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futex.c
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futex.c
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// SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-or-later
/*
* Fast Userspace Mutexes (which I call "Futexes!").
* (C) Rusty Russell, IBM 2002
*
* Generalized futexes, futex requeueing, misc fixes by Ingo Molnar
* (C) Copyright 2003 Red Hat Inc, All Rights Reserved
*
* Removed page pinning, fix privately mapped COW pages and other cleanups
* (C) Copyright 2003, 2004 Jamie Lokier
*
* Robust futex support started by Ingo Molnar
* (C) Copyright 2006 Red Hat Inc, All Rights Reserved
* Thanks to Thomas Gleixner for suggestions, analysis and fixes.
*
* PI-futex support started by Ingo Molnar and Thomas Gleixner
* Copyright (C) 2006 Red Hat, Inc., Ingo Molnar <[email protected]>
* Copyright (C) 2006 Timesys Corp., Thomas Gleixner <[email protected]>
*
* PRIVATE futexes by Eric Dumazet
* Copyright (C) 2007 Eric Dumazet <[email protected]>
*
* Requeue-PI support by Darren Hart <[email protected]>
* Copyright (C) IBM Corporation, 2009
* Thanks to Thomas Gleixner for conceptual design and careful reviews.
*
* Thanks to Ben LaHaise for yelling "hashed waitqueues" loudly
* enough at me, Linus for the original (flawed) idea, Matthew
* Kirkwood for proof-of-concept implementation.
*
* "The futexes are also cursed."
* "But they come in a choice of three flavours!"
*/
#include <linux/compat.h>
#include <linux/jhash.h>
#include <linux/pagemap.h>
#include <linux/syscalls.h>
#include <linux/hugetlb.h>
#include <linux/freezer.h>
#include <linux/memblock.h>
#include <linux/fault-inject.h>
#include <asm/futex.h>
#include "locking/rtmutex_common.h"
/*
* READ this before attempting to hack on futexes!
*
* Basic futex operation and ordering guarantees
* =============================================
*
* The waiter reads the futex value in user space and calls
* futex_wait(). This function computes the hash bucket and acquires
* the hash bucket lock. After that it reads the futex user space value
* again and verifies that the data has not changed. If it has not changed
* it enqueues itself into the hash bucket, releases the hash bucket lock
* and schedules.
*
* The waker side modifies the user space value of the futex and calls
* futex_wake(). This function computes the hash bucket and acquires the
* hash bucket lock. Then it looks for waiters on that futex in the hash
* bucket and wakes them.
*
* In futex wake up scenarios where no tasks are blocked on a futex, taking
* the hb spinlock can be avoided and simply return. In order for this
* optimization to work, ordering guarantees must exist so that the waiter
* being added to the list is acknowledged when the list is concurrently being
* checked by the waker, avoiding scenarios like the following:
*
* CPU 0 CPU 1
* val = *futex;
* sys_futex(WAIT, futex, val);
* futex_wait(futex, val);
* uval = *futex;
* *futex = newval;
* sys_futex(WAKE, futex);
* futex_wake(futex);
* if (queue_empty())
* return;
* if (uval == val)
* lock(hash_bucket(futex));
* queue();
* unlock(hash_bucket(futex));
* schedule();
*
* This would cause the waiter on CPU 0 to wait forever because it
* missed the transition of the user space value from val to newval
* and the waker did not find the waiter in the hash bucket queue.
*
* The correct serialization ensures that a waiter either observes
* the changed user space value before blocking or is woken by a
* concurrent waker:
*
* CPU 0 CPU 1
* val = *futex;
* sys_futex(WAIT, futex, val);
* futex_wait(futex, val);
*
* waiters++; (a)
* smp_mb(); (A) <-- paired with -.
* |
* lock(hash_bucket(futex)); |
* |
* uval = *futex; |
* | *futex = newval;
* | sys_futex(WAKE, futex);
* | futex_wake(futex);
* |
* `--------> smp_mb(); (B)
* if (uval == val)
* queue();
* unlock(hash_bucket(futex));
* schedule(); if (waiters)
* lock(hash_bucket(futex));
* else wake_waiters(futex);
* waiters--; (b) unlock(hash_bucket(futex));
*
* Where (A) orders the waiters increment and the futex value read through
* atomic operations (see hb_waiters_inc) and where (B) orders the write
* to futex and the waiters read (see hb_waiters_pending()).
