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git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/vfs/vfs
Pull misc kernel updates from Christian Brauner:
"Fixes
- rhashtable: give each instance its own lockdep class
syzbot reported a circular locking dependency between ht->mutex and
fs_reclaim via the simple_xattrs rhashtable being torn down during
inode eviction.
The predicted deadlock cannot occur: rhashtable_free_and_destroy()
cancels the deferred worker before taking ht->mutex and
acquisitions on distinct rhashtables are on distinct mutexes.
Lockdep flags a cycle anyway because every ht->mutex in the kernel
shared the single static lockdep class from
rhashtable_init_noprof().
The lockdep key is lifted to a per-call-site static key so every
rhashtable instance gets its own class.
- selftests/clone3: fix misuse of the libcap library interface in the
cap_checkpoint_restore test and remove unused variables
- selftests/pid_namespace: compute the pid_max test limits
dynamically instead of hardcoding values below the kernel-enforced
minimum of PIDS_PER_CPU_MIN * num_possible_cpus() which made the
tests fail on machines with many possible CPUs
- selftests: fix the Makefile TARGETS entry for nsfs which wasn't
adjusted when the tests moved under filesystems/
Cleanups
- ipc/sem.c: use unsigned int for nsops to match the declaration in
syscalls.h"
* tag 'kernel-7.2-rc1.misc' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/vfs/vfs:
selftests/clone3: remove unused variables
selftests/clone3: fix libcap interface usage
ipc/sem.c: use unsigned int for nsops
selftests: Fix Makefile target for nsfs
rhashtable: give each instance its own lockdep class
selftests/pid_namespace: compute pid_max test limits dynamically
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git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/vfs/vfs
Pull task_exec_state updates from Christian Brauner:
"This introduces a new per-task task_exec_state structure and relocates
the dumpable mode and the user namespace captured at execve() from
mm_struct onto it. It stays attached to the task for its full
lifetime.
__ptrace_may_access() and several /proc owner and visibility checks
need to consult two pieces of state for any observable task, including
zombies that have already gone through exit_mm(): the dumpable mode
and the user namespace captured at execve(). Both live on mm_struct
today, which exit_mm() clears from the task long before the task is
reaped. A reader that races with do_exit() observes task->mm == NULL
and either fails the check or falls back to init_user_ns - which
denies legitimate access to non-dumpable zombies that were running in
a nested user namespace.
mm_struct loses ->user_ns and the dumpability bits in ->flags.
MMF_DUMPABLE_BITS is reserved so the MMF_DUMP_FILTER_* layout exposed
via /proc/<pid>/coredump_filter stays stable. task->user_dumpable and
its exit_mm() snapshot are removed.
task_exec_state is the privilege domain established by an execve().
Within a thread group it is shared via refcount; across thread groups
each task has its own:
- CLONE_VM siblings (thread-group members, io_uring workers)
refcount-share the parent's exec_state.
- Non-CLONE_VM clones (fork(), vfork() without CLONE_VM) allocate a
fresh exec_state inheriting the parent's dumpable mode and user_ns.
- execve() in the child allocates a fresh instance and installs it
under task_lock + exec_update_lock via task_exec_state_replace().
- Credential changes (setresuid, capset, ...) and
prctl(PR_SET_DUMPABLE) update dumpability on the current task's
exec_state, i.e., on the thread group's shared instance.
On top of this exec_mmap() no longer tears down the old mm while
holding exec_update_lock for writing and cred_guard_mutex. Neither
lock is needed for that: exec_update_lock only exists to make the mm
swap atomic with the later commit_creds() and all its readers operate
on the new mm; none looks at the detached old mm.
The cost was real: __mmput() runs exit_mmap() over the entire old
address space and can block in exit_aio() waiting for in-flight AIO,
so execve() of a large process blocked ptrace_attach() and every
exec_update_lock reader for the duration of the teardown.
The old mm is now stashed in bprm->old_mm and released from
setup_new_exec() after both locks are dropped, with a backstop in
free_bprm() for the error paths"
* tag 'kernel-7.2-rc1.task_exec_state' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/vfs/vfs:
exec: free the old mm outside the exec locks
exec_state: relocate dumpable information
ptrace: add ptracer_access_allowed()
exec: introduce struct task_exec_state
sched/coredump: introduce enum task_dumpable
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git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/vfs/vfs
Pull vfs casefolding updates from Christian Brauner:
"This exposes the case folding behavior of local filesystems so that
file servers - nfsd, ksmbd, and user space file servers - can report
the actual behavior to clients instead of guessing.
Filesystems report case-insensitive and case-nonpreserving behavior
via new file_kattr flags in their fileattr_get implementations. fat,
exfat, ntfs3, hfs, hfsplus, xfs, cifs, nfs, vboxsf, and isofs are
wired up. Local filesystems that are not explicitly handled default to
the usual POSIX behavior of case-sensitive and case-preserving.
nfsd uses this to report case folding via NFSv3 PATHCONF and to
implement the NFSv4 FATTR4_CASE_INSENSITIVE and FATTR4_CASE_PRESERVING
attributes - both have been part of the NFS protocols for decades to
support clients on non-POSIX systems - and ksmbd reports it via
FS_ATTRIBUTE_INFORMATION. Exposing the information through the
fileattr uapi covers user space file servers.
The immediate motivation is interoperability: Windows NFS clients
hard-require servers to report case-insensitivity for Win32
applications to work correctly, and a client that knows the server is
case-insensitive can avoid issuing multiple LOOKUP/READDIR requests
searching for case variants.
The Linux NFS client already grew support for case-insensitive shares
years ago in support of the Hammerspace NFS server - negative dentry
caching must be disabled (a lookup for "FILE.TXT" failing must not
cache a negative entry when "file.txt" exists) and directory change
invalidation must drop cached case-folded name variants. Such servers
often operate in multi-protocol environments where a single file
service instance caters to both NFS and SMB clients, and nfsd needs to
report case folding properly to participate as a first-class citizen
there.
A follow-up series brings fixes for the initial work: the nfsd
case-info probe now uses kernel credentials, maps -ESTALE to
NFS3ERR_STALE, and has its cost capped across READDIR entries; the nfs
client avoids transiently zeroed case capability bits during the probe
and skips the pathconf probe when neither field is consumed; the
FS_CASEFOLD_FL semantics are clarified in the UAPI header; and the
tools UAPI headers are synced"
* tag 'vfs-7.2-rc1.casefold' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/vfs/vfs: (22 commits)
nfsd: Cap case-folding probe cost across READDIR entries
nfsd: Map -ESTALE from case probe to NFS3ERR_STALE
nfsd: Use kernel credentials for case-info probe
fs: Clarify FS_CASEFOLD_FL semantics in UAPI header
nfs: Skip pathconf probe when neither field is consumed
nfs: Avoid transient zeroed case capability bits during probe
tools headers UAPI: Sync case-sensitivity flags from linux/fs.h
ksmbd: Report filesystem case sensitivity via FS_ATTRIBUTE_INFORMATION
nfsd: Implement NFSv4 FATTR4_CASE_INSENSITIVE and FATTR4_CASE_PRESERVING
nfsd: Report export case-folding via NFSv3 PATHCONF
isofs: Implement fileattr_get for case sensitivity
vboxsf: Implement fileattr_get for case sensitivity
nfs: Implement fileattr_get for case sensitivity
cifs: Implement fileattr_get for case sensitivity
xfs: Report case sensitivity in fileattr_get
hfsplus: Report case sensitivity in fileattr_get
hfs: Implement fileattr_get for case sensitivity
ntfs3: Implement fileattr_get for case sensitivity
exfat: Implement fileattr_get for case sensitivity
fat: Implement fileattr_get for case sensitivity
...
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git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/vfs/vfs
Pull vfs directory delegations from Christian Brauner:
"This contains the VFS prerequisites for supporting directory
delegations in nfsd via CB_NOTIFY callbacks.
The filelock core gains support for ignoring delegation breaks for
directory change events together with an inode_lease_ignore_mask()
helper, and fsnotify gains fsnotify_modify_mark_mask() and a
FSNOTIFY_EVENT_RENAME data type.
