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authorAlexey Dobriyan <adobriyan@gmail.com>2009-03-25 20:48:06 +0100
committerAlexey Dobriyan <adobriyan@gmail.com>2009-03-30 23:14:44 +0200
commit99b76233803beab302123d243eea9e41149804f3 (patch)
tree398178210fe66845ccd6fa4258ba762a87e023ad /net/irda/irproc.c
parentproc 1/2: do PDE usecounting even for ->read_proc, ->write_proc (diff)
downloadlinux-99b76233803beab302123d243eea9e41149804f3.tar.xz
linux-99b76233803beab302123d243eea9e41149804f3.zip
proc 2/2: remove struct proc_dir_entry::owner
Setting ->owner as done currently (pde->owner = THIS_MODULE) is racy as correctly noted at bug #12454. Someone can lookup entry with NULL ->owner, thus not pinning enything, and release it later resulting in module refcount underflow. We can keep ->owner and supply it at registration time like ->proc_fops and ->data. But this leaves ->owner as easy-manipulative field (just one C assignment) and somebody will forget to unpin previous/pin current module when switching ->owner. ->proc_fops is declared as "const" which should give some thoughts. ->read_proc/->write_proc were just fixed to not require ->owner for protection. rmmod'ed directories will be empty and return "." and ".." -- no harm. And directories with tricky enough readdir and lookup shouldn't be modular. We definitely don't want such modular code. Removing ->owner will also make PDE smaller. So, let's nuke it. Kudos to Jeff Layton for reminding about this, let's say, oversight. http://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=12454 Signed-off-by: Alexey Dobriyan <adobriyan@gmail.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'net/irda/irproc.c')
-rw-r--r--net/irda/irproc.c1
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/net/irda/irproc.c b/net/irda/irproc.c
index 88e80a312732..8ff1861649e8 100644
--- a/net/irda/irproc.c
+++ b/net/irda/irproc.c
@@ -70,7 +70,6 @@ void __init irda_proc_register(void)
proc_irda = proc_mkdir("irda", init_net.proc_net);
if (proc_irda == NULL)
return;
- proc_irda->owner = THIS_MODULE;
for (i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE(irda_dirs); i++)
d = proc_create(irda_dirs[i].name, 0, proc_irda,