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H A D | fuse_i.h | 4f06dd92 Wed Oct 21 15:12:49 CDT 2020 Vivek Goyal <vgoyal@redhat.com> fuse: fix write deadlock
There are two modes for write(2) and friends in fuse:
a) write through (update page cache, send sync WRITE request to userspace)
b) buffered write (update page cache, async writeout later)
The write through method kept all the page cache pages locked that were used for the request. Keeping more than one page locked is deadlock prone and Qian Cai demonstrated this with trinity fuzzing.
The reason for keeping the pages locked is that concurrent mapped reads shouldn't try to pull possibly stale data into the page cache.
For full page writes, the easy way to fix this is to make the cached page be the authoritative source by marking the page PG_uptodate immediately. After this the page can be safely unlocked, since mapped/cached reads will take the written data from the cache.
Concurrent mapped writes will now cause data in the original WRITE request to be updated; this however doesn't cause any data inconsistency and this scenario should be exceedingly rare anyway.
If the WRITE request returns with an error in the above case, currently the page is not marked uptodate; this means that a concurrent read will always read consistent data. After this patch the page is uptodate between writing to the cache and receiving the error: there's window where a cached read will read the wrong data. While theoretically this could be a regression, it is unlikely to be one in practice, since this is normal for buffered writes.
In case of a partial page write to an already uptodate page the locking is also unnecessary, with the above caveats.
Partial write of a not uptodate page still needs to be handled. One way would be to read the complete page before doing the write. This is not possible, since it might break filesystems that don't expect any READ requests when the file was opened O_WRONLY.
The other solution is to serialize the synchronous write with reads from the partial pages. The easiest way to do this is to keep the partial pages locked. The problem is that a write() may involve two such pages (one head and one tail). This patch fixes it by only locking the partial tail page. If there's a partial head page as well, then split that off as a separate WRITE request.
Reported-by: Qian Cai <cai@lca.pw> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/linux-fsdevel/4794a3fa3742a5e84fb0f934944204b55730829b.camel@lca.pw/ Fixes: ea9b9907b82a ("fuse: implement perform_write") Cc: <stable@vger.kernel.org> # v2.6.26 Signed-off-by: Vivek Goyal <vgoyal@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Miklos Szeredi <mszeredi@redhat.com>
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H A D | file.c | 4f06dd92 Wed Oct 21 15:12:49 CDT 2020 Vivek Goyal <vgoyal@redhat.com> fuse: fix write deadlock
There are two modes for write(2) and friends in fuse:
a) write through (update page cache, send sync WRITE request to userspace)
b) buffered write (update page cache, async writeout later)
The write through method kept all the page cache pages locked that were used for the request. Keeping more than one page locked is deadlock prone and Qian Cai demonstrated this with trinity fuzzing.
The reason for keeping the pages locked is that concurrent mapped reads shouldn't try to pull possibly stale data into the page cache.
For full page writes, the easy way to fix this is to make the cached page be the authoritative source by marking the page PG_uptodate immediately. After this the page can be safely unlocked, since mapped/cached reads will take the written data from the cache.
Concurrent mapped writes will now cause data in the original WRITE request to be updated; this however doesn't cause any data inconsistency and this scenario should be exceedingly rare anyway.
If the WRITE request returns with an error in the above case, currently the page is not marked uptodate; this means that a concurrent read will always read consistent data. After this patch the page is uptodate between writing to the cache and receiving the error: there's window where a cached read will read the wrong data. While theoretically this could be a regression, it is unlikely to be one in practice, since this is normal for buffered writes.
In case of a partial page write to an already uptodate page the locking is also unnecessary, with the above caveats.
Partial write of a not uptodate page still needs to be handled. One way would be to read the complete page before doing the write. This is not possible, since it might break filesystems that don't expect any READ requests when the file was opened O_WRONLY.
The other solution is to serialize the synchronous write with reads from the partial pages. The easiest way to do this is to keep the partial pages locked. The problem is that a write() may involve two such pages (one head and one tail). This patch fixes it by only locking the partial tail page. If there's a partial head page as well, then split that off as a separate WRITE request.
Reported-by: Qian Cai <cai@lca.pw> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/linux-fsdevel/4794a3fa3742a5e84fb0f934944204b55730829b.camel@lca.pw/ Fixes: ea9b9907b82a ("fuse: implement perform_write") Cc: <stable@vger.kernel.org> # v2.6.26 Signed-off-by: Vivek Goyal <vgoyal@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Miklos Szeredi <mszeredi@redhat.com>
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