On Thu, Oct 20, 2016 at 2:29 PM, Cong Wang <xiyou.wangc...@gmail.com> wrote: > On Thu, Oct 20, 2016 at 7:58 AM, Stephen Smalley <s...@tycho.nsa.gov> wrote: >> On 10/20/2016 02:52 AM, Cong Wang wrote: >>> A kernel warning inside __local_bh_enable_ip() was reported by people >>> running SELinux, this is caused due to some SELinux functions >>> (indirectly) call peernet2id() with IRQ disabled in process context, >>> when we re-enable BH with IRQ disabled kernel complains. Shut up this >>> warning by saving IRQ context in peernet2id(), BH is still implicitly >>> disabled. >> >> Not sure this suffices; kill_fasync() -> send_sigio() -> >> send_sigio_to_task() -> sigio_perm() -> security_file_send_sigiotask() >> -> selinux_file_send_sigiotask() -> ... -> audit_log() -> ... -> >> peernet2id() > > Oh, this is a new one. kill_fasync() is called in IRQ handler, so we actually > do multicast in IRQ context.... It makes no sense, netlink multicast could > be very expensive if we have many listeners.
I'm sure there are a few others I don't know about, but I believe the only commonly used audit multicast listener is systemd. > I am Cc'ing Richard who added that multicast in audit_log_end(). It seems > not easy to just move the multicast to a workqueue, since the skb is copied > from audit_buffer which is freed immediately after that, probably need another > queue like audit_skb_queue. This approach would double the queue size which is something I want to avoid. I would suggest sticking with a single queue and dealing with the netlink message link fixup and multicast send in the existing netlink unicast thread; basically we would just be moving the multicast code from audit_log_end() into kauditd_thread(). This is the same approach I mentioned earlier off-list. However, that isn't something I want to mess with as a regression fix, mostly because I really want to see this regression gone by -rc2 as it is making SELinux testing a real pain. If the patch posted at the top of this thread isn't a suitable fix, we really should revert the original patch. -- paul moore www.paul-moore.com