On Sun, 13 May 2007, Nick Piggin wrote:
> On Fri, May 11, 2007 at 02:15:03PM +0100, Hugh Dickins wrote:
>
> > But again I wonder just what the gain has been, once your double
> > unmap_mapping_range is factored in. When I suggested before that
> > perhaps the double (well, treble including the one in truncate.c)
> > unmap_mapping_range might solve the problem you set out to solve
> > (I've lost sight of that!) without pagelock when faulting, you said:
> >
> > > Well aside from being terribly ugly, it means we can still drop
> > > the dirty bit where we'd otherwise rather not, so I don't think
> > > we can do that.
> >
> > but that didn't give me enough information to agree or disagree.
>
> Oh, well invalidate wants to be able to skip dirty pages or have the
> filesystem do something special with them first. Once you have taken
> the page out of the pagecache but still mapped shared, then blowing
> it away doesn't actually solve the data loss problem... only makes
> the window of VM inconsistency smaller.
Right, I think I see what you mean now, thanks: userspace
must not for a moment be allowed to write to orphaned pages.
Whereas it's not an issue for the privately COWed pages you added
the second unmap_mapping_range for: because it's only truncation
that has to worry about them, so they're heading for SIGBUS anyway.
Yes, and the page_mapped tests in mm/truncate.c are just racy
heuristics without the page lock you now put into faulting.
Hugh
-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to [email protected]
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/
[Index of Archives]
[Kernel Newbies]
[Netfilter]
[Bugtraq]
[Photo]
[Stuff]
[Gimp]
[Yosemite News]
[MIPS Linux]
[ARM Linux]
[Linux Security]
[Linux RAID]
[Video 4 Linux]
[Linux for the blind]
[Linux Resources]