| File management in the Linux kernel |
| ----------------------------------- |
| |
| This document describes how locking for files (struct file) |
| and file descriptor table (struct files) works. |
| |
| Up until 2.6.12, the file descriptor table has been protected |
| with a lock (files->file_lock) and reference count (files->count). |
| ->file_lock protected accesses to all the file related fields |
| of the table. ->count was used for sharing the file descriptor |
| table between tasks cloned with CLONE_FILES flag. Typically |
| this would be the case for posix threads. As with the common |
| refcounting model in the kernel, the last task doing |
| a put_files_struct() frees the file descriptor (fd) table. |
| The files (struct file) themselves are protected using |
| reference count (->f_count). |
| |
| In the new lock-free model of file descriptor management, |
| the reference counting is similar, but the locking is |
| based on RCU. The file descriptor table contains multiple |
| elements - the fd sets (open_fds and close_on_exec, the |
| array of file pointers, the sizes of the sets and the array |
| etc.). In order for the updates to appear atomic to |
| a lock-free reader, all the elements of the file descriptor |
| table are in a separate structure - struct fdtable. |
| files_struct contains a pointer to struct fdtable through |
| which the actual fd table is accessed. Initially the |
| fdtable is embedded in files_struct itself. On a subsequent |
| expansion of fdtable, a new fdtable structure is allocated |
| and files->fdtab points to the new structure. The fdtable |
| structure is freed with RCU and lock-free readers either |
| see the old fdtable or the new fdtable making the update |
| appear atomic. Here are the locking rules for |
| the fdtable structure - |
| |
| 1. All references to the fdtable must be done through |
| the files_fdtable() macro : |
| |
| struct fdtable *fdt; |
| |
| rcu_read_lock(); |
| |
| fdt = files_fdtable(files); |
| .... |
| if (n <= fdt->max_fds) |
| .... |
| ... |
| rcu_read_unlock(); |
| |
| files_fdtable() uses rcu_dereference() macro which takes care of |
| the memory barrier requirements for lock-free dereference. |
| The fdtable pointer must be read within the read-side |
| critical section. |
| |
| 2. Reading of the fdtable as described above must be protected |
| by rcu_read_lock()/rcu_read_unlock(). |
| |
| 3. For any update to the fd table, files->file_lock must |
| be held. |
| |
| 4. To look up the file structure given an fd, a reader |
| must use either fcheck() or fcheck_files() APIs. These |
| take care of barrier requirements due to lock-free lookup. |
| An example : |
| |
| struct file *file; |
| |
| rcu_read_lock(); |
| file = fcheck(fd); |
| if (file) { |
| ... |
| } |
| .... |
| rcu_read_unlock(); |
| |
| 5. Handling of the file structures is special. Since the look-up |
| of the fd (fget()/fget_light()) are lock-free, it is possible |
| that look-up may race with the last put() operation on the |
| file structure. This is avoided using atomic_inc_not_zero() |
| on ->f_count : |
| |
| rcu_read_lock(); |
| file = fcheck_files(files, fd); |
| if (file) { |
| if (atomic_inc_not_zero(&file->f_count)) |
| *fput_needed = 1; |
| else |
| /* Didn't get the reference, someone's freed */ |
| file = NULL; |
| } |
| rcu_read_unlock(); |
| .... |
| return file; |
| |
| atomic_inc_not_zero() detects if refcounts is already zero or |
| goes to zero during increment. If it does, we fail |
| fget()/fget_light(). |
| |
| 6. Since both fdtable and file structures can be looked up |
| lock-free, they must be installed using rcu_assign_pointer() |
| API. If they are looked up lock-free, rcu_dereference() |
| must be used. However it is advisable to use files_fdtable() |
| and fcheck()/fcheck_files() which take care of these issues. |
| |
| 7. While updating, the fdtable pointer must be looked up while |
| holding files->file_lock. If ->file_lock is dropped, then |
| another thread expand the files thereby creating a new |
| fdtable and making the earlier fdtable pointer stale. |
| For example : |
| |
| spin_lock(&files->file_lock); |
| fd = locate_fd(files, file, start); |
| if (fd >= 0) { |
| /* locate_fd() may have expanded fdtable, load the ptr */ |
| fdt = files_fdtable(files); |
| FD_SET(fd, fdt->open_fds); |
| FD_CLR(fd, fdt->close_on_exec); |
| spin_unlock(&files->file_lock); |
| ..... |
| |
| Since locate_fd() can drop ->file_lock (and reacquire ->file_lock), |
| the fdtable pointer (fdt) must be loaded after locate_fd(). |
| |