If a writer could been woken up, the above branch

        if (sem->count == 0)
                break;

would have moved us to taking the sem. So, it's
not the time to wake a writer now, and only readers
are allowed now. Thus, 0 must be passed to __rwsem_do_wake().

Next, __rwsem_do_wake() wakes readers unconditionally.
But we mustn't do that if the sem is owned by writer
in the moment. Otherwise, writer and reader own the sem
the same time, which leads to memory corruption in
callers.

rwsem-xadd.c does not need that, as:
1)the similar check is made lockless there,
2)in __rwsem_mark_wake::try_reader_grant we test,
that sem is not owned by writer.

Fixes: 17fcbd590d0c "locking/rwsem: Fix down_write_killable() for 
CONFIG_RWSEM_GENERIC_SPINLOCK=y"
Signed-off-by: Kirill Tkhai <[email protected]>
CC: Niklas Cassel <[email protected]>
CC: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <[email protected]>
CC: Ingo Molnar <[email protected]>
---
 kernel/locking/rwsem-spinlock.c |    4 ++--
 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)

diff --git a/kernel/locking/rwsem-spinlock.c b/kernel/locking/rwsem-spinlock.c
index c65f7989f850..20819df98125 100644
--- a/kernel/locking/rwsem-spinlock.c
+++ b/kernel/locking/rwsem-spinlock.c
@@ -231,8 +231,8 @@ int __sched __down_write_common(struct rw_semaphore *sem, 
int state)
 
 out_nolock:
        list_del(&waiter.list);
-       if (!list_empty(&sem->wait_list))
-               __rwsem_do_wake(sem, 1);
+       if (!list_empty(&sem->wait_list) && sem->count >= 0)
+               __rwsem_do_wake(sem, 0);
        raw_spin_unlock_irqrestore(&sem->wait_lock, flags);
 
        return -EINTR;

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