On Thu, Oct 12, 2017 at 02:16:10AM -0400, Nicolas Pitre wrote:

>  static void cramfs_kill_sb(struct super_block *sb)
>  {
>       struct cramfs_sb_info *sbi = CRAMFS_SB(sb);
>  
> -     kill_block_super(sb);
> +     if (IS_ENABLED(CCONFIG_CRAMFS_MTD)) {
> +             if (sbi->mtd_point_size)
> +                     mtd_unpoint(sb->s_mtd, 0, sbi->mtd_point_size);
> +             if (sb->s_mtd)
> +                     kill_mtd_super(sb);

...

> +     mtd_unpoint(sb->s_mtd, 0, PAGE_SIZE);
> +     err = mtd_point(sb->s_mtd, 0, sbi->size, &sbi->mtd_point_size,
> +                     &sbi->linear_virt_addr, &sbi->linear_phys_addr);
> +     if (err || sbi->mtd_point_size != sbi->size) {

What happens if that mtd_point() fails?  Note that ->kill_sb() will be
called anyway and ->mtd_point_size is going to be non-zero here...  Do
we get the second mtd_unpoint(), or am I misreading that code?

This logics does look fishy, but I'm not familiar enough with mtd guts
to tell if that's OK...

Rules regarding ->kill_sb(): any struct super_block instance that
got out of sget() and its ilk will have ->kill_sb() called.  In case of
mtd, it's simply "if that thing got past setting ->s_mtd, it will be
passed to ->kill_sb()".

Note, BTW, that you *must* have generic_shutdown_super() called once on
every reachable path in ->kill_sb().  AFAICS your patch is correct in
that area (all instances with that ->s_type are created either in
mount_bdev() or in mount_mtd(); the former will have non-NULL ->s_bdev,
the latter - non-NULL ->s_mtd), but that's one thing to watch out when
doing any modifications.

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