On 12/10, Srikar Dronamraju wrote: > > * Oleg Nesterov <o...@redhat.com> [2012-11-23 21:28:06]: > > > register/unregister verifies that inode/uc != NULL. For what? > > This really looks like "hide the potential problem", the caller > > should pass the valid data. > > > > Agree that users should pass valid data. > I do understand that we expect the users to be knowledge-able. > Also users are routed thro in-kernel api that does this check. > > However from an api perspective, if a user passes invalid data, do we > want the system to crash. > > Esp if kernel can identify that users has indeed passed wrong info. I do agree > that users can still pass invalid data that kernel maynot be able to > identify in most cases.
inode != NULL can't verify that it actually points to the valid inode, NULL is only one example of invalid data. I agree, sometimes it makes sense to protect against the stupid mistakes, but if we want to check against NULL we should do if (WARN_ON(!inode)) return; Especially in uprobe_unregister(). The current code is really "hide the possible problem" and nothing more. It is better to crash imho than silently return. > > register() also checks uc->next == NULL, probably to prevent the > > double-register but the caller can do other stupid/wrong things. > > Users can surely do more stupid things. But this is again something that > kernel can identify. By allowing a double-register of a consumer, thats > already registered, we might end up allowing circular loop of consumers. I understand. But in this case we should document that uc->next must be cleared before uprobe_register(). Or add init_consumer(). And we should change uprobe_unregister() to clear uc->next as well. I think that the code like this uprobe_register(uc); uprobe_unregister(uc); uprobe_register(uc); should work. Currently it doesn't because of this check. So I still think these checks are pointless and (at least in unregister) even harmful. But I won't insist too much, I can drop this patch if you do not change your mind. Oleg. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to majord...@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/