On Tue, Feb 12, 2019 at 09:57:17PM -0500, Martin K. Petersen wrote: > Some devices come online in write protected state and switch to > read-write once they are ready to process I/O requests. These devices > broke with commit 20bd1d026aac ("scsi: sd: Keep disk read-only when > re-reading partition") because we had no way to distinguish between a > user decision to set a block_device read-only and the actual hardware > device being write-protected. > > Because partitions are dropped and recreated on revalidate we are > unable to persist any user-provided policy in hd_struct. Introduce a > bitmap in struct gendisk to track the user configuration. This bitmap > is updated when BLKROSET is called on a given disk or partition. > > A helper function, get_user_ro(), is provided to determine whether the > ioctl has forced read-only state for a given block device. This helper > is used by set_disk_ro() and add_partition() to ensure that both > existing and newly created partitions will get the correct state. > > - If BLKROSET sets a whole disk device read-only, all partitions will > now end up in a read-only state. > > - If BLKROSET sets a given partition read-only, that partition will > remain read-only post revalidate. > > - Otherwise both the whole disk device and any partitions will > reflect the write protect state of the underlying device. > > Cc: Jeremy Cline <jeremy@xxxxxxxxxx> > Cc: Oleksii Kurochko <olkuroch@xxxxxxxxx> > Cc: stable@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx # v4.16+ > Reported-by: Oleksii Kurochko <olkuroch@xxxxxxxxx> > Bugzilla: https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=201221 > Fixes: 20bd1d026aac ("scsi: sd: Keep disk read-only when re-reading partition") > Signed-off-by: Martin K. Petersen <martin.petersen@xxxxxxxxxx> > > --- > > v2: > - Track user read-only state in a bitmap > > - Work around the regression that caused us to drop user > preferences on revalidate > --- > block/genhd.c | 22 +++++++++++++++++----- > block/ioctl.c | 4 ++++ > block/partition-generic.c | 2 +- > drivers/scsi/sd.c | 4 +--- > include/linux/genhd.h | 2 ++ > 5 files changed, 25 insertions(+), 9 deletions(-) > > diff --git a/block/genhd.c b/block/genhd.c > index 1dd8fd6613b8..34667eb1d3cc 100644 > --- a/block/genhd.c > +++ b/block/genhd.c > @@ -1544,19 +1544,31 @@ void set_device_ro(struct block_device *bdev, int flag) > > EXPORT_SYMBOL(set_device_ro); > > +bool get_user_ro(struct gendisk *disk, unsigned int partno) > +{ > + /* Is the user read-only bit set for the whole disk device? */ > + if (test_bit(0, disk->user_ro_bitmap)) > + return true; > + > + /* Is the user read-only bit set for this particular partition? */ > + if (test_bit(partno, disk->user_ro_bitmap)) > + return true; > + > + return false; > +} > +EXPORT_SYMBOL(get_user_ro); No need to export this function. > + p->policy = get_user_ro(disk, partno) ?: get_disk_ro(disk); Can we avoid the obsfucating non-standard (GNU extension) use of ?: here? Just use a local variable and a good old if.