RE: [PATCH 4/7] staging: comedi: don't allow read() on async command set up for "write"

From: Hartley Sweeten
Date: Thu Oct 30 2014 - 16:45:58 EST


On Thursday, October 30, 2014 1:28 PM, Ian Abbott wrote:
> On 30/10/14 18:05, Hartley Sweeten wrote:
>> On Thursday, October 30, 2014 5:42 AM, Ian Abbott wrote:
> [snip]
>>> add_wait_queue(&async->wait_head, &wait);
>>> while (nbytes > 0 && !retval) {
>>> @@ -2249,6 +2253,10 @@ static ssize_t comedi_read(struct file *file, char __user *buf, size_t nbytes,
>>> retval = -EACCES;
>>> break;
>>> }
>>> + if (async->cmd.flags & CMDF_WRITE) {
>>> + retval = -EINVAL;
>>> + break;
>>> + }
>>
>> Is this second test really needed in the while() loop?
>>
>> For that matter, are the s->busy tests needed in the while() loop?
>
> To answer your second question, some other thread using the same file
> object might have cancelled the asynchronous command, causing the
> current thread to see that the command is no longer active when it wakes up.
>
> To answer your first question, that other thread might have managed to
> set up another asynchronous command in before we wake up, and it might
> have been set up as a "write" command (if the subdevice supports
> commands in both directions). This doesn't detect the case when the
> other thread has managed to set up another "read" command, but since the
> current read() call hasn't read any data yet, we can just pretend we
> didn't know about the original command and read data from the new
> command instead. (After all, the calling thread can't prove the read()
> started before the first command was cancelled, so we can just pretend
> it didn't.)

But when the command is first started by do_cmd_ioctl() we have this sequence:

if (s->busy)
return -EBUSY;
...
s->busy = file;
ret = s->do_cmd(dev, s);

>From then on the s->busy pointer can only be cleared in do_become_nonbusy()
(by way of a (*cancel)). So another command cannot be started until the current
command is completed.

The user could do a (*do_cmdtest) while a command is running but that does not
effect the read/write of the async buffer.

Hartley


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