Re: [PATCH] md: don't use flush_signals in userspace processes

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On Thu, Jun 08, 2017 at 04:59:03PM +1000, Neil Brown wrote:
> On Wed, Jun 07 2017, Mikulas Patocka wrote:
> 
> > The function flush_signals clears all pending signals for the process. It
> > may be used by kernel threads when we need to prepare a kernel thread for
> > responding to signals. However using this function for an userspaces
> > processes is incorrect - clearing signals without the program expecting it
> > can cause misbehavior.
> >
> > The raid1 and raid5 code uses flush_signals in its request routine because
> > it wants to prepare for an interruptible wait. This patch drops
> > flush_signals and uses sigprocmask instead to block all signals (including
> > SIGKILL) around the schedule() call. The signals are not lost, but the
> > schedule() call won't respond to them.
> >
> > Signed-off-by: Mikulas Patocka <mpatocka@xxxxxxxxxx>
> > Cc: stable@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> 
> Thanks for catching that!
> 
> Acked-by: NeilBrown <neilb@xxxxxxxx>

Applied, thanks!

Neil,
Not about the patch itself. I had question about that part of code. Dropped
others since this is raid related. I didn't get the point why it's a
TASK_INTERRUPTIBLE sleep. It seems suggesting the thread will bail out if a
signal is sent. But I didn't see we check the signal and exit the loop. What's
the correct behavior here? Since the suspend range is controlled by userspace,
I think the correct behavior is if user kills the thread, we exit the loop. So
it seems like to be we check if there is fatal signal pending, exit the loop,
and return IO error. Not sure if we should return IO error though.

Thanks,
Shaohua
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