fs: warn in case userspace lied about modprobe return

kmod <= v19 was broken -- it could return 0 to modprobe calls,
incorrectly assuming that a kernel module was built-in, whereas in
reality the module was just forming in the kernel. The reason for this
is an incorrect userspace heuristics. A userspace kmod fix is available
for it [0], however should userspace break again we could go on with
an failed get_fs_type() which is hard to debug as the request_module()
is detected as returning 0. The first suspect would be that there is
something worth with the kernel's module loader and obviously in this
case that is not the issue.

Since these issues are painful to debug complain when we know userspace
has outright lied to us.

[0] http://git.kernel.org/cgit/utils/kernel/kmod/kmod.git/commit/libkmod/libkmod-module.c?id=fd44a98ae2eb5eb32161088954ab21e58e19dfc4

Suggested-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Cc: Jessica Yu <jeyu@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Luis R. Rodriguez <mcgrof@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk>
This commit is contained in:
Luis R. Rodriguez 2017-06-01 11:08:01 -07:00 committed by Al Viro
parent 41f1830f5a
commit 41124db869

View File

@ -275,8 +275,10 @@ struct file_system_type *get_fs_type(const char *name)
int len = dot ? dot - name : strlen(name); int len = dot ? dot - name : strlen(name);
fs = __get_fs_type(name, len); fs = __get_fs_type(name, len);
if (!fs && (request_module("fs-%.*s", len, name) == 0)) if (!fs && (request_module("fs-%.*s", len, name) == 0)) {
fs = __get_fs_type(name, len); fs = __get_fs_type(name, len);
WARN_ONCE(!fs, "request_module fs-%.*s succeeded, but still no fs?\n", len, name);
}
if (dot && fs && !(fs->fs_flags & FS_HAS_SUBTYPE)) { if (dot && fs && !(fs->fs_flags & FS_HAS_SUBTYPE)) {
put_filesystem(fs); put_filesystem(fs);