From: Jens Axboe axboe@kernel.dk
[ Upstream commit eac2ca2d682f94f46b1973bdf5e77d85d77b8e53 ]
In terms of normal application usage, this list will always be empty. And if an application does overflow a bit, it'll have a few entries. However, nothing obviously prevents syzbot from running a test case that generates a ton of overflow entries, and then flushing them can take quite a while.
Check for needing to reschedule while flushing, and drop our locks and do so if necessary. There's no state to maintain here as overflows always prune from head-of-list, hence it's fine to drop and reacquire the locks at the end of the loop.
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/io-uring/66ed061d.050a0220.29194.0053.GAE@google.com... Reported-by: syzbot+5fca234bd7eb378ff78e@syzkaller.appspotmail.com Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe axboe@kernel.dk Signed-off-by: Sasha Levin sashal@kernel.org --- io_uring/io_uring.c | 15 +++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 15 insertions(+)
diff --git a/io_uring/io_uring.c b/io_uring/io_uring.c index 3942db160f18e..637e59503ef10 100644 --- a/io_uring/io_uring.c +++ b/io_uring/io_uring.c @@ -624,6 +624,21 @@ static void __io_cqring_overflow_flush(struct io_ring_ctx *ctx, bool dying) } list_del(&ocqe->list); kfree(ocqe); + + /* + * For silly syzbot cases that deliberately overflow by huge + * amounts, check if we need to resched and drop and + * reacquire the locks if so. Nothing real would ever hit this. + * Ideally we'd have a non-posting unlock for this, but hard + * to care for a non-real case. + */ + if (need_resched()) { + io_cq_unlock_post(ctx); + mutex_unlock(&ctx->uring_lock); + cond_resched(); + mutex_lock(&ctx->uring_lock); + io_cq_lock(ctx); + } }
if (list_empty(&ctx->cq_overflow_list)) {