On 05/02/2020 19:16, Jens Axboe wrote: > On 2/5/20 9:05 AM, Jens Axboe wrote: >> On 2/5/20 9:02 AM, Pavel Begunkov wrote: >>> On 05/02/2020 18:54, Jens Axboe wrote: >>>> On 2/5/20 8:46 AM, Pavel Begunkov wrote: >>>>> IORING_OP_{READ,WRITE} need mm to access user buffers, hence >>>>> req->has_user check should go for them as well. Move the corresponding >>>>> imports past the check. >>>> >>>> I'd need to double check, but I think the has_user check should just go. >>>> The import checks for access anyway, so we'll -EFAULT there if we >>>> somehow messed up and didn't acquire the right mm. >>>> >>> It'd be even better. I have plans to remove it, but I was thinking from a >>> different angle. >> >> Let me just confirm it in practice, but it should be fine. Then we can just >> kill it. > > OK now I remember - in terms of mm it's fine, we'll do the right thing. > But the iov_iter_init() has this gem: > > /* It will get better. Eventually... */ > if (uaccess_kernel()) { > i->type = ITER_KVEC | direction; > i->kvec = (struct kvec *)iov; > } else { > i->type = ITER_IOVEC | direction; > i->iov = iov; > } > > which means that if we haven't set USER_DS, then iov_iter_init() will > magically set the type to ITER_KVEC which then crashes when the iterator > tries to copy. > > Which is pretty lame. How about a patch that just checks for > uaccess_kernel() and -EFAULTs if true for the non-fixed variants where > we don't init the iter ourselves? Then we can still kill req->has_user > and not have to fill it in. > > On the other hand, we don't send requests async without @mm. So, if we fail them whenever can't grab mm, it solves all the problems even without extra checks. What do you think? -- Pavel Begunkov