[Devel] Re: [PATCH 12/15] driver core: Implement tagged directory support for device classes.
Eric W. Biederman
ebiederm at xmission.com
Wed Jul 16 14:09:55 PDT 2008
Tejun Heo <htejun at gmail.com> writes:
>> To do that I believe we would need to ensure sysfs does not use
>> the inode->i_mutex lock except to keep the VFS layer out. Allowing us
>> to safely change the directory structure, without holding it.
>
> I don't think sysfs is depending on i_mutex anymore but I need to go
> through the code to make sure.
The vfs still does. So at least for directory tree manipulation we
need to hold i_mutex before we grab sysfs_mutex.
I think that means we need to unscramble the whole set of locking
order issues.
In lookup we have:
local_vfs_lock -> fs_global_lock
In modifications we have:
fs_global_lock -> local_vfs_lock
Which is the definition of a lock ordering problem.
Currently we play jump through some significant hoops to keep things
in local_vfs_lock -> fs_global_lock order.
If we also take the rename_mutex on directory adds and deletes we
may be able to keep jumping through those hoops. However I expect
we would be in a much better situation if we could figure out how
to avoid the problem.
It looks like the easy way to handle this is to make the sysfs_dirent
list rcu protected. Which means we can fix our lock ordering problem
without VFS modifications. Allowing the locking to always
be: sysfs_mutex ... i_mutex.
After that it would be safe and a good idea to have unshared
inodes between superblocks, just so we don't surprise anyone
making generic VFS assumptions.
Eric
_______________________________________________
Containers mailing list
Containers at lists.linux-foundation.org
https://lists.linux-foundation.org/mailman/listinfo/containers
More information about the Devel
mailing list