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net: sctp: sctp_association_init: put refs in reverse order

In case we need to bail out for whatever reason during assoc
init, we call sctp_endpoint_put() and then sock_put(), however,
we've hold both refs in reverse, non-symmetric order, so first
sctp_endpoint_hold() and then sock_hold().

Reverse this, so that in an error case we have sock_put() and then
sctp_endpoint_put(). Actually shouldn't matter too much, since both
cleanup paths do the right thing, but that way, it is more consistent
with the rest of the code.

Signed-off-by: Daniel Borkmann <dborkman@redhat.com>
Acked-by: Vlad Yasevich <vyasevich@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Daniel Borkmann 12 years ago
parent
commit
2e0c9e7911
1 changed files with 3 additions and 4 deletions
  1. 3 4
      net/sctp/associola.c

+ 3 - 4
net/sctp/associola.c

@@ -86,10 +86,9 @@ static struct sctp_association *sctp_association_init(struct sctp_association *a
 
 	/* Discarding const is appropriate here.  */
 	asoc->ep = (struct sctp_endpoint *)ep;
-	sctp_endpoint_hold(asoc->ep);
-
-	/* Hold the sock.  */
 	asoc->base.sk = (struct sock *)sk;
+
+	sctp_endpoint_hold(asoc->ep);
 	sock_hold(asoc->base.sk);
 
 	/* Initialize the common base substructure.  */
@@ -343,8 +342,8 @@ static struct sctp_association *sctp_association_init(struct sctp_association *a
 	return asoc;
 
 fail_init:
-	sctp_endpoint_put(asoc->ep);
 	sock_put(asoc->base.sk);
+	sctp_endpoint_put(asoc->ep);
 	return NULL;
 }