[RFC 0/2] Reenable might_sleep() checks for might_fault() when atomic
David Hildenbrand
dahi at linux.vnet.ibm.com
Thu Nov 27 19:03:01 AEDT 2014
> Code like
> spin_lock(&lock);
> if (copy_to_user(...))
> rc = ...
> spin_unlock(&lock);
> really *should* generate warnings like it did before.
>
> And *only* code like
> spin_lock(&lock);
Is only code like this valid or also with the spin_lock() dropped?
(e.g. the access in patch1 if I remember correctly)
So should page_fault_disable() increment the pagefault counter and the preempt
counter or only the first one?
> page_fault_disable();
> if (copy_to_user(...))
> rc = ...
> page_fault_enable();
> spin_unlock(&lock);
> should not generate warnings, since the author hopefully knew what he did.
>
> We could achieve that by e.g. adding a couple of pagefault disabled bits
> within current_thread_info()->preempt_count, which would allow
> pagefault_disable() and pagefault_enable() to modify a different part of
> preempt_count than it does now, so there is a way to tell if pagefaults have
> been explicitly disabled or are just a side effect of preemption being
> disabled.
> This would allow might_fault() to restore its old sane behaviour for the
> !page_fault_disabled() case.
So we would have pagefault code rely on:
in_disabled_pagefault() ( pagefault_disabled() ... whatever ) instead of
in_atomic().
I agree with this approach, as this is basically what I suggested in one of my
previous mails.
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