On Tue, Jul 23, 2019 at 8:32 PM Eric W. Biederman <ebiederm@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > Steve French <smfrench@xxxxxxxxx> writes: > > > Very easy to see what caused the regression with this global change: > > > > mount (which launches "cifsd" thread to read the socket) > > umount (which kills the "cifsd" thread) > > rmmod (rmmod now fails since "cifsd" thread is still active) > > > > mount launches a thread to read from the socket ("cifsd") > > umount is supposed to kill that thread (but with the patch > > "signal/cifs: Fix cifs_put_tcp_session to call send_sig instead of > > force_sig" that no longer works). So the regression is that after > > unmount you still see the "cifsd" thread, and the reason that cifsd > > thread is still around is that that patch no longer force kills the > > process (see line 2652 of fs/cifs/connect.c) which regresses module > > removal. > > > > - force_sig(SIGKILL, task); > > + send_sig(SIGKILL, task, 1); > > > > The comment in the changeset indicates "The signal SIGKILL can not be > > ignored" but obviously it can be ignored - at least on 5.3-rc1 it is > > being ignored. > > > > If send_sig(SIGKILL ...) doesn't work and if force_sig(SIGKILL, task) > > is removed and no longer possible - how do we kill a helper process > > ... > > I think I see what is happening. It looks like as well as misuinsg > force_sig, cifs is also violating the invariant that keeps SIGKILL out > of the blocked signal set. > > For that force_sig will act differently. I did not consider it because > that is never supposed to happen. > > Can someone test this code below and confirm the issue goes away? > > diff --git a/fs/cifs/transport.c b/fs/cifs/transport.c > index 5d6d44bfe10a..2a782ebc7b65 100644 > --- a/fs/cifs/transport.c > +++ b/fs/cifs/transport.c > @@ -347,6 +347,7 @@ __smb_send_rqst(struct TCP_Server_Info *server, int num_rqst, > */ > > sigfillset(&mask); > + sigdelset(&mask, SIGKILL); > sigprocmask(SIG_BLOCK, &mask, &oldmask); > > /* Generate a rfc1002 marker for SMB2+ */ > > > Eric I just tried your suggestion and it didn't work. I also tried doing a similar thing on the thread we are trying to kills ("cifsd" - ie which is blocked in the function cifs_demultiplex_thread waiting to read from the socket) # git diff -a diff --git a/fs/cifs/connect.c b/fs/cifs/connect.c index a4830ced0f98..b73062520a17 100644 --- a/fs/cifs/connect.c +++ b/fs/cifs/connect.c @@ -1104,6 +1104,7 @@ cifs_demultiplex_thread(void *p) struct task_struct *task_to_wake = NULL; struct mid_q_entry *mids[MAX_COMPOUND]; char *bufs[MAX_COMPOUND]; + sigset_t mask; current->flags |= PF_MEMALLOC; cifs_dbg(FYI, "Demultiplex PID: %d\n", task_pid_nr(current)); @@ -1113,6 +1114,8 @@ cifs_demultiplex_thread(void *p) mempool_resize(cifs_req_poolp, length + cifs_min_rcv); set_freezable(); + sigfillset(&mask); + sigdelset(&mask, SIGKILL); while (server->tcpStatus != CifsExiting) { if (try_to_freeze()) continue; That also didn't work. The only thing I have been able to find which worked was: diff --git a/fs/cifs/connect.c b/fs/cifs/connect.c index a4830ced0f98..e74f04163fc9 100644 --- a/fs/cifs/connect.c +++ b/fs/cifs/connect.c @@ -1113,6 +1113,7 @@ cifs_demultiplex_thread(void *p) mempool_resize(cifs_req_poolp, length + cifs_min_rcv); set_freezable(); + allow_signal(SIGKILL); while (server->tcpStatus != CifsExiting) { if (try_to_freeze()) continue; That fixes the problem ... but ... as Ronnie and others have noted it would allow a userspace process to make the mount unusable (all you would have to do would be to do a kill -9 of the "cifsd" process from some userspace process like bash and the mount would be unusable - so this sounds dangerous. Is there an alternative that, in the process doing the unmount in kernel, would allow us to do the equivalent of: "allow_signal(SIGKILL, <the id of the cifsd process>" In otherwords, to minimize the risk of some userspace process killing cifsd, could we delay enabling allow_signal(SIGKILL) till the unmount begins by doing it for a different process (have the unmount process enable signals for the cifsd process). Otherwise is there a way to force kill a process from the kernel as we used to do - without running the risk of a user space process killing cifsd (which is bad). -- Thanks, Steve