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author | Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk> | 2020-01-19 11:44:51 -0500 |
---|---|---|
committer | Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk> | 2020-03-13 21:08:19 -0400 |
commit | b4c0353693d22f9dcfa4757262dab0aab8376d19 (patch) | |
tree | 1449c03091a907b391db729c0b29ac98b5129e36 /fs/namei.c | |
parent | ad6cc4c338f4e5124c29971ea749073a697063a1 (diff) |
sanitize handling of nd->last_type, kill LAST_BIND
->last_type values are set in 3 places: path_init() (sets to LAST_ROOT),
link_path_walk (LAST_NORM/DOT/DOTDOT) and pick_link (LAST_BIND).
The are checked in walk_component(), lookup_last() and do_last().
They also get copied to the caller by filename_parentat(). In the last
3 cases the value is what we had at the return from link_path_walk().
In case of walk_component() it's either directly downstream from
assignment in link_path_walk() or, when called by lookup_last(), the
value we have at the return from link_path_walk().
The value at the entry into link_path_walk() can survive to return only
if the pathname contains nothing but slashes. Note that pick_link()
never returns such - pure jumps are handled directly. So for the calls
of link_path_walk() for trailing symlinks it does not matter what value
had been there at the entry; the value at the return won't depend upon it.
There are 3 call chains that might have pick_link() storing LAST_BIND:
1) pick_link() from step_into() from walk_component() from
link_path_walk(). In that case we will either be parsing the next
component immediately after return into link_path_walk(), which will
overwrite the ->last_type before anyone has a chance to look at it,
or we'll fail, in which case nobody will be looking at ->last_type at all.
2) pick_link() from step_into() from walk_component() from lookup_last().
The value is never looked at due to the above; it won't affect the value
seen at return from any link_path_walk().
3) pick_link() from step_into() from do_last(). Ditto.
In other words, assignemnt in pick_link() is pointless, and so is
LAST_BIND itself; nothing ever looks at that value. Kill it off.
And make link_path_walk() _always_ assign ->last_type - in the only
case when the value at the entry might survive to the return that value
is always LAST_ROOT, inherited from path_init(). Move that assignment
from path_init() into the beginning of link_path_walk(), to consolidate
the things.
Historical note: LAST_BIND used to be used for the kludge with trailing
pure jump symlinks (extra iteration through the top-level loop).
No point keeping it anymore...
Signed-off-by: Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk>
Diffstat (limited to 'fs/namei.c')
-rw-r--r-- | fs/namei.c | 3 |
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/fs/namei.c b/fs/namei.c index 02f148124831..1a83641e95e6 100644 --- a/fs/namei.c +++ b/fs/namei.c @@ -1785,7 +1785,6 @@ static const char *pick_link(struct nameidata *nd, struct path *link, if (unlikely(error)) return ERR_PTR(error); - nd->last_type = LAST_BIND; res = READ_ONCE(inode->i_link); if (!res) { const char * (*get)(struct dentry *, struct inode *, @@ -2123,6 +2122,7 @@ static int link_path_walk(const char *name, struct nameidata *nd) { int err; + nd->last_type = LAST_ROOT; if (IS_ERR(name)) return PTR_ERR(name); while (*name=='/') @@ -2224,7 +2224,6 @@ static const char *path_init(struct nameidata *nd, unsigned flags) if (flags & LOOKUP_RCU) rcu_read_lock(); - nd->last_type = LAST_ROOT; /* if there are only slashes... */ nd->flags = flags | LOOKUP_JUMPED | LOOKUP_PARENT; nd->depth = 0; |