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-rw-r--r--fs/locks.c70
1 files changed, 40 insertions, 30 deletions
diff --git a/fs/locks.c b/fs/locks.c
index 8b8388eca05..c3eecb895ac 100644
--- a/fs/locks.c
+++ b/fs/locks.c
@@ -683,45 +683,55 @@ posix_test_lock(struct file *filp, struct file_lock *fl)
EXPORT_SYMBOL(posix_test_lock);
-/* This function tests for deadlock condition before putting a process to
- * sleep. The detection scheme is no longer recursive. Recursive was neat,
- * but dangerous - we risked stack corruption if the lock data was bad, or
- * if the recursion was too deep for any other reason.
- *
- * We rely on the fact that a task can only be on one lock's wait queue
- * at a time. When we find blocked_task on a wait queue we can re-search
- * with blocked_task equal to that queue's owner, until either blocked_task
- * isn't found, or blocked_task is found on a queue owned by my_task.
- *
- * Note: the above assumption may not be true when handling lock requests
- * from a broken NFS client. But broken NFS clients have a lot more to
- * worry about than proper deadlock detection anyway... --okir
- *
- * However, the failure of this assumption (also possible in the case of
- * multiple tasks sharing the same open file table) also means there's no
- * guarantee that the loop below will terminate. As a hack, we give up
- * after a few iterations.
+/*
+ * Deadlock detection:
+ *
+ * We attempt to detect deadlocks that are due purely to posix file
+ * locks.
+ *
+ * We assume that a task can be waiting for at most one lock at a time.
+ * So for any acquired lock, the process holding that lock may be
+ * waiting on at most one other lock. That lock in turns may be held by
+ * someone waiting for at most one other lock. Given a requested lock
+ * caller_fl which is about to wait for a conflicting lock block_fl, we
+ * follow this chain of waiters to ensure we are not about to create a
+ * cycle.
+ *
+ * Since we do this before we ever put a process to sleep on a lock, we
+ * are ensured that there is never a cycle; that is what guarantees that
+ * the while() loop in posix_locks_deadlock() eventually completes.
+ *
+ * Note: the above assumption may not be true when handling lock
+ * requests from a broken NFS client. It may also fail in the presence
+ * of tasks (such as posix threads) sharing the same open file table.
+ *
+ * To handle those cases, we just bail out after a few iterations.
*/
#define MAX_DEADLK_ITERATIONS 10
+/* Find a lock that the owner of the given block_fl is blocking on. */
+static struct file_lock *what_owner_is_waiting_for(struct file_lock *block_fl)
+{
+ struct file_lock *fl;
+
+ list_for_each_entry(fl, &blocked_list, fl_link) {
+ if (posix_same_owner(fl, block_fl))
+ return fl->fl_next;
+ }
+ return NULL;
+}
+
static int posix_locks_deadlock(struct file_lock *caller_fl,
struct file_lock *block_fl)
{
- struct file_lock *fl;
int i = 0;
-next_task:
- if (posix_same_owner(caller_fl, block_fl))
- return 1;
- list_for_each_entry(fl, &blocked_list, fl_link) {
- if (posix_same_owner(fl, block_fl)) {
- if (i++ > MAX_DEADLK_ITERATIONS)
- return 0;
- fl = fl->fl_next;
- block_fl = fl;
- goto next_task;
- }
+ while ((block_fl = what_owner_is_waiting_for(block_fl))) {
+ if (i++ > MAX_DEADLK_ITERATIONS)
+ return 0;
+ if (posix_same_owner(caller_fl, block_fl))
+ return 1;
}
return 0;
}