> On Tue, 2009-01-27 at 08:45 +0000, Jarek Poplawski wrote:
> > On Mon, Jan 26, 2009 at 10:30:30PM +0100, Martin MOKREJŠ wrote:
> > > The patch really did not help:
> > >
http://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=12515#c5
> > > Martin
> >
> > Actually, there is a little change: the warning triggerd in another
> > place (sock_setsockopt() -> sk_attach_filter()). So we could go deeper
> > with these changes, but I'm not sure this is the right way to fix.
> >
> > It looks like the scenario is very old, but probably wasn't reported
> > (maybe there is some lockdep improvement):
>
> Yes, they likely are very old, and yes we added a lockdep annotation to
> copy_to/from_user() to catch these.
>
> > A) sys_mmap2() -> mm->mmap_sem -> packet_mmap() -> sk_lock
> > B) sock_setsockopt() -> sk_lock -> copy_from_user() -> mm->mmap_sem
> >
> > packet_mmap() (net/packet/af_packet.c) seems to be the only place in
> > net to implement mmap method, and using this lock order btw. On the
> > other hand copy_from_user() could be more popular under sk_lock, and
> > I'm not sure these changes are necessary.
> >
> > Since I don't know enough neither sock/packet nor sys_mmap, I guess
> > some advice would be precious. It looks like Peter Zijlstra solved
> > similar problems in nfs, so I CC him.
>
> The NFS/sunrpc case was special in that it did copy_to/from_kernel, that
> is, it never actually touched user memory -- we taught the might_fault()
> annotation about that.
>
> Can't you simply do the copy_from_user() before you take the sk_lock?
>