*
* This yields the following case (where X:=waiters, Y:=futex):
*
* X = Y = 0
*
* w[X]=1 w[Y]=1
* MB MB
* r[Y]=y r[X]=x
*
* Which guarantees that x==0 && y==0 is impossible; which translates back into
* the guarantee that we cannot both miss the futex variable change and the
* enqueue.
*
* Note that a new waiter is accounted for in (a) even when it is possible that
* the wait call can return error, in which case we backtrack from it in (b).
* Refer to the comment in queue_lock().
*
* Similarly, in order to account for waiters being requeued on another
* address we always increment the waiters for the destination bucket before
* acquiring the lock. It then decrements them again after releasing it -
* the code that actually moves the futex(es) between hash buckets (requeue_futex)
* will do the additional required waiter count housekeeping. This is done for
* double_lock_hb() and double_unlock_hb(), respectively.
*/
#ifdef CONFIG_HAVE_FUTEX_CMPXCHG
#define futex_cmpxchg_enabled 1
#else
static int __read_mostly futex_cmpxchg_enabled;
#endif
/*
* Futex flags used to encode options to functions and preserve them across
* restarts.
*/
#ifdef CONFIG_MMU
# define FLAGS_SHARED 0x01
#else
/*
* NOMMU does not have per process address space. Let the compiler optimize
* code away.
*/
# define FLAGS_SHARED 0x00
#endif
#define FLAGS_CLOCKRT 0x02
#define FLAGS_HAS_TIMEOUT 0x04
/*
* Priority Inheritance state:
*/
struct futex_pi_state {
/*
* list of 'owned' pi_state instances - these have to be
* cleaned up in do_exit() if the task exits prematurely:
*/
struct list_head list;
/*
* The PI object:
*/
struct rt_mutex pi_mutex;
struct task_struct *owner;
refcount_t refcount;
union futex_key key;
} __randomize_layout;
/**
* struct futex_q - The hashed futex queue entry, one per waiting task
* @list: priority-sorted list of tasks waiting on this futex
* @task: the task waiting on the futex
* @lock_ptr: the hash bucket lock
* @key: the key the futex is hashed on
* @pi_state: optional priority inheritance state
* @rt_waiter: rt_waiter storage for use with requeue_pi
* @requeue_pi_key: the requeue_pi target futex key
* @bitset: bitset for the optional bitmasked wakeup
*
* We use this hashed waitqueue, instead of a normal wait_queue_entry_t, so
* we can wake only the relevant ones (hashed queues may be shared).
*
* A futex_q has a woken state, just like tasks have TASK_RUNNING.
* It is considered woken when plist_node_empty(&q->list) || q->lock_ptr == 0.
* The order of wakeup is always to make the first condition true, then
* the second.
*
* PI futexes are typically woken before they are removed from the hash list via
* the rt_mutex code. See unqueue_me_pi().
*/
struct futex_q {
struct plist_node list;
struct task_struct *task;
spinlock_t *lock_ptr;
union futex_key key;
struct futex_pi_state *pi_state;
struct rt_mutex_waiter *rt_waiter;
union futex_key *requeue_pi_key;
u32 bitset;
} __randomize_layout;
static const struct futex_q futex_q_init = {
/* list gets initialized in queue_me()*/
.key = FUTEX_KEY_INIT,
.bitset = FUTEX_BITSET_MATCH_ANY
};
/*
* Hash buckets are shared by all the futex_keys that hash to the same
* location. Each key may have multiple futex_q structures, one for each task
* waiting on a futex.
*/
struct futex_hash_bucket {
atomic_t waiters;
spinlock_t lock;
struct plist_head chain;
} ____cacheline_aligned_in_smp;
/*
* The base of the bucket array and its size are always used together
* (after initialization only in hash_futex()), so ensure that they
* reside in the same cacheline.
*/
static struct {
struct futex_hash_bucket *queues;
unsigned long hashsize;
} __futex_data __read_mostly __aligned(2*sizeof(long));
#define futex_queues (__futex_data.queues)
#define futex_hashsize (__futex_data.hashsize)
/*
* Fault injections for futexes.
