From: Jan Kara Date: Wed, 8 Mar 2017 16:48:31 +0000 (+0100) Subject: block: Allow bdi re-registration X-Git-Url: http://git.lede-project.org./?a=commitdiff_plain;h=b6f8fec4448aa52a8c36a392aa1ca2ea99acd460;p=openwrt%2Fstaging%2Fblogic.git block: Allow bdi re-registration SCSI can call device_add_disk() several times for one request queue when a device in unbound and bound, creating new gendisk each time. This will lead to bdi being repeatedly registered and unregistered. This was not a big problem until commit 165a5e22fafb "block: Move bdi_unregister() to del_gendisk()" since bdi was only registered repeatedly (bdi_register() handles repeated calls fine, only we ended up leaking reference to gendisk due to overwriting bdi->owner) but unregistered only in blk_cleanup_queue() which didn't get called repeatedly. After 165a5e22fafb we were doing correct bdi_register() - bdi_unregister() cycles however bdi_unregister() is not prepared for it. So make sure bdi_unregister() cleans up bdi in such a way that it is prepared for a possible following bdi_register() call. An easy way to provoke this behavior is to enable CONFIG_DEBUG_TEST_DRIVER_REMOVE and use scsi_debug driver to create a scsi disk which immediately hangs without this fix. Fixes: 165a5e22fafb127ecb5914e12e8c32a1f0d3f820 Signed-off-by: Jan Kara Tested-by: Omar Sandoval Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe --- diff --git a/mm/backing-dev.c b/mm/backing-dev.c index 6d861d090e9f..6ac932210f56 100644 --- a/mm/backing-dev.c +++ b/mm/backing-dev.c @@ -710,6 +710,11 @@ static void cgwb_bdi_destroy(struct backing_dev_info *bdi) */ atomic_dec(&bdi->usage_cnt); wait_event(cgwb_release_wait, !atomic_read(&bdi->usage_cnt)); + /* + * Grab back our reference so that we hold it when @bdi gets + * re-registered. + */ + atomic_inc(&bdi->usage_cnt); } /** @@ -857,6 +862,8 @@ int bdi_register_owner(struct backing_dev_info *bdi, struct device *owner) MINOR(owner->devt)); if (rc) return rc; + /* Leaking owner reference... */ + WARN_ON(bdi->owner); bdi->owner = owner; get_device(owner); return 0;