Re: [PATCH] virtio-fs: Query rootmode during mount

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

 



On 07.11.24 09:58, Miklos Szeredi wrote:
On Thu, 24 Oct 2024 at 18:47, Hanna Czenczek <hreitz@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

To be able to issue INIT (and GETATTR), we need to at least partially
initialize the super_block structure, which is currently done via
fuse_fill_super_common().
What exactly is needed to be initialized?

It isn’t much, but I believe it’s most of fuse_fill_super_common() (without restructuring the code so flags returned by INIT are put into a separate structure and then re-joined into sb and fc later).

fuse_send_init() reads sb->s_bdi->ra_pages, process_init_reply() writes it and sb->s_time_gran, ->s_flags, ->s_stack_depth, ->s_export_op, and ->s_iflags.  In addition, process_init_reply() depends on several flags and objects in fc being set up (among those are fc->dax and fc->default_permissions), which is done by fuse_fill_super_common().

So I think what we need from fuse_fill_super_common() is:
- fuse_sb_defaults() (so these values can then be overwritten by process_init_reply()),
- fuse_dax_conn_alloc(),
- fuse_bdi_init(),
- fc->default_permissions at least, but I’d just take the fc->[flag] setting block as a whole then.

I assume we’ll also want the SB_MANDLOCK check then, and rcu_assign_pointer().  Then we might as well also set the block sizes and the subtype.

The problem is that I don’t know the order things in fuse_fill_super_common() need to be in, and fuse_dev_alloc_install() is called before fuse_bdi_init(), so I didn’t want to move that.

So what I understand is that calling fuse_dev_alloc_install() there isn’t necessary?  I’m happy to move that to part 2, as you suggest, but I’m not sure we can really omit much from part 1 without changing how process_init_reply() operates.  We could in theory delay process_init_reply() until after GETATTR (and thus after setting s_root), but that seems kind of wrong, and would still require setting up BDI and DAX for fuse_send_init().

@@ -1762,18 +1801,12 @@ int fuse_fill_super_common(struct super_block *sb, struct fuse_fs_context *ctx)
         sb->s_d_op = &fuse_dentry_operations;

         mutex_lock(&fuse_mutex);
-       err = -EINVAL;
-       if (ctx->fudptr && *ctx->fudptr)
-               goto err_unlock;
-
         err = fuse_ctl_add_conn(fc);
         if (err)
                 goto err_unlock;

         list_add_tail(&fc->entry, &fuse_conn_list);
         sb->s_root = root_dentry;
-       if (ctx->fudptr)
-               *ctx->fudptr = fud;
This is wrong, because we need the fuse_mutex protection for checking
and setting the private_data on the fuse device file.

If this split is needed (which I'm not sure) then fud allocation
should probably be moved to part2 instead of moving the *ctx->fudptr
setup to part1.


@@ -1635,8 +1657,16 @@ static void virtio_kill_sb(struct super_block *sb)
         struct fuse_mount *fm = get_fuse_mount_super(sb);
         bool last;

-       /* If mount failed, we can still be called without any fc */
-       if (sb->s_root) {
+       /*
+        * Only destroy the connection after full initialization, i.e.
+        * once s_root is set (see commit d534d31d6a45d).
+        * One exception: For virtio-fs, we call INIT before s_root is
+        * set so we can determine the root node's mode.  We must call
+        * DESTROY after INIT.  So if an error occurs during that time
+        * window (specifically in fuse_make_root_inode()), we still
+        * need to call virtio_fs_conn_destroy() here.
+        */
+       if (sb->s_root || (fm->fc && fm->fc->initialized && !fm->submount)) {
How could fm->submount be set if sb->s_root isn't?

fuse_get_tree_submount(), specifically fuse_fill_super_submount() whose error path leads to deactivate_locked_super(), can fail before sb->s_root is set.

Still, the idea was rather to make it clear that this condition (INIT sent but s_root not set) is unique to non-submounts, so as not to mess with the submount code unintentionally.

Or sb->s_root set
and fc->initialized isn't?

That would be the non-virtio-fs non-submount case (fuse_fill_super()), where s_root is set first and INIT sent after.

Hanna

Seems it would be sufficient to check fm->fc->initialized, no?

Thanks,
Miklos






[Index of Archives]     [KVM Development]     [Libvirt Development]     [Libvirt Users]     [CentOS Virtualization]     [Netdev]     [Ethernet Bridging]     [Linux Wireless]     [Kernel Newbies]     [Security]     [Linux for Hams]     [Netfilter]     [Bugtraq]     [Yosemite Forum]     [MIPS Linux]     [ARM Linux]     [Linux RAID]     [Linux Admin]     [Samba]

  Powered by Linux