On Thu, Jan 21, 2021 at 06:49:40PM +0530, Gautham Ananthakrishna wrote:

> +static void sweep_negative(struct dentry *dentry)
> +{
> +     struct dentry *parent;
> +
> +     if (!d_is_tail_negative(dentry)) {
> +             parent = lock_parent(dentry);
> +             if (!parent)
> +                     return;

Wait a minute.  It's not a good environment for calling lock_parent().
Who said that dentry won't get freed right under it?

Right now callers of __lock_parent() either hold a reference to dentry
*or* are called for a positive dentry, with inode->i_lock held.
You are introducing something very different - 

>               if (likely(retain_dentry(dentry))) {
> +                     if (d_is_negative(dentry))
> +                             sweep_negative(dentry);
>                       spin_unlock(&dentry->d_lock);

Here we can be called for a negative dentry with refcount already *NOT*
held by us.  Look:

static inline struct dentry *lock_parent(struct dentry *dentry)
{
        struct dentry *parent = dentry->d_parent;
        if (IS_ROOT(dentry))
                return NULL;
isn't a root

        if (likely(spin_trylock(&parent->d_lock)))
                return parent;

no such luck - someone's already holding parent's ->d_lock

        return __lock_parent(dentry);
and here we have
static struct dentry *__lock_parent(struct dentry *dentry)
{
        struct dentry *parent;
        rcu_read_lock();  

OK, anything we see in its ->d_parent is guaranteed to stay
allocated until we get to matching rcu_read_unlock()

        spin_unlock(&dentry->d_lock);
dropped the spinlock, now it's fair game for d_move(), d_drop(), etc.

again:
        parent = READ_ONCE(dentry->d_parent);
dentry couldn't have been reused, so it's the last value stored there.
Points to still allocated struct dentry instance, so we can...

        spin_lock(&parent->d_lock);
grab its ->d_lock.

        /*
         * We can't blindly lock dentry until we are sure
         * that we won't violate the locking order.
         * Any changes of dentry->d_parent must have
         * been done with parent->d_lock held, so
         * spin_lock() above is enough of a barrier
         * for checking if it's still our child.
         */
        if (unlikely(parent != dentry->d_parent)) {
                spin_unlock(&parent->d_lock);
                goto again;
        }
Nevermind, it's still equal to our ->d_parent.  So we have
the last valid parent's ->d_lock held

        rcu_read_unlock();
What's to hold dentry allocated now?  IF we held its refcount - no
problem, it can't go away.  If we held its ->d_inode->i_lock - ditto
(it wouldn't get to __dentry_kill() until we drop that, since all
callers do acquire that lock and it couldn't get scheduled for
freeing until it gets through most of __dentry_kill()).

IOW, we are free to grab dentry->d_lock again.
        if (parent != dentry)
                spin_lock_nested(&dentry->d_lock, DENTRY_D_LOCK_NESTED);
        else
                parent = NULL;
        return parent;
}

With your patch, though, you've got a call site where neither condition
is guaranteed.  Current kernel is fine - we are holding ->d_lock there,
and we don't touch dentry after it gets dropped.  Again, it can't get
scheduled for freeing until after we drop ->d_lock, so we are safe.
With that change, however, you've got a hard-to-hit memory corruptor
there...

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