On Fri, Jul 5, 2024 at 11:17 AM [off-list ref] wrote:
From: Ed Tsai <redacted>
Filesystems may define their own splice write. Therefore, use file
fops instead of invoking iter_file_splice_write() directly.
This looks sane, but can you share the scenario where you ran into this?
or did you find this via code audit?
I can think of these cases:
1. overlayfs with fuse (virtiofs) upper
2. fuse passthrough over fuse
3. fuse passthrough over overlayfs
4. fuse passthrough over gfs2 or some out of tree fs
The first two will not cause any harm,
In case #3, according to the comment above ovl_splice_write()
the current code could even deadlock.
So do you have a reproduction?
Thanks,
Amir.
quoted hunk ↗ jump to hunk
Signed-off-by: Ed Tsai <redacted>
---
fs/backing-file.c | 5 ++++-
1 file changed, 4 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-)
diff --git a/fs/backing-file.c b/fs/backing-file.c
index 740185198db3..687a7fae7d25 100644
--- a/fs/backing-file.c
+++ b/fs/backing-file.c
@@ -280,13 +280,16 @@ ssize_t backing_file_splice_write(struct pipe_inode_info *pipe,
if (WARN_ON_ONCE(!(out->f_mode & FMODE_BACKING)))
return -EIO;
+ if (out->f_op->splice_write)
+ return -EINVAL;
+
ret = file_remove_privs(ctx->user_file);
if (ret)
return ret;
old_cred = override_creds(ctx->cred);
file_start_write(out);
- ret = iter_file_splice_write(pipe, out, ppos, len, flags);
+ ret = out->f_op->splice_write(pipe, out, ppos, len, flags);
file_end_write(out);
revert_creds(old_cred);
--2.18.0