Re: [PATCH] tty/tty_io.c: make a check before reuse cdev

From: xinhui.pan
Date: Thu Jul 24 2014 - 06:24:18 EST


hi, Peter

ä 2014å07æ24æ 00:04, Peter Hurley åé:
> Hi Xinhui,
>
> On 07/23/2014 05:21 AM, xinhui.pan wrote:
>> ä 2014å07æ23æ 00:40, Peter Hurley åé:
>>> On 07/22/2014 07:52 AM, xinhui.pan wrote:
>>>> ä 2014å07æ21æ 23:38, Greg KH åé:
>>>>> On Mon, Jul 21, 2014 at 08:47:16PM +0800, pp wrote:
>
>>>>>> tty driver register its device and (D)init the cdevs again.
>>>>>
>>>>> What driver does this with an "old" device, it should have created a new
>>>>> one, otherwise, as you have pointed out, it's a bug.
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>> I can't agree more with you. we should not use "old" device.
>>>
>>> This is a gsm driver problem. The GSM driver is reusing device indexes
>>> for still-open ttys.
>>>
>>> The GSM driver uses a global table, gsm_mux[], to allocate device indexes
>>> but prematurely clears the table entry in gsm_mux_cleanup(). If instead,
>>> clearing the gsm_mux table entry were deferred to gsm_mux_free(), then
>>> device indexes would not be getting reused until after the last tty
>>> associated with the last gsm attach was closed.
>>>
>>
>> Very nice solution. We will check if this can cause any risk, both to kernel and user space.
>> Using a new tty base to register with new cdevs may give us more chance to wait PROCESS quit/close.
>> when total 256 tty used up, what we should do is still in discuss.
>
> I saw your patch for the use of gsm->num before gsm_activate_mux() has
> allocated the table entry; thanks for fixing that.
>
> As for what to do if all the gsm_mux table entries are used: if the error
> is infrequent, I suggest simply returning an error which is what the
> driver does currently. Otherwise, a more dynamic allocation scheme may be required.
>

Yes, agree with you. This error is infrequent. Intel software will close the gsmtty after read/write hit errors.
We don't need dynamic allocation. So keep returning an error here. :)

> I did notice while reviewing the error handling that gsmld_open() will
> leak the entire composite ldisc data allocated by gsm_alloc_mux() if
> gsmld_attach_gsm() fails.
>

Thanks for your reviewing. Do you mean gsm = gsm_alloc_mux() will cause leak if gsmld_attach_gsm fails?
As there is no gsm_free_mux()? If so, Yes, it is. In such scenario, gsmld_close is not called. and gsm_free_mux
is not called, either.
Thanks for your nice comments. You really help us fix several ugly issues.
Let me have a deep think about it.

thanks,

xinhui

> Regards,
> Peter Hurley
>
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