Date: Sun, 12 Apr 2020 10:40:56 -0700 From: Conrad Meyer <cem@freebsd.org> To: Michael Tuexen <tuexen@freebsd.org> Cc: src-committers <src-committers@freebsd.org>, svn-src-all <svn-src-all@freebsd.org>, svn-src-head <svn-src-head@freebsd.org> Subject: Re: svn commit: r359809 - head/sys/netinet Message-ID: <CAG6CVpVUydYHha77deAoJ3KNimX1j1sUiG6uwcx9ELOb-tw3Xw@mail.gmail.com> In-Reply-To: <55089DD1-2111-4946-964B-0AAC33F9A876@freebsd.org> References: <202004112036.03BKatfm047227@repo.freebsd.org> <CAG6CVpVNjZ5PBQxYop-cYb5AbjwNPNJ--dtXoeFC7c2o2sZc0Q@mail.gmail.com> <55089DD1-2111-4946-964B-0AAC33F9A876@freebsd.org>
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Hi Michael, On Sun, Apr 12, 2020 at 2:33 AM Michael Tuexen <tuexen@freebsd.org> wrote: > Yes. What I meant is that in the stream scheduler code (sctp_ss_functions= .c) > the pattern is > > TAILQ_REMOVE(&asoc->ss_data.out.list, sp, ss_next); > sp->ss_next.tqe_next =3D NULL; > sp->ss_next.tqe_prev =3D NULL; > > which I think is OK, since I'm clearing the pointers related to the remov= e > operation. Do you agree? It is harmless in the sense that it is not a functional change, but I wouldn't suggest doing so. First, in the location modified, TAILQ_INSERT immediately subsequent will just overwrite the NULLs. The compiler almost certainly just optimizes this out. (If you used TAILQ_CONCAT instead, you can avoid rewriting the pointer chain in the linked list entirely and only update heads/tails.) (By the way, I was mistaken about the queue.h TRASH feature being included in INVARIANTS kernels =E2=80=94 it is instead governed by QUEUE_MACRO_DEBUG_TRASH. IMO, we should go ahead and enabled QUEUE_MACRO_DEBUG_TRASH in GENERIC/INVARIANTS =E2=80=94 unlike "TRACE," TRA= SH is inexpensive =E2=80=94 and it catches use-after-frees.) Second, generally one should not manipulate the implementation details of sys/queue.h directly. In QUEUE_MACRO_DEBUG_TRASH kernels, the REMOVE operation already stores bogus values in these pointers ("TRASHIT()"). > I totally agree. I'm actually adding more INVARIANTS checks to the SCTP > code to catch more places where the code does not behave as expected when > running syzkaller (more on the API testing) and ossfuzz (for the userland > stack, more on the packet injection side). So you will see more panics > when using INVARIANTS, for example, now in the timer code. But this point= s > me to places I need to look at. That's good to hear. I agree it is good to assert/panic more in INVARIANTS, when invariants are violated =E2=80=94 it's why we have it :-). > > In this use, consider using > > 'TAILQ_CONCAT(&stcb->asoc.strmout[i].outqueue, &oldstream[i].outqueue, > > next)' instead of the loop construct. > > Thanks for the hint. Wasn't aware of it and didn't consider it more movin= g over a queue. No problem. It is often useful to manipulate entire lists cheaply rather than individual elements. Another common pattern is: under a lock, TAILQ_SWAP the lock-protected list to an initialized (empty) stack list-head, drop the lock, and clean up the list outside the lock. Best, Conrad
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