On Wed, Apr 18, 2007 at 10:26:31AM +0200, Patrick McHardy ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote: > Evgeniy Polyakov wrote: > > On Wed, Apr 18, 2007 at 12:16:18PM +0400, Pavel Emelianov ([EMAIL > > PROTECTED]) wrote: > > > >>Sorry, I forgot to put netdev and David in Cc when I first sent it. > >> > >>There is a race between netlink_dump_start() and netlink_release() > >>that can lead to the situation when a netlink socket with non-zero > >>callback is freed. > > > > > > Out of curiosity, why not to fix a netlink_dump_start() to remove > > callback in error path, since in 'no-error' path it removes it in > > netlink_dump(). > > > It already does (netlink_destroy_callback), but that doesn't help > with this race though since without this patch we don't enter the > error path.
I thought that with releasing a socket, which will have a callback attached only results in a leak of the callback? In that case we can just free it in dump() just like it is done in no-error path already. Or do I miss something additional? > > And, btw, can release method be called while socket is being used, I > > thought about proper reference counters should prevent this, but not > > 100% sure with RCU dereferencing of the descriptor. > > > The problem is asynchronous processing of the dump request in the > context of a different process. Process requests a dump, message > is queued and process returns from sendmsg since some other process > is already processing the queue. Then the process closes the socket, > resulting in netlink_release being called. When the dump request > is finally processed the race Pavel described might happen. This > can only happen for netlink families that use mutex_try_lock for > queue processing of course. Doesn't it called from ->sk_data_ready() which is synchronous with respect to sendmsg, not sure about conntrack though, but it looks so? -- Evgeniy Polyakov - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/