With this in place nfsd can request delegations on directories and set
up inotify watches to trigger sending CB_NOTIFY events to clients
instead of having every directory change break the delegation.
New tracepoints are added to fsnotify() and to the start of
break_lease(), and trace_break_lease_block() is passed the currently
blocking lease instead of the new one.
A follow-up fix moves the LEASE_BREAK_* flags out of
#ifdef CONFIG_FILE_LOCKING to fix the build for CONFIG_FILE_LOCKING=n
configurations"
* tag 'vfs-7.2-rc1.directory.delegations' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/vfs/vfs:
filelock: move LEASE_BREAK_* flags out of #ifdef CONFIG_FILE_LOCKING
fsnotify: add FSNOTIFY_EVENT_RENAME data type
fsnotify: add fsnotify_modify_mark_mask()
fsnotify: new tracepoint in fsnotify()
filelock: add an inode_lease_ignore_mask helper
filelock: add a tracepoint to start of break_lease()
filelock: add support for ignoring deleg breaks for dir change events
filelock: pass current blocking lease to trace_break_lease_block() rather than "new_fl"
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git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/vfs/vfs
Pull vfs inode updates from Christian Brauner:
"This extends the lockless ->i_count handling.
iput() could already decrement any value greater than one locklessly
but acquiring a reference always required taking inode->i_lock. Now
acquiring a reference is lockless as long as the count was already at
least 1, i.e., only the 0->1 and 1->0 transitions take the lock.
This avoids the lock for the common cases of nfs calling into the
inode hash and btrfs using igrab(). Cleanup-wise icount_read_once() is
added to line up with inode_state_read_once() and the open-coded
->i_count loads across the tree are converted, and ihold() is
relocated and tidied up.
On top of that some stale lock ordering annotations are retired from
the inode hash code: iunique() no longer takes the hash lock since the
inode hash became RCU-searchable and s_inode_list_lock is no longer
taken under the hash lock either"
* tag 'vfs-7.2-rc1.inode' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/vfs/vfs:
fs: retire stale lock ordering annotations from inode hash
fs: allow lockless ->i_count bumps as long as it does not transition 0->1
fs: relocate and tidy up ihold()
fs: add icount_read_once() and stop open-coding ->i_count loads
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git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/vfs/vfs
Pull exportfs updates from Christian Brauner:
"This cleans up the exportfs support for block-style layouts that
provide direct block device access: the operations for layout-based
block device access are split out of struct export_operations into a
separate header, ->commit_blocks() no longer takes a struct iattr
argument, and the way support for layout-based block device access is
detected is reworked.
nfsd's blocklayout code also stops honoring loca_time_modify. This is
preparation for supporting export of more than a single device per
file system"
* tag 'vfs-7.2-rc1.exportfs' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/vfs/vfs:
exportfs,nfsd: rework checking for layout-based block device access support
exportfs: don't pass struct iattr to ->commit_blocks
exportfs: split out the ops for layout-based block device access
nfsd/blocklayout: always ignore loca_time_modify
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Bump MAX_CALL_FRAMES from 8 to 16 to allow deeper call chains
that Rust-BPF requires and update selftests.
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20260613180755.29671-1-alexei.starovoitov@gmail.com
Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org>
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The return value of i3c_master_add_i3c_dev_locked() is not used by any
caller, and callers are not in a position to recover from failures in
this path.
Change the function to return void. Amend the kernel-doc accordingly,
fix some grammar and remove a stale paragraph.
Signed-off-by: Adrian Hunter <adrian.hunter@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Frank Li <Frank.Li@nxp.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260612080107.11606-6-adrian.hunter@intel.com
Signed-off-by: Alexandre Belloni <alexandre.belloni@bootlin.com>
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The existing i3c_master_enec_locked() wrapper always treats a NACKed
ENEC CCC as a failure (M2 error). However, broadcasting ENEC to enable
Hot-Join is legitimately useful even when no I3C devices are currently
present on the bus, in which case the broadcast will be NACKed and
should not be reported as an error.
The underlying helper i3c_master_enec_disec_locked() already accepts a
suppress_m2 flag that lets callers ignore such NACKs. Expose it so that
a subsequent patch enabling Hot-Join events can issue ENEC with M2
suppression.
Signed-off-by: Adrian Hunter <adrian.hunter@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Frank Li <Frank.Li@nxp.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260608054312.10604-8-adrian.hunter@intel.com
Signed-off-by: Alexandre Belloni <alexandre.belloni@bootlin.com>
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Master drivers may invoke i3c_master_do_daa_ext() during resume to
re-run Dynamic Address Assignment. As well as assigning addresses to
any newly arrived devices, this restores the dynamic address of devices
that lost it across system suspend, so it has to run as part of the
controller's resume path.
A side effect of i3c_master_do_daa_ext() today is that it also
registers any newly discovered I3C devices with the driver model
inline, via i3c_master_register_new_i3c_devs(). Doing that from the
resume path is problematic: a hot-join-capable device may join the bus
during this same DAA, and registering it immediately would push driver
model work (probing, sysfs, etc.) into the controller's resume context,
where the rest of the system is not yet fully resumed and the
controller driver is still partway through its own resume sequence.
Decouple discovery from registration: add a reg_work work item to
struct i3c_master_controller and have i3c_master_do_daa_ext() queue it
on master->wq (the freezable workqueue) instead of calling
i3c_master_register_new_i3c_devs() directly. The worker performs the
registration only when the controller is not shutting_down, and is
cancelled alongside hj_work in i3c_master_shutdown(). Because wq is
freezable, any newly observed devices end up being registered after
the system has finished resuming.
i3c_master_register() also routes its initial post-bus-init registration
through reg_work, using flush_work() to keep probe-time behavior
synchronous. This keeps a single registration code path and ensures the
worker is the only writer of desc->dev.
Fixes: 3a379bbcea0af ("i3c: Add core I3C infrastructure")
Signed-off-by: Adrian Hunter <adrian.hunter@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Frank Li <Frank.Li@nxp.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260608054312.10604-7-adrian.hunter@intel.com
Signed-off-by: Alexandre Belloni <alexandre.belloni@bootlin.com>
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System shutdown invokes each device's bus shutdown callback to quiesce
hardware, but the I3C bus type does not currently implement one. As a
result, on shutdown the controller's Hot-Join work and any in-flight
i3c_master_do_daa() can keep running (or be newly triggered) while the
rest of the system is being torn down.
A similar window exists at i3c_master_unregister() time: cancel_work_sync()
on hj_work prevents queued work from completing, but does not stop a
fresh Hot-Join IBI from re-queueing the worker, nor a concurrent sysfs
writer from toggling Hot-Join via i3c_set_hotjoin().
Introduce a single "shutting down" gate in the I3C core, set under the
bus maintenance lock so it is observed by any in-progress DAA path
before pending work is cancelled. Install an i3c_bus_type shutdown
callback that engages this gate for master devices during system
shutdown, and use the same gate in i3c_master_unregister() so both
paths get identical guarantees.
Once the gate is engaged, the Hot-Join worker, i3c_master_do_daa_ext()
and i3c_set_hotjoin() all bail out cleanly, so Hot-Join IBIs that race
with shutdown become no-ops, direct DAA callers see -ENODEV, and sysfs
writers can no longer re-enable Hot-Join through ops->enable_hotjoin()
while the controller is going away.
No functional change for the steady-state runtime path; the new checks
only take effect once the controller has been marked as shutting down.
Note, this patch depends on patch "i3c: master: Consolidate Hot-Join DAA
work in the core".
Fixes: 3a379bbcea0af ("i3c: Add core I3C infrastructure")
Signed-off-by: Adrian Hunter <adrian.hunter@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Frank Li <Frank.Li@nxp.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260608054312.10604-5-adrian.hunter@intel.com
Signed-off-by: Alexandre Belloni <alexandre.belloni@bootlin.com>
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Three master drivers (dw-i3c-master, i3c-master-cdns, svc-i3c-master)
each carry an essentially identical Hot-Join handler: a struct
work_struct embedded in their private state, a work function that just
calls i3c_master_do_daa() on the embedded i3c_master_controller, plus
matching INIT_WORK()/cancel_work_sync() boilerplate in probe/remove (and
shutdown for dw-i3c). The IBI/ISR paths then queue that work onto
master->wq, which already lives in the core.
