diff --git a/fs/verity/enable.c b/fs/verity/enable.c index 1370bfd17e87..39459b1eff75 100644 --- a/fs/verity/enable.c +++ b/fs/verity/enable.c @@ -350,25 +350,27 @@ int fsverity_ioctl_enable(struct file *filp, const void __user *uarg) goto out_drop_write; err = enable_verity(filp, &arg); - if (err) - goto out_allow_write_access; /* - * Some pages of the file may have been evicted from pagecache after - * being used in the Merkle tree construction, then read into pagecache - * again by another process reading from the file concurrently. Since - * these pages didn't undergo verification against the file measurement - * which fs-verity now claims to be enforcing, we have to wipe the - * pagecache to ensure that all future reads are verified. + * We no longer drop the inode's pagecache after enabling verity. This + * used to be done to try to avoid a race condition where pages could be + * evicted after being used in the Merkle tree construction, then + * re-instantiated by a concurrent read. Such pages are unverified, and + * the backing storage could have filled them with different content, so + * they shouldn't be used to fulfill reads once verity is enabled. + * + * But, dropping the pagecache has a big performance impact, and it + * doesn't fully solve the race condition anyway. So for those reasons, + * and also because this race condition isn't very important relatively + * speaking (especially for small-ish files, where the chance of a page + * being used, evicted, *and* re-instantiated all while enabling verity + * is quite small), we no longer drop the inode's pagecache. */ - filemap_write_and_wait(inode->i_mapping); - invalidate_inode_pages2(inode->i_mapping); /* * allow_write_access() is needed to pair with deny_write_access(). * Regardless, the filesystem won't allow writing to verity files. */ -out_allow_write_access: allow_write_access(filp); out_drop_write: mnt_drop_write_file(filp);