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Reinette Chatre authored
It is possible for internal scan to race against itself if the device is not returning the scan results from first requests. What happens in this case is the cleanup done during the abort of the first internal scan also cleans up part of the new scan, causing it to access memory it shouldn't. Here are details: * First internal scan is triggered and scan command sent to device. * After seven seconds there is no scan results so the watchdog timer triggers a scan abort. * The scan abort succeeds and a SCAN_COMPLETE_NOTIFICATION is received for failed scan. * During processing of SCAN_COMPLETE_NOTIFICATION we clear STATUS_SCANNING and queue the "scan_completed" work. ** At this time, since the problem that caused the internal scan in first place is still present, a new internal scan is triggered. The behavior at this point is a bit different between 2.6.34 and 2.6.35 since 2.6.35 has a lot of this synchronized. The rest of the race description will thus be generalized. ** As part of preparing for the scan "is_internal_short_scan" is set to true. * At this point the completion work for fist scan is run. As part of this there is some locking missing around the "is_internal_short_scan" variable and it is set to "false". ** Now the second scan runs and it considers itself a real (not internal0 scan and thus causes problems with wrong memory being accessed. The fix is twofold. * Since "is_internal_short_scan" should be protected by mutex, fix this in scan completion work so that changes to it can be serialized. * Do not queue a new internal scan if one is in progress. This fixes https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=15824Signed-off-by: Reinette Chatre <reinette.chatre@intel.com> Signed-off-by: John W. Linville <linville@tuxdriver.com>
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