*/
#ifdef CONFIG_FAIL_FUTEX
static struct {
struct fault_attr attr;
bool ignore_private;
} fail_futex = {
.attr = FAULT_ATTR_INITIALIZER,
.ignore_private = false,
};
static int __init setup_fail_futex(char *str)
{
return setup_fault_attr(&fail_futex.attr, str);
}
__setup("fail_futex=", setup_fail_futex);
static bool should_fail_futex(bool fshared)
{
if (fail_futex.ignore_private && !fshared)
return false;
return should_fail(&fail_futex.attr, 1);
}
#ifdef CONFIG_FAULT_INJECTION_DEBUG_FS
static int __init fail_futex_debugfs(void)
{
umode_t mode = S_IFREG | S_IRUSR | S_IWUSR;
struct dentry *dir;
dir = fault_create_debugfs_attr("fail_futex", NULL,
&fail_futex.attr);
if (IS_ERR(dir))
return PTR_ERR(dir);
debugfs_create_bool("ignore-private", mode, dir,
&fail_futex.ignore_private);
return 0;
}
late_initcall(fail_futex_debugfs);
#endif /* CONFIG_FAULT_INJECTION_DEBUG_FS */
#else
static inline bool should_fail_futex(bool fshared)
{
return false;
}
#endif /* CONFIG_FAIL_FUTEX */
#ifdef CONFIG_COMPAT
static void compat_exit_robust_list(struct task_struct *curr);
#else
static inline void compat_exit_robust_list(struct task_struct *curr) { }
#endif
/*
* Reflects a new waiter being added to the waitqueue.
*/
static inline void hb_waiters_inc(struct futex_hash_bucket *hb)
{
#ifdef CONFIG_SMP
atomic_inc(&hb->waiters);
/*
* Full barrier (A), see the ordering comment above.
*/
smp_mb__after_atomic();
#endif
}
/*
* Reflects a waiter being removed from the waitqueue by wakeup
* paths.
*/
static inline void hb_waiters_dec(struct futex_hash_bucket *hb)
{
#ifdef CONFIG_SMP
atomic_dec(&hb->waiters);
#endif
}
static inline int hb_waiters_pending(struct futex_hash_bucket *hb)
{
#ifdef CONFIG_SMP
/*
* Full barrier (B), see the ordering comment above.
*/
smp_mb();
return atomic_read(&hb->waiters);
#else
return 1;
#endif
}
/**
* hash_futex - Return the hash bucket in the global hash
* @key: Pointer to the futex key for which the hash is calculated
*
* We hash on the keys returned from get_futex_key (see below) and return the
* corresponding hash bucket in the global hash.
*/
static struct futex_hash_bucket *hash_futex(union futex_key *key)
{
u32 hash = jhash2((u32 *)key, offsetof(typeof(*key), both.offset) / 4,
key->both.offset);
return &futex_queues[hash & (futex_hashsize - 1)];
}
/**
* match_futex - Check whether two futex keys are equal
* @key1: Pointer to key1
* @key2: Pointer to key2
*
* Return 1 if two futex_keys are equal, 0 otherwise.
*/
static inline int match_futex(union futex_key *key1, union futex_key *key2)
{
return (key1 && key2
&& key1->both.word == key2->both.word
&& key1->both.ptr == key2->both.ptr
&& key1->both.offset == key2->both.offset);
}
enum futex_access {
FUTEX_READ,
FUTEX_WRITE
};
/**
* futex_setup_timer - set up the sleeping hrtimer.
* @time: ptr to the given timeout value
* @timeout: the hrtimer_sleeper structure to be set up
* @flags: futex flags
* @range_ns: optional range in ns
*
* Return: Initialized hrtimer_sleeper structure or NULL if no timeout
* value given
*/
static inline struct hrtimer_sleeper *
futex_setup_timer(ktime_t *time, struct hrtimer_sleeper *timeout,
int flags, u64 range_ns)
{
if (!time)
return NULL;
hrtimer_init_sleeper_on_stack(timeout, (flags & FLAGS_CLOCKRT) ?
CLOCK_REALTIME : CLOCK_MONOTONIC,
HRTIMER_MODE_ABS);
/*
* If range_ns is 0, calling hrtimer_set_expires_range_ns() is
* effectively the same as calling hrtimer_set_expires().