Move this pattern into the I3C core:
- Add struct work_struct hj_work to struct i3c_master_controller and
initialise it in i3c_master_register() with a core-provided handler
i3c_master_hj_work_fn() that performs i3c_master_do_daa().
- Cancel the work in i3c_master_unregister() so all controllers get
correct teardown ordering against the workqueue for free.
- Export i3c_master_queue_hotjoin() as the single entry point drivers
call from their Hot-Join IBI handler.
Convert the three existing users to the new API: drop their private
hj_work fields, work functions, INIT_WORK() and cancel_work_sync()
calls, and replace the queue_work(master->wq, &drv->hj_work) call sites
with i3c_master_queue_hotjoin(&drv->base). The dw-i3c shutdown path
still needs to flush pending Hot-Join work before tearing down the
hardware, so it is updated to cancel master->base.hj_work directly.
No functional change intended: the work is still queued on the same
master->wq, runs the same i3c_master_do_daa(), and is cancelled at
controller teardown. Future Hot-Join improvements now only need to
be made in one place.
Signed-off-by: Adrian Hunter <adrian.hunter@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Frank Li <Frank.Li@nxp.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260608054312.10604-4-adrian.hunter@intel.com
Signed-off-by: Alexandre Belloni <alexandre.belloni@bootlin.com>
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The I3C master workqueue (master->wq) is used to defer work that needs
thread context and the bus maintenance lock, most notably Hot Join
processing (which calls i3c_master_do_daa() to assign dynamic addresses
to newly joined devices).
Currently the workqueue keeps running across system suspend, which can
race with the suspend path:
- do_daa() may execute after the controller has been suspended,
issuing bus transactions on a powered-down or otherwise unusable
controller.
- New I3C devices can be enumerated and added to the bus mid-suspend,
registering driver model objects at a point where the I3C subsystem
and its consumers are not prepared to handle them.
Mark the workqueue WQ_FREEZABLE so its workers are frozen for the
duration of system suspend/hibernate and resumed afterwards. This
naturally defers any pending or newly queued Hot Join work until the
system (and the controller) is fully resumed, closing both races
without adding explicit suspend/resume synchronization in the master
drivers.
Update the kerneldoc for struct i3c_master_controller::wq to reflect
that the workqueue is freezable.
Fixes: 3a379bbcea0af ("i3c: Add core I3C infrastructure")
Signed-off-by: Adrian Hunter <adrian.hunter@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Frank Li <Frank.Li@nxp.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260608054312.10604-2-adrian.hunter@intel.com
Signed-off-by: Alexandre Belloni <alexandre.belloni@bootlin.com>
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Adds the UAPI for the quiet flags feature (but not the implementation
yet).
Even though currently LANDLOCK_ADD_RULE_QUIET only affects audit
logging, in the future this can also be used as part of a supervisor
mechanism, where it will also suppress denial notifications on a
per-object basis. Thus the name is deliberately generic, as opposed to
e.g. LANDLOCK_ADD_RULE_LOG_QUIET.
According to pahole, even after adding the struct access_masks
quiet_masks in struct landlock_hierarchy, the u32 log_* bitfield still
only has a size of 2 bytes, so there's minimal wasted space.
Assisted-by: GitHub-Copilot:claude-opus-4.8
Signed-off-by: Tingmao Wang <m@maowtm.org>
[mic: Update date, fix comment formatting]
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/031184748a8e74c0bb02f1fa13d7a3f10918c627.1781228815.git.m@maowtm.org
Signed-off-by: Mickaël Salaün <mic@digikod.net>
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Update nft_dup and nft_fwd to use the nf_dev_xmit_recursion() helpers.
This patch also disables BH when transmitting the skb to address a
possible migration to different CPU leading to imbalanced decrementation
of the recursion counters.
This is modeled after Florian Westphal's dev_xmit_recursion*() API
available since commit 97cdcf37b57e ("net: place xmit recursion in
softnet data") according to its current state in the tree.
Fixes: 1d47b55b36d2 ("netfilter: nft_fwd_netdev: use recursion counter in neigh egress path")
Fixes: f37ad9127039 ("netfilter: nf_dup_netdev: Move the recursion counter struct netdev_xmit")
Signed-off-by: Pablo Neira Ayuso <pablo@netfilter.org>
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nf_ct_ext_find() might return NULL if ct extension is not found.
Add also the null checks to:
- nfct_help()
- nfct_help_data()
- nfct_seqadj()
- nfct_nat()
This is defensive, for safety reasons.
nf_ct_ext_find() used to return NULL if the extension is stale for
unconfirmed conntracks if the genid validation fails.
Skip NULL check in nf_nat_inet_fn() given this is valid to be NULL
for non-initialized ct nat extensions.
While at it, fetch ct helper area in nf_ct_expect_related_report() only
once and pass it on to other ancilliary functions. Replace WARN_ON()
by WARN_ON_ONCE() in nf_ct_unlink_expect_report().
Signed-off-by: Pablo Neira Ayuso <pablo@netfilter.org>
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Devlink param value attribute is not defined since devlink is handling
the value validating and parsing internally, this allows us to implement
multi attribute values without breaking any policies.
Devlink param multi-attribute values are considered to be dynamically
sized arrays of u64 values, by introducing a new devlink param type
DEVLINK_PARAM_TYPE_U64_ARRAY, driver and user space can set a variable
count of u64 values into the DEVLINK_ATTR_PARAM_VALUE_DATA attribute.
Implement get/set parsing and add to the internal value structure passed
to drivers.
This is useful for devices that need to configure a list of values for
a specific configuration.
example:
$ devlink dev param show pci/... name multi-value-param
name multi-value-param type driver-specific
values:
cmode permanent value: 0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7
$ devlink dev param set pci/... name multi-value-param \
value 4,5,6,7,0,1,2,3 cmode permanent
Signed-off-by: Saeed Mahameed <saeedm@nvidia.com>
Signed-off-by: Ratheesh Kannoth <rkannoth@marvell.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260609040453.711932-5-rkannoth@marvell.com
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
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Add support for a second fine-grained UDP access right.
LANDLOCK_ACCESS_NET_CONNECT_SEND_UDP controls the ability to set the
remote port of a socket (via connect()) and to specify an explicit
destination when sending a datagram, to override any remote peer set on
a UDP socket (e.g. in sendto() or sendmsg()). It will be useful for
applications that send datagrams, and for some servers too (those
creating per-client sockets, which want to receive traffic only from a
specific address).
Similarly as for bind(), this access control is performed when
configuring sockets, not in hot code paths.
Add detection of when autobind is about to be required, and deny the
operation if the process would not be allowed to call bind(0)
explicitly. Autobind can only be performed in udp_lib_get_port() from
code paths already controlled by LSM hooks: when connect()ing, sending a
first datagram, and in some splice() EOF edge case which, afaiu, can
only happen after a remote peer has been set. This invariant needs to be
preserved to keep bind policies actually enforced.
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Buffet <matthieu@buffet.re>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260611162107.49278-3-matthieu@buffet.re
[mic: Add quick return for non-sandboxed tasks, fix sa_family
dereferencing, fix comment formatting]
Signed-off-by: Mickaël Salaün <mic@digikod.net>
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Add support for a first fine-grained UDP access right.
LANDLOCK_ACCESS_NET_BIND_UDP controls the ability to set the local port
of a UDP socket (via bind()). It will be useful for servers (to start
receiving datagrams), and for some clients that need to use a specific
source port (e.g. mDNS requires to use port 5353)
For obvious performance concerns, access control is only enforced when
configuring sockets, not when using them for common send/recv
operations.
Bump ABI to allow userspace to detect and use this new right.
