Commit 730c586a authored by Salman Qazi's avatar Salman Qazi Committed by Linus Torvalds

drivers/char/mem.c: avoid OOM lockup during large reads from /dev/zero

While running 20 parallel instances of dd as follows:

  #!/bin/bash
  for i in `seq 1 20`; do
           dd if=/dev/zero of=/export/hda3/dd_$i bs=1073741824 count=1 &
  done
  wait

on a 16G machine, we noticed that rather than just killing the processes,
the entire kernel went down.  Stracing dd reveals that it first does an
mmap2, which makes 1GB worth of zero page mappings.  Then it performs a
read on those pages from /dev/zero, and finally it performs a write.

The machine died during the reads.  Looking at the code, it was noticed
that /dev/zero's read operation had been changed by
557ed1fa ("remove ZERO_PAGE") from giving
zero page mappings to actually zeroing the page.

The zeroing of the pages causes physical pages to be allocated to the
process.  But, when the process exhausts all the memory that it can, the
kernel cannot kill it, as it is still in the kernel mode allocating more
memory.  Consequently, the kernel eventually crashes.

To fix this, I propose that when a fatal signal is pending during
/dev/zero read operation, we simply return and let the user process die.
Signed-off-by: default avatarSalman Qazi <sqazi@google.com>
Cc: Nick Piggin <nickpiggin@yahoo.com.au>
Signed-off-by: default avatarAndrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
[ Modified error return and comment trivially.  - Linus]
Signed-off-by: default avatarLinus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
parent 2cb7878a
......@@ -694,6 +694,9 @@ static ssize_t read_zero(struct file * file, char __user * buf,
written += chunk - unwritten;
if (unwritten)
break;
/* Consider changing this to just 'signal_pending()' with lots of testing */
if (fatal_signal_pending(current))
return written ? written : -EINTR;
buf += chunk;
count -= chunk;
cond_resched();
......
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