USB: serial: refuse to open recently removed USB Serial devices

A USB-serial converter device is plugged into a system, and a process
opens it's device node.  If the device is physically removed whilst the
process still has its device node open, then other processes can
sucessfully open the now non-existent device's node.  I would expect
that open() on a device that has been physically removed should return
ENODEV.

This is manifesting itself with getty on my system.  I do the following:
1.  set up inittab to spawn getty on ttyUSB0, eg:
    T1:23:respawn:/sbin/getty -L ttyUSB0 115200 vt100
2.  Plug in USB-serial converter cable
3.  Wait for a login prompt on a terminal program attached to the serial
    cable
4.  Login
5.  Pull the USB-serial converter cable from the box
6.  getty doesn't realise that ttyUSB0 no longer exists as /dev/ttyUSB0
    can still be opened.
7.  Re-insert the USB-serial converter cable
8.  You should no longer get a login prompt over the serial cable, as
    the the USB-serial cable now shows up as /dev/ttyUSB1, and getty is
    trying to talk to /dev/ttyUSB0.

The attached patch will cause open("/dev/ttyUSB0", O_RDONLY) to return
ENODEV after the USB-serial converter has been pulled.  The patch was
created against 2.6.28.1.  I can supply it against something else if
needs be.  It is fairly simple, so should be OK.

I am using a pl2303 device, although I don't think that makes any
difference.


From: James Woodcock <James.Woodcock@ACULAB.COM>
Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@suse.de>

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