Signed-off-by: Matthieu Buffet <matthieu@buffet.re>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260611162107.49278-2-matthieu@buffet.re
[mic: Fix comment formatting]
Signed-off-by: Mickaël Salaün <mic@digikod.net>
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Extend the DPLL pin notification API to include a source identifier
indicating where the notification originates. This allows notifier
consumers to distinguish between notifications coming from
an associated DPLL instance, a parent pin, or the pin itself.
A new field, src_clock_id, is added to struct dpll_pin_notifier_info
and is passed through all pin-related notification paths. Callers of
dpll_pin_notify() are updated to provide a meaningful source identifier
based on their context:
- pin registration/unregistration uses the DPLL's clock_id,
- pin-on-pin operations use the parent pin's clock_id,
- pin changes use the pin's own clock_id.
As introduced in the commit ("dpll: allow registering FW-identified pin
with a different DPLL"), it is possible to share the same physical pin
via firmware description (fwnode) with DPLL objects from different
kernel modules. This means that a given pin can be registered multiple
times.
Driver such as ICE (E825 devices) rely on this mechanism when listening
for the event where a shared-fwnode pin appears, while avoiding reacting
to events triggered by their own registration logic.
This change only extends the notification metadata and does not alter
existing semantics for drivers that do not use the new field.
Reviewed-by: Arkadiusz Kubalewski <arkadiusz.kubalewski@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Aleksandr Loktionov <aleksandr.loktionov@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Jiri Pirko <jiri@nvidia.com>
Signed-off-by: Grzegorz Nitka <grzegorz.nitka@intel.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260607183045.1213735-9-grzegorz.nitka@intel.com
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
|
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Add DPLL_TYPE_GENERIC to represent DPLL devices which do not fit the
existing PPS or EEC classes.
The UAPI type is intentionally generic. During netdev discussion,
maintainers pointed out that introducing identifiers tied to a specific
placement or single design does not scale across ASICs and vendors.
The role of a DPLL is already inferable from the spawning driver,
bus device, and pin topology, without encoding additional
purpose-specific taxonomy in the type name.
Using a generic type keeps the UAPI extensible and avoids premature
naming that may become incorrect as new hardware topologies are
exposed through the DPLL subsystem.
Expose the new type through UAPI and netlink specification as "generic".
Reviewed-by: Aleksandr Loktionov <aleksandr.loktionov@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Jiri Pirko <jiri@nvidia.com>
Signed-off-by: Grzegorz Nitka <grzegorz.nitka@intel.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260607183045.1213735-2-grzegorz.nitka@intel.com
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
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git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/klassert/ipsec-next
Steffen Klassert says:
====================
pull request (net-next): ipsec-next 2026-06-12
1) Replace the open-coded manual cleanup in xfrm_add_policy() error
path with xfrm_policy_destroy() for consistency with
xfrm_policy_construct().
From Deepanshu Kartikey.
2) Limit XFRMA_TFCPAD to a sensible maximum (max IP length, 64k) since
u32 is excessive for traffic flow confidentiality padding.
From David Ahern.
3) Add a new netlink message XFRM_MSG_MIGRATE_STATE that
allows migrating individual IPsec SAs independently of
their policies. The existing XFRM_MSG_MIGRATE is tightly coupled
to policy+SA migration, lacks SPI for unique SA identification,
and cannot express reqid changes or migrate Transport mode
selectors. The new interface identifies the SA via SPI and mark,
supports reqid changes, address family changes, encap removal,
and uses an atomic create+install flow under x->lock to prevent
SN/IV reuse during AEAD SA migration.
From Antony Antony.
* tag 'ipsec-next-2026-06-12' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/klassert/ipsec-next:
xfrm: add documentation for XFRM_MSG_MIGRATE_STATE
xfrm: restrict netlink attributes for XFRM_MSG_MIGRATE_STATE
xfrm: add XFRM_MSG_MIGRATE_STATE for single SA migration
xfrm: make xfrm_dev_state_add xuo parameter const
xfrm: extract address family and selector validation helpers
xfrm: refactor XFRMA_MTIMER_THRESH validation into a helper
xfrm: move encap and xuo into struct xfrm_migrate
xfrm: add error messages to state migration
xfrm: add state synchronization after migration
xfrm: check family before comparing addresses in migrate
xfrm: split xfrm_state_migrate into create and install functions
xfrm: rename reqid in xfrm_migrate
xfrm: fix NAT-related field inheritance in SA migration
xfrm: allow migration from UDP encapsulated to non-encapsulated ESP
xfrm: add extack to xfrm_init_state
xfrm: remove redundant assignments
xfrm: Reject excessive values for XFRMA_TFCPAD
xfrm: cleanup error path in xfrm_add_policy()
====================
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260612074725.1760473-1-steffen.klassert@secunet.com
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
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|
Add vsock_pending_to_accept() to move a socket directly from the
pending list to the accept queue in a single operation, avoiding
the sock_put/sock_hold dance and the sk_acceptq_removed()/
sk_acceptq_added() pair that would otherwise be needed when
calling vsock_remove_pending() followed by vsock_enqueue_accept().
Use it in vmci_transport_recv_connecting_server() where a completed
handshake transitions the socket from pending to accept queue.
Suggested-by: Stefano Garzarella <sgarzare@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Raf Dickson <rafdog35@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Stefano Garzarella <sgarzare@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Luigi Leonardi <leonardi@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Bobby Eshleman <bobbyeshleman@meta.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260612045216.105796-2-rafdog35@gmail.com
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
|
|
With the tctx fallback running its entries directly, the per-ctx
fallback work has a single user left: moving local (DEFER_TASKRUN)
task_work entries out of a ring that is going away. Both of its call
sites are process context and don't hold ->uring_lock, the same
conditions the deferred fallback work itself ran under - so run the
entries in cancel mode right there instead, and rename the helper to
io_cancel_local_task_work() to match what it now does.
With that, ->fallback_llist, ->fallback_work, io_fallback_req_func()
and __io_fallback_tw() can all go away, along with the fallback work
flushing in the ring exit and cancel paths. Requests that get
orphaned by an exiting task now run via the tctx fallback work, which
the ring exit side implicitly waits on through the ctx refs those
requests hold.
Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@kernel.dk>
|
|
Like the local task_work list, the normal (tctx) task_work list is an
llist, and hence needs the O(n) llist_reverse_order() pass before
running entries in queue order. On top of that, capped runs - sqpoll
processing IORING_TW_CAP_ENTRIES_VALUE entries at a time - need the
claimed-but-unprocessed leftovers carried in a separate retry_list,
as they can't be pushed back to the shared list.
Switch tctx->task_list to a mpscq, like what was done for the
DEFER_TASKRUN paths as well.
Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@kernel.dk>
|
|
The local (DEFER_TASKRUN) task_work list is an llist, which is LIFO
ordered, and hence __io_run_local_work() has to restore the right
running order with an O(n) llist_reverse_order() pass first. On top of
that, a batch that gets capped by max_events needs the leftover entries
parked on a separate ->retry_llist, as they can't be pushed back to the
shared list.
Switch it to the FIFO mpscq. Adds are wait-free instead of a cmpxchg
retry loop, entries are popped in queue order with no reversal pass,
capping a run simply leaves the remainder on the queue, and
->retry_llist goes away entirely. The consumer cursor, ->work_head,
lives with the rest of the ->uring_lock protected state rather than
next to the queue, so that popping entries doesn't dirty the producer
side cacheline.
For low amounts of task_work, this ends up being a bit more efficient
than the existing scheme. As an example of that, doing multishot
receives for 8 clients has the following task_work overhead:
1.02% sock-test [kernel.kallsyms] [k] io_req_local_work_add
0.88% sock-test [kernel.kallsyms] [k] __io_run_local_work_loop
0.60% sock-test [kernel.kallsyms] [k] llist_reverse_order
0.14% sock-test [kernel.kallsyms] [k] __io_run_local_work
2.64% at ~46Gb/sec
and after this change:
1.08% sock-test [kernel.kallsyms] [k] io_req_local_work_add
1.03% sock-test [kernel.kallsyms] [k] __io_run_local_work
2.11% at ~53Gb/sec
which has less overhead even though that test run was faster. For a case
of having 1024 clients on a single ring:
2.22% sock-test [kernel.kallsyms] [k] llist_reverse_order
0.84% sock-test [kernel.kallsyms] [k] __io_run_local_work_loop
0.42% sock-test [kernel.kallsyms] [k] io_req_local_work_add
0.02% sock-test [kernel.kallsyms] [k] __io_run_local_work
3.50% at ~24Gb/sec
we start to see the llist reversing taking a considerable amount of
time, and the total add+run task_work overhead is around 3.5%. After
the change:
0.90% sock-test [kernel.kallsyms] [k] __io_run_local_work
0.42% sock-test [kernel.kallsyms] [k] io_req_local_work_add
1.32% at ~26Gb/sec
most of that overhead is gone, and performance is better as well.
