(&patch->kobj) must be called without klp_mutex. Otherwise, > it might be blocked by enabled_store() that needs the mutex as well. > In addition, enabled_store() must check if the patch was not > unregisted in the meantime. > > There is no need to do the same for other kobject_put() callsites > at the moment. Their sysfs operations neiter take the lock nor s/neiter/neither/ Thanks, Miroslav -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-s390" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html