• Andreas Gruenbacher's avatar
    posix_acl: Inode acl caching fixes · b8a7a3a6
    Andreas Gruenbacher authored
    When get_acl() is called for an inode whose ACL is not cached yet, the
    get_acl inode operation is called to fetch the ACL from the filesystem.
    The inode operation is responsible for updating the cached acl with
    set_cached_acl().  This is done without locking at the VFS level, so
    another task can call set_cached_acl() or forget_cached_acl() before the
    get_acl inode operation gets to calling set_cached_acl(), and then
    get_acl's call to set_cached_acl() results in caching an outdate ACL.
    
    Prevent this from happening by setting the cached ACL pointer to a
    task-specific sentinel value before calling the get_acl inode operation.
    Move the responsibility for updating the cached ACL from the get_acl
    inode operations to get_acl().  There, only set the cached ACL if the
    sentinel value hasn't changed.
    
    The sentinel values are chosen to have odd values.  Likewise, the value
    of ACL_NOT_CACHED is odd.  In contrast, ACL object pointers always have
    an even value (ACLs are aligned in memory).  This allows to distinguish
    uncached ACLs values from ACL objects.
    
    In addition, switch from guarding inode->i_acl and inode->i_default_acl
    upates by the inode->i_lock spinlock to using xchg() and cmpxchg().
    
    Filesystems that do not want ACLs returned from their get_acl inode
    operations to be cached must call forget_cached_acl() to prevent the VFS
    from doing so.
    
    (Patch written by Al Viro and Andreas Gruenbacher.)
    Signed-off-by: default avatarAndreas Gruenbacher <agruenba@redhat.com>
    Signed-off-by: default avatarAl Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk>
    b8a7a3a6
acl.c 8.79 KB