Caleb Sander Mateos <csander@purestorage.com> reports that it improves
the performance of a ublk 4kb workload by 4% [1], while testing v1 of
this patchset.
[1] https://lore.kernel.org/io-uring/CADUfDZr-MMYBaP-e+y9+xuRhuiunO2sBTUCmwZyd7AgT8sVtiQ@mail.gmail.com/
Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@kernel.dk>
|
|
Local task_work is currently using llists for managing the work,
but that's a LIFO type of list. This means that running this task_work
needs to reverse the list first, to ensure fairness in running the
queued items.
Add a lockless FIFO queued, based on Dmitry Vyukov's intrusive MPSC
node-based queue algorithm, modified with an externally held consumer
cursor and conditional stub reinsertion. See comments in the header.
Producers are wait-free: a push is a single xchg() on the queue tail,
which serializes concurrent producers and defines the FIFO order, plus
a store linking the node to its predecessor. There are no cmpxchg retry
loops, and pushing is safe from any context, including hardirq.
The cost of linked list FIFO ordering is that a push publishes the node
in two steps - the xchg() makes it visible as the new tail before the
subsequent store links it into the chain that is reachable from the
head. A consumer hitting that window gets a NULL from mpscq_pop() while
mpscq_empty() reports false, and must retry later rather than treat the
queue as empty. The window is two instructions wide, but a producer can
get preempted inside it, so the consumer must not busy wait on it.
The consumer side supports a single consumer at a time, with callers
providing their own serialization. A stub node, which also defines the
empty state (tail == stub), allows the consumer to detach the final
node without racing against producer link stores: that node is only
handed out once the stub has been cmpxchg'ed back in as the tail. This
also guarantees that the previous tail returned by mpscq_push() cannot
get freed before that push has linked it, making it always valid for
comparisons.
The consumer cursor is deliberately not part of the queue struct - the
caller owns it and passes it to mpscq_pop(). This is done to separate
the consumer and producers cacheline. The cursor is written for every
popped entry, and keeping it on the same cacheline as ->tail would have
the consumer invalidating the line that producers need for every push.
Keeping it external lets the caller place it with its own consumer side
data instead.
Reviewed-by: Caleb Sander Mateos <csander@purestorage.com>
Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@kernel.dk>
|
|
raw_res_spin_unlock_irqrestore() calls raw_res_spin_unlock() and then
restores interrupts, this means preemption is enabled when interrupts
are still disabled (as part of raw_res_spin_unlock()) so this cannot
trigger an actual preemption.
This is inconsistent with other spinlock implementations
(raw_spin_unlock_irqrestore() and bpf_res_spin_unlock_irqrestore()
itself).
Adjust the macro to ensure interrupts are enabled before enabling
preemption, allowing to schedule at that point. Make the same
modification in the error path of raw_res_spin_lock_irqsave().
Fixes: 101acd2e78b1 ("rqspinlock: Add macros for rqspinlock usage")
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Acked-by: Arnd Bergmann <arnd@arndb.de> # asm-generic
Acked-by: Waiman Long <longman@redhat.com>
Acked-by: Kumar Kartikeya Dwivedi <memxor@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Gabriele Monaco <gmonaco@redhat.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20260610090431.32427-1-gmonaco@redhat.com
Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org>
|
|
When a cgroup BPF program exits with 0, bpf_prog_run_array_cg() sets
the hook return value to -EPERM if it is not a valid errno. This is
correct for errno-based hooks, which return 0 on success and negative
errno on failure, but wrong for boolean and void LSM hooks. Boolean
LSM hooks should only return true or false, and void LSM hooks have
no return value at all.
Fix it by skipping setting -EPERM for hooks not returning errno.
Fixes: 69fd337a975c ("bpf: per-cgroup lsm flavor")
Signed-off-by: Xu Kuohai <xukuohai@huawei.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20260610201724.733943-2-xukuohai@huaweicloud.com
Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org>
|
|
The main purpose of this cmd is to be able to associate a
non-psp-capable device (e.g. veth or netkit) with a psp device.
One use case is if we create a pair of veth/netkit, and assign 1 end
inside a netns, while leaving the other end within the default netns,
with a real PSP device, e.g. netdevsim or a physical PSP-capable NIC.
With this command, we could associate the veth/netkit inside the netns
with PSP device, so the virtual device could act as PSP-capable device
to initiate PSP connections, and performs PSP encryption/decryption on
the real PSP device.
Signed-off-by: Wei Wang <weibunny@fb.com>
Reviewed-by: Daniel Zahka <daniel.zahka@gmail.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260608233118.2694144-3-weibunny.kernel@gmail.com
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
|
|
Blamed commit converted the untracked dev_hold()/dev_put() calls
in the watchdog code to use the tracked dev_hold_track()/dev_put_track()
(which were later renamed/interfaced to netdev_hold() and netdev_put()).
By introducing dev->watchdog_dev_tracker to store the
reference tracking information without adding synchronization
between netdev_watchdog_up() and dev_watchdog(), it enabled the
race condition where this pointer could be overwritten or freed
concurrently, leading to the list corruption crash syzbot reported:
list_del corruption, ffff888114a18c00->next is NULL
kernel BUG at lib/list_debug.c:52 !
Oops: invalid opcode: 0000 [#1] SMP KASAN PTI
CPU: 1 UID: 0 PID: 91 Comm: kworker/u8:5 Not tainted syzkaller #0 PREEMPT(lazy)
Hardware name: Google Google Compute Engine/Google Compute Engine, BIOS Google 05/09/2026
Workqueue: events_unbound linkwatch_event
RIP: 0010:__list_del_entry_valid_or_report.cold+0x22/0x2a lib/list_debug.c:52
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__list_del_entry_valid include/linux/list.h:132 [inline]
__list_del_entry include/linux/list.h:246 [inline]
list_move_tail include/linux/list.h:341 [inline]
ref_tracker_free+0x1a7/0x6c0 lib/ref_tracker.c:329
netdev_tracker_free include/linux/netdevice.h:4491 [inline]
netdev_put include/linux/netdevice.h:4508 [inline]
netdev_put include/linux/netdevice.h:4504 [inline]
netdev_watchdog_down net/sched/sch_generic.c:600 [inline]
dev_deactivate_many+0x28c/0xfe0 net/sched/sch_generic.c:1363
dev_deactivate+0x109/0x1d0 net/sched/sch_generic.c:1397
linkwatch_do_dev net/core/link_watch.c:184 [inline]
linkwatch_do_dev+0xd3/0x120 net/core/link_watch.c:166
__linkwatch_run_queue+0x3a5/0x810 net/core/link_watch.c:240
linkwatch_event+0x8f/0xc0 net/core/link_watch.c:314
process_one_work+0xa0e/0x1980 kernel/workqueue.c:3314
process_scheduled_works kernel/workqueue.c:3397 [inline]
worker_thread+0x5ef/0xe50 kernel/workqueue.c:3478
kthread+0x370/0x450 kernel/kthread.c:436
ret_from_fork+0x69a/0xc80 arch/x86/kernel/process.c:158
ret_from_fork_asm+0x1a/0x30 arch/x86/entry/entry_64.S:245
This patch has three coordinated parts:
1) Add dev->watchdog_lock and dev->watchdog_ref_held to serialize watchdog operations.
2) Remove netdev_watchdog_up() call from netif_carrier_on():
This ensures netdev_watchdog_up() is only called from process/BH context
(via linkwatch workqueue dev_activate()), allowing us to use
spin_lock_bh() for synchronization.