*/
hrtimer_set_expires_range_ns(&timeout->timer, *time, range_ns);
return timeout;
}
/*
* Generate a machine wide unique identifier for this inode.
*
* This relies on u64 not wrapping in the life-time of the machine; which with
* 1ns resolution means almost 585 years.
*
* This further relies on the fact that a well formed program will not unmap
* the file while it has a (shared) futex waiting on it. This mapping will have
* a file reference which pins the mount and inode.
*
* If for some reason an inode gets evicted and read back in again, it will get
* a new sequence number and will _NOT_ match, even though it is the exact same
* file.
*
* It is important that match_futex() will never have a false-positive, esp.
* for PI futexes that can mess up the state. The above argues that false-negatives
* are only possible for malformed programs.
*/
static u64 get_inode_sequence_number(struct inode *inode)
{
static atomic64_t i_seq;
u64 old;
/* Does the inode already have a sequence number? */
old = atomic64_read(&inode->i_sequence);
if (likely(old))
return old;
for (;;) {
u64 new = atomic64_add_return(1, &i_seq);
if (WARN_ON_ONCE(!new))
continue;
old = atomic64_cmpxchg_relaxed(&inode->i_sequence, 0, new);
if (old)
return old;
return new;
}
}
/**
* get_futex_key() - Get parameters which are the keys for a futex
* @uaddr: virtual address of the futex
* @fshared: false for a PROCESS_PRIVATE futex, true for PROCESS_SHARED
* @key: address where result is stored.
* @rw: mapping needs to be read/write (values: FUTEX_READ,
* FUTEX_WRITE)
*
* Return: a negative error code or 0
*
* The key words are stored in @key on success.
*
* For shared mappings (when @fshared), the key is:
*
* ( inode->i_sequence, page->index, offset_within_page )
*
* [ also see get_inode_sequence_number() ]
*
* For private mappings (or when !@fshared), the key is:
*
* ( current->mm, address, 0 )
*
* This allows (cross process, where applicable) identification of the futex
* without keeping the page pinned for the duration of the FUTEX_WAIT.
*
* lock_page() might sleep, the caller should not hold a spinlock.
*/
static int get_futex_key(u32 __user *uaddr, bool fshared, union futex_key *key,
enum futex_access rw)
{
unsigned long address = (unsigned long)uaddr;
struct mm_struct *mm = current->mm;
struct page *page, *tail;
struct address_space *mapping;
int err, ro = 0;
/*
* The futex address must be "naturally" aligned.
*/
key->both.offset = address % PAGE_SIZE;
if (unlikely((address % sizeof(u32)) != 0))
return -EINVAL;
address -= key->both.offset;
if (unlikely(!access_ok(uaddr, sizeof(u32))))
return -EFAULT;
if (unlikely(should_fail_futex(fshared)))
return -EFAULT;
/*
* PROCESS_PRIVATE futexes are fast.
* As the mm cannot disappear under us and the 'key' only needs
* virtual address, we dont even have to find the underlying vma.
* Note : We do have to check 'uaddr' is a valid user address,
* but access_ok() should be faster than find_vma()
*/
if (!fshared) {
key->private.mm = mm;
key->private.address = address;
return 0;
}
again:
/* Ignore any VERIFY_READ mapping (futex common case) */
if (unlikely(should_fail_futex(true)))
return -EFAULT;
err = get_user_pages_fast(address, 1, FOLL_WRITE, &page);
/*
* If write access is not required (eg. FUTEX_WAIT), try
* and get read-only access.
*/
if (err == -EFAULT && rw == FUTEX_READ) {
err = get_user_pages_fast(address, 1, 0, &page);
ro = 1;
}
if (err < 0)
return err;
else
err = 0;
/*
* The treatment of mapping from this point on is critical. The page
* lock protects many things but in this context the page lock
* stabilizes mapping, prevents inode freeing in the shared
* file-backed region case and guards against movement to swap cache.
*
* Strictly speaking the page lock is not needed in all cases being
* considered here and page lock forces unnecessarily serialization
* From this point on, mapping will be re-verified if necessary and
* page lock will be acquired only if it is unavoidable
*
* Mapping checks require the head page for any compound page so the
* head page and mapping is looked up now. For anonymous pages, it
* does not matter if the page splits in the future as the key is
* based on the address. For filesystem-backed pages, the tail is
* required as the index of the page determines the key. For
* base pages, there is no tail page and tail == page.
