Merge tag 'tpmdd-v6.4-rc1-fix-v2' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git...
[linux-block.git] / Documentation / filesystems / files.rst
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1.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
2
3===================================
28225418 4File management in the Linux kernel
e6d42cb1 5===================================
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6
7This document describes how locking for files (struct file)
8and file descriptor table (struct files) works.
9
10Up until 2.6.12, the file descriptor table has been protected
11with a lock (files->file_lock) and reference count (files->count).
12->file_lock protected accesses to all the file related fields
13of the table. ->count was used for sharing the file descriptor
14table between tasks cloned with CLONE_FILES flag. Typically
15this would be the case for posix threads. As with the common
16refcounting model in the kernel, the last task doing
17a put_files_struct() frees the file descriptor (fd) table.
18The files (struct file) themselves are protected using
19reference count (->f_count).
20
21In the new lock-free model of file descriptor management,
22the reference counting is similar, but the locking is
23based on RCU. The file descriptor table contains multiple
24elements - the fd sets (open_fds and close_on_exec, the
25array of file pointers, the sizes of the sets and the array
26etc.). In order for the updates to appear atomic to
27a lock-free reader, all the elements of the file descriptor
28table are in a separate structure - struct fdtable.
29files_struct contains a pointer to struct fdtable through
30which the actual fd table is accessed. Initially the
31fdtable is embedded in files_struct itself. On a subsequent
32expansion of fdtable, a new fdtable structure is allocated
33and files->fdtab points to the new structure. The fdtable
34structure is freed with RCU and lock-free readers either
35see the old fdtable or the new fdtable making the update
36appear atomic. Here are the locking rules for
37the fdtable structure -
38
391. All references to the fdtable must be done through
e6d42cb1 40 the files_fdtable() macro::
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41
42 struct fdtable *fdt;
43
44 rcu_read_lock();
45
46 fdt = files_fdtable(files);
47 ....
48 if (n <= fdt->max_fds)
49 ....
50 ...
51 rcu_read_unlock();
52
53 files_fdtable() uses rcu_dereference() macro which takes care of
54 the memory barrier requirements for lock-free dereference.
55 The fdtable pointer must be read within the read-side
56 critical section.
57
582. Reading of the fdtable as described above must be protected
59 by rcu_read_lock()/rcu_read_unlock().
60
670e9f34 613. For any update to the fd table, files->file_lock must
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62 be held.
63
644. To look up the file structure given an fd, a reader
460b4f81 65 must use either lookup_fd_rcu() or files_lookup_fd_rcu() APIs. These
28225418 66 take care of barrier requirements due to lock-free lookup.
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67
68 An example::
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69
70 struct file *file;
71
72 rcu_read_lock();
460b4f81 73 file = lookup_fd_rcu(fd);
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74 if (file) {
75 ...
76 }
77 ....
78 rcu_read_unlock();
79
805. Handling of the file structures is special. Since the look-up
81 of the fd (fget()/fget_light()) are lock-free, it is possible
82 that look-up may race with the last put() operation on the
fd659fd6 83 file structure. This is avoided using atomic_long_inc_not_zero()
e6d42cb1 84 on ->f_count::
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85
86 rcu_read_lock();
f36c2943 87 file = files_lookup_fd_rcu(files, fd);
28225418 88 if (file) {
fd659fd6 89 if (atomic_long_inc_not_zero(&file->f_count))
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90 *fput_needed = 1;
91 else
92 /* Didn't get the reference, someone's freed */
93 file = NULL;
94 }
95 rcu_read_unlock();
96 ....
97 return file;
98
fd659fd6 99 atomic_long_inc_not_zero() detects if refcounts is already zero or
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100 goes to zero during increment. If it does, we fail
101 fget()/fget_light().
102
1036. Since both fdtable and file structures can be looked up
104 lock-free, they must be installed using rcu_assign_pointer()
105 API. If they are looked up lock-free, rcu_dereference()
106 must be used. However it is advisable to use files_fdtable()
460b4f81 107 and lookup_fd_rcu()/files_lookup_fd_rcu() which take care of these issues.
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108
1097. While updating, the fdtable pointer must be looked up while
110 holding files->file_lock. If ->file_lock is dropped, then
111 another thread expand the files thereby creating a new
112 fdtable and making the earlier fdtable pointer stale.
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113
114 For example::
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115
116 spin_lock(&files->file_lock);
117 fd = locate_fd(files, file, start);
118 if (fd >= 0) {
119 /* locate_fd() may have expanded fdtable, load the ptr */
120 fdt = files_fdtable(files);
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121 __set_open_fd(fd, fdt);
122 __clear_close_on_exec(fd, fdt);
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123 spin_unlock(&files->file_lock);
124 .....
125
126 Since locate_fd() can drop ->file_lock (and reacquire ->file_lock),
127 the fdtable pointer (fdt) must be loaded after locate_fd().
128