3) Synchronize watchdog up and watchdog timer:
Protect netdev_watchdog_up() with tx_global_lock and watchdog_lock.
Only allocate a new tracker in netdev_watchdog_up() if one is
not already present.
In dev_watchdog(), ensure we don't release the tracker if the
timer was rescheduled either by dev_watchdog() itself or concurrently
by netdev_watchdog_up().
Fixes: f12bf6f3f942 ("net: watchdog: add net device refcount tracker")
Reported-by: syzbot+381d82bbf0253710b35d@syzkaller.appspotmail.com
Closes: https://lore.kernel.org/netdev/6a26b751.c25708ab.1b19ef.0013.GAE@google.com/T/#u
Tested-by: syzbot+3479efbc2821cb2a79f2@syzkaller.appspotmail.com
Signed-off-by: Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260611152737.2580480-1-edumazet@google.com
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
|
|
The tls_toe feature and its single user (chelsio chtls) have been
unmaintained for multiple years. It also hooks into the core of the
TCP implementation, and bypasses most of the networking stack.
Signed-off-by: Sabrina Dubroca <sd@queasysnail.net>
Reviewed-by: Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/1f30e73275c07bf879f547589872d0916025a52e.1781165969.git.sd@queasysnail.net
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
|
|
A child socket inherits the listener's bpf_sock_ops_cb_flags via
sk_clone_lock(). If its setup fails in tcp_v4_syn_recv_sock() /
tcp_v6_syn_recv_sock(), the child is freed through put_and_exit, where
inet_csk_prepare_forced_close() drops the socket lock and tcp_done() runs
without it.
If BPF_SOCK_OPS_STATE_CB_FLAG was inherited, tcp_done() -> tcp_set_state()
calls tcp_call_bpf(), which expects the lock and trips sock_owned_by_me():
WARNING: include/net/sock.h:1799 at tcp_set_state+0x433/0x550
RIP: 0010:tcp_set_state+0x433/0x550 include/net/sock.h:1799
Call Trace:
<IRQ>
tcp_done+0xba/0x250 net/ipv4/tcp.c:5095
tcp_v4_syn_recv_sock+0x850/0xa50 net/ipv4/tcp_ipv4.c:1787
tcp_check_req+0xf30/0x1360 net/ipv4/tcp_minisocks.c:926
tcp_v4_rcv+0x1047/0x1b50 net/ipv4/tcp_ipv4.c:2164
</IRQ>
The child is freed before it is ever established, so it should run no
sock_ops callback. Clear its cb flags in inet_csk_prepare_for_destroy_sock(),
the common point for the IPv4, IPv6 and chtls forced-close paths and for the
MPTCP ->syn_recv_sock() failure path (dispose_child), which reaches tcp_done()
on a child that was never established too.
Suggested-by: Jiayuan Chen <jiayuan.chen@linux.dev>
Fixes: d44874910a26 ("bpf: Add BPF_SOCK_OPS_STATE_CB")
Signed-off-by: Sechang Lim <rhkrqnwk98@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Jiayuan Chen <jiayuan.chen@linux.dev>
Reviewed-by: Kuniyuki Iwashima <kuniyu@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Dumazet <edumazet@google.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260611092923.1895982-1-rhkrqnwk98@gmail.com
Signed-off-by: Jakub Kicinski <kuba@kernel.org>
|
|
Pull drm fixes from Dave Airlie:
"Looks like it's settled down a bit more thankfully. Small changes
across the board, amdgpu/xe leading with some colorop changes in the
core/amd. Otherwise some misc driver fixes.
colorop:
- make lut interpolation mutable
- track colorop updates correctly
amdgpu:
- UserQ fix
- Userptr fix
- MCCS freesync fix
- track colorop changes correctly
amdkfd:
- Fix an event information leak
- Events bounds check fix
- Trap cleanup fix
i915:
- Check supported link rates DPCD read
- Fix phys BO pread/pwrite with offset
xe:
- fix oops in suspend/shutdown without display
- RAS fixes
- Use HW_ERR prefix in log
- include all registered queues in TLB invalidation
- Fix refcount leak in xe_range_tree in error paths
- fix job timeout recovery for unstarted jobs and kernel queues
amdxdna:
- fix possible leak of mm_struct
ivpu:
- fix integer truncation
vc4:
- fix leak in krealloc() error handling
virtio:
- fix dma_fence ref-count leak"
* tag 'drm-fixes-2026-06-13' of https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/drm/kernel: (24 commits)
accel/amdxdna: Fix mm_struct reference leak in aie2_populate_range()
drm/xe: fix job timeout recovery for unstarted jobs and kernel queues
drm/xe: fix refcount leak in xe_range_fence_insert()
drm/xe: include all registered queues in TLB invalidation
drm/xe/hw_error: Use HW_ERR prefix in log
drm/xe/drm_ras: Add per node cleanup action
drm/xe/drm_ras: Make counter allocation drm managed
drm/xe/display: fix oops in suspend/shutdown without display
drm/amd/display: use plane color_mgmt_changed to track colorop changes
drm/atomic: track individual colorop updates
drm/colorop: make lut(1/3)d_interpolation props correctly behave as mutable
drm/colorop: Remove read-only comments from interpolation fields
drm/i915/gem: Fix phys BO pread/pwrite with offset
drm/vc4: fix krealloc() memory leak
drm/virtio: Fix driver removal with disabled KMS
drm/i915/edp: Check supported link rates DPCD read
accel/ivpu: Fix signed integer truncation in IPC receive
drm/virtio: fix dma_fence refcount leak on error in virtio_gpu_dma_fence_wait()
drm/amd/display: Consult MCCS FreeSync cap only if requested & supported
drm/amdkfd: Unwind debug trap enable on copy_to_user failure
...
|
|
https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/drm/misc/kernel into drm-fixes
Short summary of fixes pull:
amd:
- track colorop changes correctly
amdxdna:
- fix possible leak of mm_struct
colorop:
- make lut interpolation mutable
- track colorop updates correctly
ivpu:
- fix integer truncation
vc4:
- fix leak in krealloc() error handling
virtio:
- fix dma_fence ref-count leak
Signed-off-by: Dave Airlie <airlied@redhat.com>
From: Thomas Zimmermann <tzimmermann@suse.de>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260612081418.GA17001@2a02-2455-9062-2500-e496-5a17-62ba-545e.dyn6.pyur.net
|
|
To date, platform firmware maps accelerator memory and accelerator drivers
simply want an address range that they can map themselves. This typically
results in a single region being auto-assembled upon registration of a
memory device. Use the @attach mechanism of devm_cxl_add_memdev()
parameter to retrieve that region while also adhering to CXL subsystem
locking and lifetime rules. As part of adhering to current object lifetime
rules, if the region or the CXL port topology is invalidated, the CXL core
arranges for the accelertor driver to be detached as well.
The locking and lifetime rules were validated with Dave's work-in-progress
cxl-type-2 support for cxl_test.
devm_cxl_add_classdev() supports the general memory expansion flow where
region assembly is optional, dynamic, and user controlled.
Cc: Alejandro Lucero <alucerop@amd.com>
Signed-off-by: Dan Williams <djbw@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Alejandro Lucero <alucerop@amd.com>
Tested-by: Alejandro Lucero <alucerop@amd.com>
Reviewed-by: Dave Jiang <dave.jiang@intel.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260519210158.1499795-6-djbw@kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Dave Jiang <dave.jiang@intel.com>
|
|
Current DAI supports auto format selection. It allow to have array like
below.
(X) static u64 xxx_auto_formats[] = {
(A) /* First Priority */
SND_SOC_POSSIBLE_DAIFMT_I2S |
SND_SOC_POSSIBLE_DAIFMT_LEFT_J,
/* Second Priority */
(B) SND_SOC_POSSIBLE_DAIFMT_DSP_A |
SND_SOC_POSSIBLE_DAIFMT_DSP_B,
};
It try to find available format from I2S/LEFT_J first (A).
