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authorHugh Dickins <hugh@veritas.com>2008-12-10 20:48:52 +0000
committerGreg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>2008-12-13 15:29:33 -0800
commit188127a7b9a4ccdae3d53e362f6824b5a7bce6ce (patch)
tree4c6fa4bf7e06e65c15edf5969e88d1bdd3b6aa4d /Documentation/watchdog
parent35b9d8e0aa1268072f0a9238d738558c64c77372 (diff)
fix mapping_writably_mapped()
commit b88ed20594db2c685555b68c52b693b75738b2f5 upstream. Lee Schermerhorn noticed yesterday that I broke the mapping_writably_mapped test in 2.6.7! Bad bad bug, good good find. The i_mmap_writable count must be incremented for VM_SHARED (just as i_writecount is for VM_DENYWRITE, but while holding the i_mmap_lock) when dup_mmap() copies the vma for fork: it has its own more optimal version of __vma_link_file(), and I missed this out. So the count was later going down to 0 (dangerous) when one end unmapped, then wrapping negative (inefficient) when the other end unmapped. The only impact on x86 would have been that setting a mandatory lock on a file which has at some time been opened O_RDWR and mapped MAP_SHARED (but not necessarily PROT_WRITE) across a fork, might fail with -EAGAIN when it should succeed, or succeed when it should fail. But those architectures which rely on flush_dcache_page() to flush userspace modifications back into the page before the kernel reads it, may in some cases have skipped the flush after such a fork - though any repetitive test will soon wrap the count negative, in which case it will flush_dcache_page() unnecessarily. Fix would be a two-liner, but mapping variable added, and comment moved. Reported-by: Lee Schermerhorn <Lee.Schermerhorn@hp.com> Signed-off-by: Hugh Dickins <hugh@veritas.com> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>
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