*/
tail = page;
page = compound_head(page);
mapping = READ_ONCE(page->mapping);
/*
* If page->mapping is NULL, then it cannot be a PageAnon
* page; but it might be the ZERO_PAGE or in the gate area or
* in a special mapping (all cases which we are happy to fail);
* or it may have been a good file page when get_user_pages_fast
* found it, but truncated or holepunched or subjected to
* invalidate_complete_page2 before we got the page lock (also
* cases which we are happy to fail). And we hold a reference,
* so refcount care in invalidate_complete_page's remove_mapping
* prevents drop_caches from setting mapping to NULL beneath us.
*
* The case we do have to guard against is when memory pressure made
* shmem_writepage move it from filecache to swapcache beneath us:
* an unlikely race, but we do need to retry for page->mapping.
*/
if (unlikely(!mapping)) {
int shmem_swizzled;
/*
* Page lock is required to identify which special case above
* applies. If this is really a shmem page then the page lock
* will prevent unexpected transitions.
*/
lock_page(page);
shmem_swizzled = PageSwapCache(page) || page->mapping;
unlock_page(page);
put_page(page);
if (shmem_swizzled)
goto again;
return -EFAULT;
}
/*
* Private mappings are handled in a simple way.
*
* If the futex key is stored on an anonymous page, then the associated
* object is the mm which is implicitly pinned by the calling process.
*
* NOTE: When userspace waits on a MAP_SHARED mapping, even if
* it's a read-only handle, it's expected that futexes attach to
* the object not the particular process.
*/
if (PageAnon(page)) {
/*
* A RO anonymous page will never change and thus doesn't make
* sense for futex operations.
*/
if (unlikely(should_fail_futex(true)) || ro) {
err = -EFAULT;
goto out;
}
key->both.offset |= FUT_OFF_MMSHARED; /* ref taken on mm */
key->private.mm = mm;
key->private.address = address;
} else {
struct inode *inode;
/*
* The associated futex object in this case is the inode and
* the page->mapping must be traversed. Ordinarily this should
* be stabilised under page lock but it's not strictly
* necessary in this case as we just want to pin the inode, not
* update the radix tree or anything like that.
*
* The RCU read lock is taken as the inode is finally freed
* under RCU. If the mapping still matches expectations then the
* mapping->host can be safely accessed as being a valid inode.
*/
rcu_read_lock();
if (READ_ONCE(page->mapping) != mapping) {
rcu_read_unlock();
put_page(page);
goto again;
}
inode = READ_ONCE(mapping->host);
if (!inode) {
rcu_read_unlock();
put_page(page);
goto again;
}
key->both.offset |= FUT_OFF_INODE; /* inode-based key */
key->shared.i_seq = get_inode_sequence_number(inode);
key->shared.pgoff = basepage_index(tail);
rcu_read_unlock();
}
out:
put_page(page);
return err;
}
/**
* fault_in_user_writeable() - Fault in user address and verify RW access
* @uaddr: pointer to faulting user space address
*
* Slow path to fixup the fault we just took in the atomic write
* access to @uaddr.
*
* We have no generic implementation of a non-destructive write to the
* user address. We know that we faulted in the atomic pagefault
* disabled section so we can as well avoid the #PF overhead by
* calling get_user_pages() right away.
*/
static int fault_in_user_writeable(u32 __user *uaddr)
{
struct mm_struct *mm = current->mm;
int ret;
mmap_read_lock(mm);
ret = fixup_user_fault(mm, (unsigned long)uaddr,
FAULT_FLAG_WRITE, NULL);
mmap_read_unlock(mm);
return ret < 0 ? ret : 0;
}
/**
* futex_top_waiter() - Return the highest priority waiter on a futex
* @hb: the hash bucket the futex_q's reside in
* @key: the futex key (to distinguish it from other futex futex_q's)
*
* Must be called with the hb lock held.