Then, try to find from I2S/LEFT_J/DSP_A/DSP_B if couldn't find (A)+(B).
(OR:ed)
In this method, it can't handle if there is format combination.
For example, some driver has pattern.
Pattern1
I2S/RIFHT_J/LEFT_J (FORMAT) and NB_NF/IB_IF/IB_NF/NB_IF (INV)_
Pattern2
DSP_A/DSP_B (FORMAT) and NB_NF/ IB_NF
Because it will try to OR Pattern1 and Pattern2, un-supported
pattern might be selected.
This patch update method not to use OR, and assumes full format array.
Above sample (X) need to be
static u64 xxx_auto_formats[] = {
/* First Priority */
SND_SOC_POSSIBLE_DAIFMT_I2S |
SND_SOC_POSSIBLE_DAIFMT_LEFT_J,
/* Second Priority */
SND_SOC_POSSIBLE_DAIFMT_I2S |
SND_SOC_POSSIBLE_DAIFMT_LEFT_J |
SND_SOC_POSSIBLE_DAIFMT_DSP_A |
SND_SOC_POSSIBLE_DAIFMT_DSP_B,
};
Note: It doesn't support Multi CPU/Codec for now
Signed-off-by: Kuninori Morimoto <kuninori.morimoto.gx@renesas.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/87jys836k8.wl-kuninori.morimoto.gx@renesas.com
Signed-off-by: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org>
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Clock provider / consumer selection is based on board, we can't select
automatically from software. Let's remove SND_SOC_POSSIBLE_xBx_xFx.
Signed-off-by: Kuninori Morimoto <kuninori.morimoto.gx@renesas.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/87tsrc36li.wl-kuninori.morimoto.gx@renesas.com
Signed-off-by: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org>
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Add a new block error injection interface that allows to inject specific
status code for specific ranges.
Signed-off-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
Reviewed-by: Damien Le Moal <dlemoal@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Hannes Reinecke <hare@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Md Haris Iqbal <haris.iqbal@linux.dev>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260611140703.2401204-5-hch@lst.de
Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe <axboe@kernel.dk>
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So far our parsing of {iommu,msi}-map properties has always blindly
assumed that the output specifiers will always have exactly 1 cell.
This typically does happen to be the case, but is not actually enforced
(and the PCI msi-map binding even explicitly states support for 0 or 1
cells) - as a result we've now ended up with dodgy DTs out in the field
which depend on this behaviour to map a 1-cell specifier for a 2-cell
provider, despite that being bogus per the bindings themselves.
Since there is some potential use in being able to map at least single
input IDs to multi-cell output specifiers (and properly support 0-cell
outputs as well), add support for properly parsing and using the target
nodes' #cells values, albeit with the unfortunate complication of still
having to work around expectations of the old behaviour too.
Since there are multi-cell output specifiers, the callers of of_map_id()
may need to get the exact cell output value for further processing.
Update of_map_id() to set args_count in the output to reflect the actual
number of output specifier cells.
Signed-off-by: Robin Murphy <robin.murphy@arm.com>
Signed-off-by: Charan Teja Kalla <charan.kalla@oss.qualcomm.com>
Signed-off-by: Vijayanand Jitta <vijayanand.jitta@oss.qualcomm.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260603-parse_iommu_cells-v16-3-dc509dacb19a@oss.qualcomm.com
Signed-off-by: Rob Herring (Arm) <robh@kernel.org>
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Change of_map_id() to take a pointer to struct of_phandle_args
instead of passing target device node and translated IDs separately.
Update all callers accordingly.
Add an explicit filter_np parameter to of_map_id() and of_map_msi_id()
to separate the filter input from the output. Previously, the target
parameter served dual purpose: as an input filter (if non-NULL, only
match entries targeting that node) and as an output (receiving the
matched node with a reference held). Now filter_np is the explicit
input filter and arg->np is the pure output.
Previously, of_map_id() would call of_node_put() on the matched node
when a filter was provided, making reference ownership inconsistent.
Remove this internal of_node_put() call so that of_map_id() now always
transfers ownership of the matched node reference to the caller via
arg->np. Callers are now consistently responsible for releasing this
reference with of_node_put(arg->np) when done.
Acked-by: Frank Li <Frank.Li@nxp.com>
Suggested-by: Rob Herring (Arm) <robh@kernel.org>
Suggested-by: Dmitry Baryshkov <dmitry.baryshkov@oss.qualcomm.com>
Signed-off-by: Charan Teja Kalla <charan.kalla@oss.qualcomm.com>
Signed-off-by: Vijayanand Jitta <vijayanand.jitta@oss.qualcomm.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260603-parse_iommu_cells-v16-2-dc509dacb19a@oss.qualcomm.com
Signed-off-by: Rob Herring (Arm) <robh@kernel.org>
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Since we now have quite a few users parsing "iommu-map" and "msi-map"
properties, give them some wrappers to conveniently encapsulate the
appropriate sets of property names. This will also make it easier to
then change of_map_id() to correctly account for specifier cells.
Reviewed-by: Rob Herring (Arm) <robh@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Frank Li <Frank.Li@nxp.com>
Acked-by: Marc Zyngier <maz@kernel.org>
Acked-by: Bjorn Helgaas <bhelgaas@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Robin Murphy <robin.murphy@arm.com>
Signed-off-by: Vijayanand Jitta <vijayanand.jitta@oss.qualcomm.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260603-parse_iommu_cells-v16-1-dc509dacb19a@oss.qualcomm.com
Signed-off-by: Rob Herring (Arm) <robh@kernel.org>
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iommu_copy_struct_from_full_user_array() copies a whole user array into a
kernel buffer. In the common case, where user entry_len equals destination
entry size, it takes a fast path and copies the whole array with a single
copy_from_user().
That fast path does not return, so it falls through into the item-by-item
copy_struct_from_user() loop and copies every entry a second time. For an
equal entry_len that loop is just a copy_from_user() of the same bytes, so
the whole array is copied twice for no benefit.
Return right after the bulk copy. The per-item loop then runs only on the
slow path, where entry_len differs and each entry needs size adaption.
Fixes: 4f2e59ccb698 ("iommu: Add iommu_copy_struct_from_full_user_array helper")
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/r/6c9eca4ff584cb977661e97799ac6fe934e7f51c.1780521606.git.nicolinc@nvidia.com
Assisted-by: Claude:claude-opus-4-8
Signed-off-by: Nicolin Chen <nicolinc@nvidia.com>
Reviewed-by: Lu Baolu <baolu.lu@linux.intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Jason Gunthorpe <jgg@nvidia.com>
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IOMMU_IOAS_MAP_FILE is documented as mapping a memfd, but the
implementation first tries to resolve the fd as a dma-buf and has a
special path for supported dma-buf exporters. In particular, VFIO PCI
dma-bufs exported through VFIO_DEVICE_FEATURE_DMA_BUF can be mapped when
they describe a single DMA range.
Update the UAPI comment so userspace understands that certain kinds of
dma-buf are supported in addition to memfd.
Fixes: 44ebaa1744fd ("iommufd: Accept a DMABUF through IOMMU_IOAS_MAP_FILE")
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/r/20260610-tmp-v1-1-b8ccbf557391@fb.com
Signed-off-by: Alex Mastro <amastro@fb.com>
Assisted-by: Codex:gpt-5.5-high
Signed-off-by: Jason Gunthorpe <jgg@nvidia.com>
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The secondary_op_tmpl kdoc line has been removed accidentally, add it
back.
Reported-by: Michael Walle <mwalle@kernel.org>
Closes: https://lore.kernel.org/linux-mtd/DJ56CDMRVFQ6.FOZRIQTF3VDW@kernel.org/T/#u
Fixes: 38fbe4b3f66e ("spi: spi-mem: Add a no_cs_assertion capability")
Signed-off-by: Miquel Raynal <miquel.raynal@bootlin.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260612-perso-fix-no-cs-assertion-kdoc-v1-1-626b2d6d0d9b@bootlin.com
Signed-off-by: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org>
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Merge tag 'mtd/spi-mem-cont-read-for-7.2' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/mtd/linux into spi-7.2
Miquel Raynal <miquel.raynal@bootlin.com> says:
Aside from preparation changes in the SPI NAND core, the changes carried
here focus on the shared spi-mem layer which is enhanced in order to
bring two new features:
- The possibility to fill a primary and a secondary operation template
in the direct mapping structure in order to support continuous reads
in SPI NAND, which may require two different read operations.
