On Thu 01-06-23 15:37:32, David Laight wrote:
...
- Lock any non-NULL argument. The caller must make sure that if he is passing
- in two directories, one is not ancestor of the other
Not directly relevant to this change but is the 'not an ancestor' check actually robust?
I found a condition in which the kernel 'pwd' code (which follows the inode chain) failed to stop at the base of a chroot.
I suspect that the ancestor check would fail the same way.
Honestly, I'm not sure how this could be the case but I'm not a dcache expert. d_ancestor() works on dentries and the whole dcache code pretty much relies on the fact that there always is at most one dentry for any directory. Also in case we call d_ancestor() from this code, we have the whole filesystem locked from any other directory moves so the ancestor relationship of two dirs cannot change (which is different from pwd code AFAIK). So IMHO no failure is possible in our case.
Honza
IIRC the problematic code used unshare() to 'escape' from a network natespace. If it was inside a chroot (that wasn't on a mount point) there ware two copies of the 'chroot /' inode and the match failed.
I might be able to find the test case.
David
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