On 02/22/18 11:21 PM, Atul Gupta wrote:
> @@ -403,6 +431,15 @@ static int do_tls_setsockopt_tx(struct sock *sk, char 
> __user *optval,
>               goto err_crypto_info;
>       }
>  
> +     rc = tls_offload_dev_absent(sk);
> +     if (rc == -EINVAL) {
> +             goto out;
> +     } else if (rc == -EEXIST) {
> +             /* Retain HW unhash for cleanup and move to SW Tx */
> +             sk->sk_prot[TLS_BASE_TX].unhash =
> +                     sk->sk_prot[TLS_FULL_HW].unhash;

I'm still confused by this, it lookes like it is modifying the global
tls_prots without taking a lock?  And modifying it for all sockets,
not just this one?  One way to fix might be to always set an unhash in
TLS_BASE_TX, and then have a function pointer unhash in ctx.

> +static void tls_hw_unhash(struct sock *sk)
> +{
> +     struct tls_device *dev;
> +
> +     mutex_lock(&device_mutex);
> +     list_for_each_entry(dev, &device_list, dev_list) {
> +             if (dev->unhash)
> +                     dev->unhash(dev, sk);
> +     }
> +     mutex_unlock(&device_mutex);
> +     sk->sk_prot->unhash(sk);

I would have thought unhash() here was tls_hw_unhash, doesn't the
original callback need to be saved like the other ones
(set/getsockopt, etc) in tls_init?  Similar for hash().

It looks like in patch 11 you directly call tcp_prot.hash/unhash, so
it doesn't have this issue.

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