cachepc-linux

Fork of AMDESE/linux with modifications for CachePC side-channel attack
git clone https://git.sinitax.com/sinitax/cachepc-linux
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README.Locking (7068B)


      1
      2	JFFS2 LOCKING DOCUMENTATION
      3	---------------------------
      4
      5This document attempts to describe the existing locking rules for
      6JFFS2. It is not expected to remain perfectly up to date, but ought to
      7be fairly close.
      8
      9
     10	alloc_sem
     11	---------
     12
     13The alloc_sem is a per-filesystem mutex, used primarily to ensure
     14contiguous allocation of space on the medium. It is automatically
     15obtained during space allocations (jffs2_reserve_space()) and freed
     16upon write completion (jffs2_complete_reservation()). Note that
     17the garbage collector will obtain this right at the beginning of
     18jffs2_garbage_collect_pass() and release it at the end, thereby
     19preventing any other write activity on the file system during a
     20garbage collect pass.
     21
     22When writing new nodes, the alloc_sem must be held until the new nodes
     23have been properly linked into the data structures for the inode to
     24which they belong. This is for the benefit of NAND flash - adding new
     25nodes to an inode may obsolete old ones, and by holding the alloc_sem
     26until this happens we ensure that any data in the write-buffer at the
     27time this happens are part of the new node, not just something that
     28was written afterwards. Hence, we can ensure the newly-obsoleted nodes
     29don't actually get erased until the write-buffer has been flushed to
     30the medium.
     31
     32With the introduction of NAND flash support and the write-buffer, 
     33the alloc_sem is also used to protect the wbuf-related members of the
     34jffs2_sb_info structure. Atomically reading the wbuf_len member to see
     35if the wbuf is currently holding any data is permitted, though.
     36
     37Ordering constraints: See f->sem.
     38
     39
     40	File Mutex f->sem
     41	---------------------
     42
     43This is the JFFS2-internal equivalent of the inode mutex i->i_sem.
     44It protects the contents of the jffs2_inode_info private inode data,
     45including the linked list of node fragments (but see the notes below on
     46erase_completion_lock), etc.
     47
     48The reason that the i_sem itself isn't used for this purpose is to
     49avoid deadlocks with garbage collection -- the VFS will lock the i_sem
     50before calling a function which may need to allocate space. The
     51allocation may trigger garbage-collection, which may need to move a
     52node belonging to the inode which was locked in the first place by the
     53VFS. If the garbage collection code were to attempt to lock the i_sem
     54of the inode from which it's garbage-collecting a physical node, this
     55lead to deadlock, unless we played games with unlocking the i_sem
     56before calling the space allocation functions.
     57
     58Instead of playing such games, we just have an extra internal
     59mutex, which is obtained by the garbage collection code and also
     60by the normal file system code _after_ allocation of space.
     61
     62Ordering constraints: 
     63
     64	1. Never attempt to allocate space or lock alloc_sem with 
     65	   any f->sem held.
     66	2. Never attempt to lock two file mutexes in one thread.
     67	   No ordering rules have been made for doing so.
     68	3. Never lock a page cache page with f->sem held.
     69
     70
     71	erase_completion_lock spinlock
     72	------------------------------
     73
     74This is used to serialise access to the eraseblock lists, to the
     75per-eraseblock lists of physical jffs2_raw_node_ref structures, and
     76(NB) the per-inode list of physical nodes. The latter is a special
     77case - see below.
     78
     79As the MTD API no longer permits erase-completion callback functions
     80to be called from bottom-half (timer) context (on the basis that nobody
     81ever actually implemented such a thing), it's now sufficient to use
     82a simple spin_lock() rather than spin_lock_bh().
     83
     84Note that the per-inode list of physical nodes (f->nodes) is a special
     85case. Any changes to _valid_ nodes (i.e. ->flash_offset & 1 == 0) in
     86the list are protected by the file mutex f->sem. But the erase code
     87may remove _obsolete_ nodes from the list while holding only the
     88erase_completion_lock. So you can walk the list only while holding the
     89erase_completion_lock, and can drop the lock temporarily mid-walk as
     90long as the pointer you're holding is to a _valid_ node, not an
     91obsolete one.
     92
     93The erase_completion_lock is also used to protect the c->gc_task
     94pointer when the garbage collection thread exits. The code to kill the
     95GC thread locks it, sends the signal, then unlocks it - while the GC
     96thread itself locks it, zeroes c->gc_task, then unlocks on the exit path.
     97
     98
     99	inocache_lock spinlock
    100	----------------------
    101
    102This spinlock protects the hashed list (c->inocache_list) of the
    103in-core jffs2_inode_cache objects (each inode in JFFS2 has the
    104correspondent jffs2_inode_cache object). So, the inocache_lock
    105has to be locked while walking the c->inocache_list hash buckets.
    106
    107This spinlock also covers allocation of new inode numbers, which is
    108currently just '++->highest_ino++', but might one day get more complicated
    109if we need to deal with wrapping after 4 milliard inode numbers are used.
    110
    111Note, the f->sem guarantees that the correspondent jffs2_inode_cache
    112will not be removed. So, it is allowed to access it without locking
    113the inocache_lock spinlock. 
    114
    115Ordering constraints: 
    116
    117	If both erase_completion_lock and inocache_lock are needed, the
    118	c->erase_completion has to be acquired first.
    119
    120
    121	erase_free_sem
    122	--------------
    123
    124This mutex is only used by the erase code which frees obsolete node
    125references and the jffs2_garbage_collect_deletion_dirent() function.
    126The latter function on NAND flash must read _obsolete_ nodes to
    127determine whether the 'deletion dirent' under consideration can be
    128discarded or whether it is still required to show that an inode has
    129been unlinked. Because reading from the flash may sleep, the
    130erase_completion_lock cannot be held, so an alternative, more
    131heavyweight lock was required to prevent the erase code from freeing
    132the jffs2_raw_node_ref structures in question while the garbage
    133collection code is looking at them.
    134
    135Suggestions for alternative solutions to this problem would be welcomed.
    136
    137
    138	wbuf_sem
    139	--------
    140
    141This read/write semaphore protects against concurrent access to the
    142write-behind buffer ('wbuf') used for flash chips where we must write
    143in blocks. It protects both the contents of the wbuf and the metadata
    144which indicates which flash region (if any) is currently covered by 
    145the buffer.
    146
    147Ordering constraints:
    148	Lock wbuf_sem last, after the alloc_sem or and f->sem.
    149
    150
    151	c->xattr_sem
    152	------------
    153
    154This read/write semaphore protects against concurrent access to the
    155xattr related objects which include stuff in superblock and ic->xref.
    156In read-only path, write-semaphore is too much exclusion. It's enough
    157by read-semaphore. But you must hold write-semaphore when updating,
    158creating or deleting any xattr related object.
    159
    160Once xattr_sem released, there would be no assurance for the existence
    161of those objects. Thus, a series of processes is often required to retry,
    162when updating such a object is necessary under holding read semaphore.
    163For example, do_jffs2_getxattr() holds read-semaphore to scan xref and
    164xdatum at first. But it retries this process with holding write-semaphore
    165after release read-semaphore, if it's necessary to load name/value pair
    166from medium.
    167
    168Ordering constraints:
    169	Lock xattr_sem last, after the alloc_sem.