Re: [PATCH] sysrq: Restore original console_loglevel when sysrq disabled

From: Sergey Senozhatsky
Date: Fri Jan 11 2019 - 08:07:40 EST


On (01/11/19 13:45), Petr Mladek wrote:
> The sysrq header line is printed with an increased loglevel
> to provide users some positive feedback.
>
> The original loglevel is not restored when the sysrq operation
> is disabled. This bug was introduced in 2.6.12 (pre-git-history)
> by the commit ("Allow admin to enable only some of the Magic-Sysrq
> functions").


Good find, and the patch looks OK to me. A small comment below.
FWIW,
Reviewed-by: Sergey Senozhatsky <sergey.senozhatsky@xxxxxxxxx>


---

A side note (nitpick, etc.); it's Friday night in here, I'm enjoying
my beer; so maybe I'm wrong about the whole thing.


> @@ -553,6 +553,7 @@ void __handle_sysrq(int key, bool check_mask)
> op_p->handler(key);
> } else {
> pr_cont("This sysrq operation is disabled.\n");
> + console_loglevel = orig_log_level;
> }

This looks a bit racy.

When we do

printk("FOO\n");
console_loglevel = XYZ;

We don't have any real guarantees that printk("FOO\n") will print
anything straight ahead. It is possible that console_sem is already
locked and the owner is preempted, so by the time the console_sem
owner picks up that FOO\n messages, console_loglevel is back to
orig_log_level and suppress_message_printing() will just tell us
to skip the message.

Do we need pr_cont() there? Maybe we can just have a normal pr_err()
which would always tell that "key" sysrq is disabled? (we also
would need to change the error message a bit).

-ss