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Linux Kernel Programming

You're reading from  Linux Kernel Programming

Product type Book
Published in Mar 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789953435
Pages 754 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Kaiwan N. Billimoria Kaiwan N. Billimoria
Profile icon Kaiwan N. Billimoria
Toc

Table of Contents (19) Chapters close

Preface 1. Section 1: The Basics
2. Kernel Workspace Setup 3. Building the 5.x Linux Kernel from Source - Part 1 4. Building the 5.x Linux Kernel from Source - Part 2 5. Writing Your First Kernel Module - LKMs Part 1 6. Writing Your First Kernel Module - LKMs Part 2 7. Section 2: Understanding and Working with the Kernel
8. Kernel Internals Essentials - Processes and Threads 9. Memory Management Internals - Essentials 10. Kernel Memory Allocation for Module Authors - Part 1 11. Kernel Memory Allocation for Module Authors - Part 2 12. The CPU Scheduler - Part 1 13. The CPU Scheduler - Part 2 14. Section 3: Delving Deeper
15. Kernel Synchronization - Part 1 16. Kernel Synchronization - Part 2 17. About Packt 18. Other Books You May Enjoy

The mutex interruptible and killable variants

As you have already learned, the mutex_lock_interruptible() API is used when the driver (or module) is willing to acknowledge any (user space) signal interrupting it (and returns -ERESTARTSYS to tell the kernel VFS layer to perform signal handling; the user space system call will fail with errno set to EINTR). An example can be found in the module handling code in the kernel, within the delete_module(2) system call (which rmmod(8) invokes):

// kernel/module.c
[ ... ]
SYSCALL_DEFINE2(delete_module, const char __user *, name_user,
unsigned int, flags)
{
struct module *mod;
[ ... ]
if (!capable(CAP_SYS_MODULE) || modules_disabled)
return -EPERM;
[ ... ]
if (mutex_lock_interruptible(&module_mutex) != 0)
return -EINTR;
mod = find_module(name);
[ ... ]
out:
mutex_unlock(&module_mutex);
return ret;
}

Notice how the API returns -EINTR on failure. (The SYSCALL_DEFINEn...

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