Frank. On Thu, 19 Jan 2017, Frank Ch. Eigler wrote: > > Well, if you are not in thread context then the check is pointless: > > __range_not_ok(addr, size, user_addr_max()) > > and: > > #define user_addr_max() (current->thread.addr_limit.seg) > > > > So what guarantees when you are not in context of current, i.e. in thread > > context, that the addr/size which is checked against the limits of current > > actually belongs to current? > > We're probably in task context in that there is a valid current(), but
current is always accessible no matter in which context you are - task, softirq, hardirq, nmi ... > running with preemption and/or interrupts and/or pagefaults disabled > at that point, so in_task() objects. As Peter explained, neither preempt disable nor interrupt disable not pagefault disabled have any influence on in_task(). It merily checks the context: !in_softirq() && !in_hardirq() && !in_nmi(). So that warning happens definitely not from task context. Care to share the code? Thanks, tglx