*/
static struct futex_q *futex_top_waiter(struct futex_hash_bucket *hb,
union futex_key *key)
{
struct futex_q *this;
plist_for_each_entry(this, &hb->chain, list) {
if (match_futex(&this->key, key))
return this;
}
return NULL;
}
static int cmpxchg_futex_value_locked(u32 *curval, u32 __user *uaddr,
u32 uval, u32 newval)
{
int ret;
pagefault_disable();
ret = futex_atomic_cmpxchg_inatomic(curval, uaddr, uval, newval);
pagefault_enable();
return ret;
}
static int get_futex_value_locked(u32 *dest, u32 __user *from)
{
int ret;
pagefault_disable();
ret = __get_user(*dest, from);
pagefault_enable();
return ret ? -EFAULT : 0;
}
/*
* PI code:
*/
static int refill_pi_state_cache(void)
{
struct futex_pi_state *pi_state;
if (likely(current->pi_state_cache))
return 0;
pi_state = kzalloc(sizeof(*pi_state), GFP_KERNEL);
if (!pi_state)
return -ENOMEM;
INIT_LIST_HEAD(&pi_state->list);
/* pi_mutex gets initialized later */
pi_state->owner = NULL;
refcount_set(&pi_state->refcount, 1);
pi_state->key = FUTEX_KEY_INIT;
current->pi_state_cache = pi_state;
return 0;
}
static struct futex_pi_state *alloc_pi_state(void)
{
struct futex_pi_state *pi_state = current->pi_state_cache;
WARN_ON(!pi_state);
current->pi_state_cache = NULL;
return pi_state;
}
static void get_pi_state(struct futex_pi_state *pi_state)
{
WARN_ON_ONCE(!refcount_inc_not_zero(&pi_state->refcount));
}
/*
* Drops a reference to the pi_state object and frees or caches it
* when the last reference is gone.
*/
static void put_pi_state(struct futex_pi_state *pi_state)
{
if (!pi_state)
return;
if (!refcount_dec_and_test(&pi_state->refcount))
return;
/*
* If pi_state->owner is NULL, the owner is most probably dying
* and has cleaned up the pi_state already
*/
if (pi_state->owner) {
struct task_struct *owner;
raw_spin_lock_irq(&pi_state->pi_mutex.wait_lock);
owner = pi_state->owner;
if (owner) {
raw_spin_lock(&owner->pi_lock);
list_del_init(&pi_state->list);
raw_spin_unlock(&owner->pi_lock);
}
rt_mutex_proxy_unlock(&pi_state->pi_mutex, owner);
raw_spin_unlock_irq(&pi_state->pi_mutex.wait_lock);
}
if (current->pi_state_cache) {
kfree(pi_state);
} else {
/*
* pi_state->list is already empty.
* clear pi_state->owner.
* refcount is at 0 - put it back to 1.
*/
pi_state->owner = NULL;
refcount_set(&pi_state->refcount, 1);
current->pi_state_cache = pi_state;
}
}
#ifdef CONFIG_FUTEX_PI
/*
* This task is holding PI mutexes at exit time => bad.
* Kernel cleans up PI-state, but userspace is likely hosed.
* (Robust-futex cleanup is separate and might save the day for userspace.)
*/
static void exit_pi_state_list(struct task_struct *curr)
{
struct list_head *next, *head = &curr->pi_state_list;
struct futex_pi_state *pi_state;
struct futex_hash_bucket *hb;
union futex_key key = FUTEX_KEY_INIT;
if (!futex_cmpxchg_enabled)
return;
/*
* We are a ZOMBIE and nobody can enqueue itself on
* pi_state_list anymore, but we have to be careful
* versus waiters unqueueing themselves:
*/
raw_spin_lock_irq(&curr->pi_lock);
while (!list_empty(head)) {
next = head->next;
pi_state = list_entry(next, struct futex_pi_state, list);
key = pi_state->key;
hb = hash_futex(&key);
/*
* We can race against put_pi_state() removing itself from the
* list (a waiter going away). put_pi_state() will first
* decrement the reference count and then modify the list, so
* its possible to see the list entry but fail this reference
* acquire.
*
* In that case; drop the locks to let put_pi_state() make
* progress and retry the loop.
