On Fri, Feb 24, 2017 at 9:39 AM, Bart Van Assche <bart.vanass...@sandisk.com> wrote: > > So the crash is caused by an attempt to dereference address 0x6b6b6b6b6b6b6b6b > at offset 0x270. I think this means the crash is caused by a use-after-free.
Yeah, that's POISON_FREE, and that might explain why you see crashes that others don't - you obviously have SLAB poisoning enabled. Jens may not have. %rdi is "struct mapped_device *md", which came from dm_softirq_done() doing struct dm_rq_target_io *tio = tio_from_request(rq); struct request *clone = tio->clone; int rw; if (!clone) { rq_end_stats(tio->md, rq); rw = rq_data_dir(rq); if (!rq->q->mq_ops) blk_end_request_all(rq, tio->error); else blk_mq_end_request(rq, tio->error); rq_completed(tio->md, rw, false); return; } so it's the 'tio' pointer that has been free'd. But it's worth noting that we did apparently successfully dereference "tio" earlier in that dm_softirq_done() *without* getting the poison value, so what I think might be going on is that the 'tio' thing gets free'd when the code does the blk_end_request_all()/blk_mq_end_request() call. Which makes sense - that ends the lifetime of the request, which in turn also ends the lifetime of the "tio_from_request()", no? So the fix may be as simple as just doing if (!clone) { struct mapped_device *md = tio->md; rq_end_stats(md, rq); ... rq_completed(md, rw, false); return; } because the 'mapped_device' pointer hopefully is still valid, it's just 'tio' that has been freed. Jens? Bart? Christoph? Somebody who knows this code should double-check my thinking above. I don't actually know the tio lifetimes, I'm just going by looking at how earlier accesses seemed to be fine (eg that "tio->clone" got us NULL, not a POISON_FREE pointer, for example). Linus