CRED: Holding a spinlock does not imply the holding of RCU read lock
Change the credentials documentation to make it clear that the RCU read lock must be explicitly held when accessing credentials pointers in some other task than current. Holding a spinlock does not implicitly hold the RCU read lock. Signed-off-by: Serge Hallyn <serue@us.ibm.com> Reviewed-by: Paul E. McKenney <paulmck@linux.vnet.ibm.com> Signed-off-by: David Howells <dhowells@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: James Morris <jmorris@namei.org>
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@ -408,9 +408,6 @@ This should be used inside the RCU read lock, as in the following example:
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...
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}
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A function need not get RCU read lock to use __task_cred() if it is holding a
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spinlock at the time as this implicitly holds the RCU read lock.
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Should it be necessary to hold another task's credentials for a long period of
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time, and possibly to sleep whilst doing so, then the caller should get a
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reference on them using:
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@ -426,17 +423,16 @@ credentials, hiding the RCU magic from the caller:
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uid_t task_uid(task) Task's real UID
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uid_t task_euid(task) Task's effective UID
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If the caller is holding a spinlock or the RCU read lock at the time anyway,
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then:
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If the caller is holding the RCU read lock at the time anyway, then:
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__task_cred(task)->uid
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__task_cred(task)->euid
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should be used instead. Similarly, if multiple aspects of a task's credentials
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need to be accessed, RCU read lock or a spinlock should be used, __task_cred()
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called, the result stored in a temporary pointer and then the credential
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aspects called from that before dropping the lock. This prevents the
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potentially expensive RCU magic from being invoked multiple times.
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need to be accessed, RCU read lock should be used, __task_cred() called, the
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result stored in a temporary pointer and then the credential aspects called
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from that before dropping the lock. This prevents the potentially expensive
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RCU magic from being invoked multiple times.
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Should some other single aspect of another task's credentials need to be
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accessed, then this can be used:
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