On Tue, Oct 30, 2018 at 11:39:11AM +0100, Christian Brauner wrote: > On Tue, Oct 30, 2018 at 08:50:22AM +0000, Daniel Colascione wrote: > > On Tue, Oct 30, 2018 at 3:21 AM, Joel Fernandes <joe...@google.com> wrote: > > > On Mon, Oct 29, 2018 at 3:11 PM Daniel Colascione <dan...@google.com> > > > wrote: > > >> > > >> Add a simple proc-based kill interface. To use /proc/pid/kill, just > > >> write the signal number in base-10 ASCII to the kill file of the > > >> process to be killed: for example, 'echo 9 > /proc/$$/kill'. > > >> > > >> Semantically, /proc/pid/kill works like kill(2), except that the > > >> process ID comes from the proc filesystem context instead of from an > > >> explicit system call parameter. This way, it's possible to avoid races > > >> between inspecting some aspect of a process and that process's PID > > >> being reused for some other process. > > >> > > >> With /proc/pid/kill, it's possible to write a proper race-free and > > >> safe pkill(1). An approximation follows. A real program might use > > >> openat(2), having opened a process's /proc/pid directory explicitly, > > >> with the directory file descriptor serving as a sort of "process > > >> handle". > > > > > > How long does the 'inspection' procedure take? If its a short > > > duration, then is PID reuse really an issue, I mean the PIDs are not > > > reused until wrap around and the only reason this can be a problem is > > > if you have the wrap around while the 'inspecting some aspect' > > > procedure takes really long. > > > > It's a race. Would you make similar statements about a similar fix for > > a race condition involving a mutex and a double-free just because the > > race didn't crash most of the time? The issue I'm trying to fix here > > is the same problem, one level higher up in the abstraction hierarchy. > > > > > Also the proc fs is typically not the right place for this. Some > > > entries in proc are writeable, but those are for changing values of > > > kernel data structures. The title of man proc(5) is "proc - process > > > information pseudo-filesystem". So its "information" right? > > > > Why should userspace care whether a particular operation is "changing > > [a] value[] of [a] kernel data structure" or something else? That > > something in /proc is a struct field is an implementation detail. It's > > the interface semantics that matters, and whether a particular > > operation is achieved by changing a struct field or by making a > > function call is irrelevant to userspace. Proc is a filesystem about > > processes. Why shouldn't you be able to send a signal to a process via > > proc? It's an operation involving processes. > > > > It's already possible to do things *to* processes via proc, e.g., > > adjust OOM killer scores. Proc filesystem file descriptors are > > userspace references to kernel-side struct pid instances, and as such, > > make good process handles. There are already "verb" files in procfs, > > such as /proc/sys/vm/drop_caches and /proc/sysrq-trigger. Why not add > > a kill "verb", especially if it closes a race that can't be closed > > some other way? > > > > You could implement this interface as a system call that took a procfs > > directory file descriptor, but relative to this proposal, it would be > > all downside. Such a thing would act just the same way as > > /pric/pid/kill, and wouldn't be usable from the shell or from programs > > that didn't want to use syscall(2). (Since glibc isn't adding new > > system call wrappers.) AFAIK, the only downside of having a "kill" > > file is the need for a string-to-integer conversion, but compared to > > process killing, integer parsing is insignificant. > > > > > IMO without a really good reason for this, it could really be a hard > > > sell but the RFC was worth it anyway to discuss it ;-) > > > > The traditional unix process API is down there at level -10 of Rusty > > Russel's old bad API scale: "It's impossible to get right". The races > > in the current API are unavoidable. That most programs don't hit these > > races most of the time doesn't mean that the race isn't present. > > > > We've moved to a model where we identify other system resources, like > > DRM fences, locks, sockets, and everything else via file descriptors. > > This change is a step toward using procfs file descriptors to work > > with processes, which makes the system more regular and easier to > > reason about. A clean API that's possible to use correctly is a > > worthwhile project. > > So I have been disucssing a new process API With David Howells, Kees > Cook and a few others and I am working on an RFC/proposal for this. It > is partially inspired by the new mount API. So I would like to block > this patch until then. I would like to get this right very much and I > don't think this is the way to go. I hope to have a more detailed > proposal out soon(ish). David and I were also thinking about an adhoc > session at the kernel summit but we aren't clear whether there's still a > slot.
It's also entertaining since I talked with Dylan Reid at Google about this during {O,L}SS too. :)