*
* On a successful return, the pointer to the PTE is stored in @ptepp;
* the corresponding lock is taken and its location is stored in @ptlp.
- * The contents of the PTE are only stable until @ptlp is released;
- * any further use, if any, must be protected against invalidation
- * with MMU notifiers.
+ *
+ * The contents of the PTE are only stable until @ptlp is released using
+ * pte_unmap_unlock(). This function will fail if the PTE is non-present.
+ * Present PTEs may include PTEs that map refcounted pages, such as
+ * anonymous folios in COW mappings.
+ *
+ * Callers must be careful when relying on PTE content after
+ * pte_unmap_unlock(). Especially if the PTE maps a refcounted page,
+ * callers must protect against invalidation with MMU notifiers; otherwise
+ * access to the PFN at a later point in time can trigger use-after-free.
*
* Only IO mappings and raw PFN mappings are allowed. The mmap semaphore
* should be taken for read.
*
- * KVM uses this function. While it is arguably less bad than the historic
- * ``follow_pfn``, it is not a good general-purpose API.
+ * This function must not be used to modify PTE content.
*
* Return: zero on success, -ve otherwise.
*/
pmd_t *pmd;
pte_t *ptep;
+ mmap_assert_locked(mm);
+ if (unlikely(address < vma->vm_start || address >= vma->vm_end))
+ goto out;
+
if (!(vma->vm_flags & (VM_IO | VM_PFNMAP)))
goto out;