[RFC] [PATCH 2/2] cgroups: make procs file writable

Oleg Nesterov oleg at redhat.com
Mon May 31 10:52:42 PDT 2010


I only glanced into one function, cgroup_attach_proc(), and some things
look "obviously wrong". Sorry, I can't really read these patches now,
most probably I misunderstood the code...

> +int cgroup_attach_proc(struct cgroup *cgrp, struct task_struct *leader)
> +{
> +	int retval;
> +	struct cgroup_subsys *ss, *failed_ss = NULL;
> +	struct cgroup *oldcgrp;
> +	struct css_set *oldcg;
> +	struct cgroupfs_root *root = cgrp->root;
> +	/* threadgroup list cursor */
> +	struct task_struct *tsk;
> +	/*
> +	 * we need to make sure we have css_sets for all the tasks we're
> +	 * going to move -before- we actually start moving them, so that in
> +	 * case we get an ENOMEM we can bail out before making any changes.
> +	 */
> +	struct list_head newcg_list;
> +	struct cg_list_entry *cg_entry, *temp_nobe;
> +
> +	/*
> +	 * Note: Because of possible races with de_thread(), we can't
> +	 * distinguish between the case where the user gives a non-leader tid
> +	 * and the case where it changes out from under us. So both are allowed.
> +	 */

OK, the caller has a reference to the argument, leader,

> +	leader = leader->group_leader;

But why it is safe to use leader->group_leader if we race with exec?

> +	list_for_each_entry_rcu(tsk, &leader->thread_group, thread_group) {

Even if we didn't change "leader" above, this is not safe in theory.
We already discussed this, list_for_each_rcu(head) is only safe when
we know that "head" itself is valid.

Suppose that this leader exits, then leader->thread_group.next exits
too before we take rcu_read_lock().

> +	oldcgrp = task_cgroup_from_root(leader, root);
> +	if (cgrp != oldcgrp) {
> +		retval = cgroup_task_migrate(cgrp, oldcgrp, leader, true);
> +		BUG_ON(retval != 0 && retval != -ESRCH);
> +	}
> +	/* Now iterate over each thread in the group. */
> +	list_for_each_entry_rcu(tsk, &leader->thread_group, thread_group) {
> +		BUG_ON(tsk->signal != leader->signal);
> +		/* leave current thread as it is if it's already there */
> +		oldcgrp = task_cgroup_from_root(tsk, root);
> +		if (cgrp == oldcgrp)
> +			continue;
> +		/* we don't care whether these threads are exiting */
> +		retval = cgroup_task_migrate(cgrp, oldcgrp, tsk, true);
> +		BUG_ON(retval != 0 && retval != -ESRCH);
> +	}

This looks strange. Why do we move leader outside of the loop ?
Of course, list_for_each_entry() can't work to move all sub-threads,
but "do while_each_thread()" can.



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