*/
if (!refcount_inc_not_zero(&pi_state->refcount)) {
raw_spin_unlock_irq(&curr->pi_lock);
cpu_relax();
raw_spin_lock_irq(&curr->pi_lock);
continue;
}
raw_spin_unlock_irq(&curr->pi_lock);
spin_lock(&hb->lock);
raw_spin_lock_irq(&pi_state->pi_mutex.wait_lock);
raw_spin_lock(&curr->pi_lock);
/*
* We dropped the pi-lock, so re-check whether this
* task still owns the PI-state:
*/
if (head->next != next) {
/* retain curr->pi_lock for the loop invariant */
raw_spin_unlock(&pi_state->pi_mutex.wait_lock);
spin_unlock(&hb->lock);
put_pi_state(pi_state);
continue;
}
WARN_ON(pi_state->owner != curr);
WARN_ON(list_empty(&pi_state->list));
list_del_init(&pi_state->list);
pi_state->owner = NULL;
raw_spin_unlock(&curr->pi_lock);
raw_spin_unlock_irq(&pi_state->pi_mutex.wait_lock);
spin_unlock(&hb->lock);
rt_mutex_futex_unlock(&pi_state->pi_mutex);
put_pi_state(pi_state);
raw_spin_lock_irq(&curr->pi_lock);
}
raw_spin_unlock_irq(&curr->pi_lock);
}
#else
static inline void exit_pi_state_list(struct task_struct *curr) { }
#endif
/*
* We need to check the following states:
*
* Waiter | pi_state | pi->owner | uTID | uODIED | ?
*
* [1] NULL | --- | --- | 0 | 0/1 | Valid
* [2] NULL | --- | --- | >0 | 0/1 | Valid
*
* [3] Found | NULL | -- | Any | 0/1 | Invalid
*
* [4] Found | Found | NULL | 0 | 1 | Valid
* [5] Found | Found | NULL | >0 | 1 | Invalid
*
* [6] Found | Found | task | 0 | 1 | Valid
*
* [7] Found | Found | NULL | Any | 0 | Invalid
*
* [8] Found | Found | task | ==taskTID | 0/1 | Valid
* [9] Found | Found | task | 0 | 0 | Invalid
* [10] Found | Found | task | !=taskTID | 0/1 | Invalid
*
* [1] Indicates that the kernel can acquire the futex atomically. We
* came came here due to a stale FUTEX_WAITERS/FUTEX_OWNER_DIED bit.
*
* [2] Valid, if TID does not belong to a kernel thread. If no matching
* thread is found then it indicates that the owner TID has died.
*
* [3] Invalid. The waiter is queued on a non PI futex
*
* [4] Valid state after exit_robust_list(), which sets the user space
* value to FUTEX_WAITERS | FUTEX_OWNER_DIED.
*
* [5] The user space value got manipulated between exit_robust_list()
* and exit_pi_state_list()
*
* [6] Valid state after exit_pi_state_list() which sets the new owner in
* the pi_state but cannot access the user space value.
*
* [7] pi_state->owner can only be NULL when the OWNER_DIED bit is set.
*
* [8] Owner and user space value match
*
* [9] There is no transient state which sets the user space TID to 0
* except exit_robust_list(), but this is indicated by the
* FUTEX_OWNER_DIED bit. See [4]
*
* [10] There is no transient state which leaves owner and user space
* TID out of sync.
*
*
* Serialization and lifetime rules:
*
* hb->lock:
*
* hb -> futex_q, relation
* futex_q -> pi_state, relation
*
* (cannot be raw because hb can contain arbitrary amount
* of futex_q's)
*
* pi_mutex->wait_lock:
*
* {uval, pi_state}
*
* (and pi_mutex 'obviously')
*
* p->pi_lock:
*
* p->pi_state_list -> pi_state->list, relation
*
* pi_state->refcount:
*
* pi_state lifetime
*
*
* Lock order:
*
* hb->lock
* pi_mutex->wait_lock
* p->pi_lock
*
*/
/*
* Validate that the existing waiter has a pi_state and sanity check
* the pi_state against the user space value. If correct, attach to
* it.
*/
static int attach_to_pi_state(u32 __user *uaddr, u32 uval,
struct futex_pi_state *pi_state,
struct futex_pi_state **ps)
{
pid_t pid = uval & FUTEX_TID_MASK;
u32 uval2;
int ret;
/*
* Userspace might have messed up non-PI and PI futexes [3]
*/
if (unlikely(!pi_state))
return -EINVAL;
/*
* We get here with hb->lock held, and having found a