• David Howells's avatar
    afs: Fix clearance of reply · f0a7d188
    David Howells authored
    The recent patch to fix the afs_server struct leak didn't actually fix the
    bug, but rather fixed some of the symptoms.  The problem is that an
    asynchronous call that holds a resource pointed to by call->reply[0] will
    find the pointer cleared in the call destructor, thereby preventing the
    resource from being cleaned up.
    
    In the case of the server record leak, the afs_fs_get_capabilities()
    function in devel code sets up a call with reply[0] pointing at the server
    record that should be altered when the result is obtained, but this was
    being cleared before the destructor was called, so the put in the
    destructor does nothing and the record is leaked.
    
    Commit f014ffb0 removed the additional ref obtained by
    afs_install_server(), but the removal of this ref is actually used by the
    garbage collector to mark a server record as being defunct after the record
    has expired through lack of use.
    
    The offending clearance of call->reply[0] upon completion in
    afs_process_async_call() has been there from the origin of the code, but
    none of the asynchronous calls actually use that pointer currently, so it
    should be safe to remove (note that synchronous calls don't involve this
    function).
    
    Fix this by the following means:
    
     (1) Revert commit f014ffb0.
    
     (2) Remove the clearance of reply[0] from afs_process_async_call().
    
    Without this, afs_manage_servers() will suffer an assertion failure if it
    sees a server record that didn't get used because the usage count is not 1.
    
    Fixes: f014ffb0 ("afs: Fix afs_server struct leak")
    Fixes: 08e0e7c8 ("[AF_RXRPC]: Make the in-kernel AFS filesystem use AF_RXRPC.")
    Signed-off-by: default avatarDavid Howells <dhowells@redhat.com>
    Cc: stable <stable@vger.kernel.org>
    Signed-off-by: default avatarGreg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
    f0a7d188
rxrpc.c 22.7 KB