- SPI controllers may indicate possible CS instabilities over long
transfers by setting a boolean. This capability is related to the
previous one, the need for it has arised while testing SPI NAND
continuous reads with the Cadence QSPI controller which cannot, under
certain conditions, keep the CS asserted for the length of
an eraseblock-large transfer.
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'rockchip', 'verisilicon', 'riscv', 'intel/vt-d', 'amd/amd-vi' and 'core' into next
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Merge series "slab: support for compiler-assisted type-based slab cache
partitioning" from Marco Elver. From the cover letter [6]:
Rework the general infrastructure around RANDOM_KMALLOC_CACHES into more
flexible KMALLOC_PARTITION_CACHES, with the former being a partitioning
mode of the latter.
Introduce a new mode, KMALLOC_PARTITION_TYPED, which leverages a feature
available in Clang 22 and later, called "allocation tokens" via
__builtin_infer_alloc_token() [1]. Unlike KMALLOC_PARTITION_RANDOM
(formerly RANDOM_KMALLOC_CACHES), this mode deterministically assigns a
slab cache to an allocation of type T, regardless of allocation site.
The builtin __builtin_infer_alloc_token(<malloc-args>, ...) instructs
the compiler to infer an allocation type from arguments commonly passed
to memory-allocating functions and returns a type-derived token ID. The
implementation passes kmalloc-args to the builtin: the compiler performs
best-effort type inference, and then recognizes common patterns such as
`kmalloc(sizeof(T), ...)`, `kmalloc(sizeof(T) * n, ...)`, but also
`(T *)kmalloc(...)`. Where the compiler fails to infer a type the
fallback token (default: 0) is chosen.
Note: kmalloc_obj(..) APIs fix the pattern how size and result type are
expressed, and therefore ensures there's not much drift in which
patterns the compiler needs to recognize. Specifically, kmalloc_obj()
and friends expand to `(TYPE *)KMALLOC(__obj_size, GFP)`, which the
compiler recognizes via the cast to TYPE*.
Clang's default token ID calculation is described as [1]:
typehashpointersplit: This mode assigns a token ID based on the hash
of the allocated type's name, where the top half ID-space is reserved
for types that contain pointers and the bottom half for types that do
not contain pointers.
Separating pointer-containing objects from pointerless objects and data
allocations can help mitigate certain classes of memory corruption
exploits [2]: attackers who gains a buffer overflow on a primitive
buffer cannot use it to directly corrupt pointers or other critical
metadata in an object residing in a different, isolated heap region.
It is important to note that heap isolation strategies offer a
best-effort approach, and do not provide a 100% security guarantee,
albeit achievable at relatively low performance cost. Note that this
also does not prevent cross-cache attacks: while waiting for future
features like SLAB_VIRTUAL [3] to provide physical page isolation, this
feature should be deployed alongside SHUFFLE_PAGE_ALLOCATOR and
init_on_free=1 to mitigate cross-cache attacks and page-reuse attacks as
much as possible today.
With all that, my kernel (x86 defconfig) shows me a histogram of slab
cache object distribution per /proc/slabinfo (after boot):
<slab cache> <objs> <hist>
kmalloc-part-15 1465 ++++++++++++++
kmalloc-part-14 2988 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
kmalloc-part-13 1656 ++++++++++++++++
kmalloc-part-12 1045 ++++++++++
kmalloc-part-11 1697 ++++++++++++++++
kmalloc-part-10 1489 ++++++++++++++
kmalloc-part-09 965 +++++++++
kmalloc-part-08 710 +++++++
kmalloc-part-07 100 +
kmalloc-part-06 217 ++
kmalloc-part-05 105 +
kmalloc-part-04 4047 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
kmalloc-part-03 183 +
kmalloc-part-02 283 ++
kmalloc-part-01 316 +++
kmalloc 1422 ++++++++++++++
The above /proc/slabinfo snapshot shows me there are 6673 allocated
objects (slabs 00 - 07) that the compiler claims contain no pointers or
it was unable to infer the type of, and 12015 objects that contain
pointers (slabs 08 - 15). On a whole, this looks relatively sane.
Additionally, when I compile my kernel with -Rpass=alloc-token, which
provides diagnostics where (after dead-code elimination) type inference
failed, I see 186 allocation sites where the compiler failed to identify
a type (down from 966 when I sent the RFC [4]). Some initial review
confirms these are mostly variable sized buffers, but also include
structs with trailing flexible length arrays.
Link: https://clang.llvm.org/docs/AllocToken.html [1]
Link: https://blog.dfsec.com/ios/2025/05/30/blasting-past-ios-18/ [2]
Link: https://lwn.net/Articles/944647/ [3]
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/all/20250825154505.1558444-1-elver@google.com/ [4]
Link: https://discourse.llvm.org/t/rfc-a-framework-for-allocator-partitioning-hints/87434 [5]
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/all/20260511200136.3201646-1-elver@google.com/ [6]
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git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/kvmarm/kvmarm into HEAD
KVM/arm64 updates for 7.2
* New features:
- None. Zilch. Nada. Que dalle.
* Fixes and other improvements:
- Significant cleanup of the vgic-v5 PPI support which was merged in
7.1. This makes the code more maintainable, and squashes a couple
of bugs in the meantime.
- Set of fixes for the handling of the MMU in an NV context,
particularly VNCR-triggered faults. S1POE support is fixed
as well.
- Large set of pKVM fixes, mostly addressing recurring issues
around hypervisor tracking of donated pages in obscure cases
where the donation could fail and leave things in a bizarre
state.
- Fixes for the so-called "lazy vgic init", which resulted in
sleeping operations in non-preemptible sections. This turned
out to be far more invasive than initially expected...
- Reduce the overhead of L1/L2 context switch by not touching
the FP registers.
- Fix the way non-implemented page sizes are dealt with when
a guest insist on using them for S2 translation.
- The usual set of low-impact fixes and cleanups all over the map.
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ssh://gitolite.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/westeri/thunderbolt into usb-next
Mika writes:
thunderbolt: Changes for v7.2 merge window
This includes following USB4/Thunderbolt changes for the v7.2 merge
window:
- Make the driver more compliant with the connection manager guide.
- Improvements over Thunderbolt XDomain service handling.
- USB4STREAM driver.
- Split out PCIe bits into pci.c to allow the driver to work on
non-PCIe hosts as well.
- Various fixes and improvements.
All these have been in linux-next with no reported issues.
* tag 'thunderbolt-for-v7.2-rc1' of ssh://gitolite.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/westeri/thunderbolt: (41 commits)
thunderbolt: debugfs: Fix sideband write size check
thunderbolt: debugfs: Fix margining error counter buffer leak
thunderbolt: test: Release third DP tunnel
thunderbolt: Prevent XDomain delayed work use-after-free on disconnect
thunderbolt: test: Add KUnit tests for property parser bounds checks
thunderbolt: Add some more descriptive probe error messages
thunderbolt: Require nhi->ops be valid
thunderbolt: Separate out common NHI bits
thunderbolt: Move pci_device out of tb_nhi
thunderbolt: Increase Notification Timeout to 255 ms for USB4 routers
thunderbolt: Increase timeout for Configuration Ready bit
thunderbolt: Verify Router Ready bit is set after router enumeration
thunderbolt: Verify PCIe adapter in detect state before tunnel setup
thunderbolt: Activate path hops from source to destination
thunderbolt: Fix lane bonding log when bonding not possible
thunderbolt: Don't access path config space on Lane 1 adapters in tb_switch_reset_host()
thunderbolt: Improve multi-display DisplayPort tunnel allocation
docs: admin-guide: thunderbolt: Add instructions how to use USB4STREAM
thunderbolt: Add support for USB4STREAM
thunderbolt: Add support for ConfigFS
...
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