Re: [PATCH] idr: fix invalid ptr dereference on item delete

From: Matthew Wilcox
Date: Sat May 19 2018 - 09:19:07 EST


On Sat, May 19, 2018 at 09:26:36AM +0300, Roman Kagan wrote:
> On Fri, May 18, 2018 at 03:31:38PM -0700, Andrew Morton wrote:
> > On Fri, 18 May 2018 10:50:25 -0700 Matthew Wilcox <willy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> >
> > > If the radix tree underlying the IDR happens to be full and we attempt
> > > to remove an id which is larger than any id in the IDR, we will call
> > > __radix_tree_delete() with an uninitialised 'slot' pointer, at which
> > > point anything could happen. This was easiest to hit with a single entry
> > > at id 0 and attempting to remove a non-0 id, but it could have happened
> > > with 64 entries and attempting to remove an id >= 64.
> > >
> > > Fixes: 0a835c4f090a ("Reimplement IDR and IDA using the radix tree")
> > > Reported-by: syzbot+35666cba7f0a337e2e79@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> > > Debugged-by: Roman Kagan <rkagan@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> > > Signed-off-by: Matthew Wilcox <mawilcox@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> >
> > Neither of the changelogs I'm seeing attempt to describe the end-user
> > impact of the bug. People like to know that so they can decide which
> > kernel version(s) need patching, so please always remember it.
>
> That's my fault, Matthew may not have seen the original discussion among
> the KVM folks.
>
> > Looknig at the sysbot report, the impact is at least "privileged user
> > can trigger a WARN", but I assume there could be worse,
>
> Unfortunately it is worse: the syzcaller test boils down to opening
> /dev/kvm, creating an eventfd, and calling a couple of KVM ioctls. None
> of this requires superuser. And the result is dereferencing an
> uninitialized pointer which is likely a crash.
>
> > as-yet-undiscovered impacts. So I'm thinking a cc:stable is needed,
> > yes?
>
> Well the specific path caught by syzbot is via KVM_HYPERV_EVENTD ioctl
> which is new in 4.17. But I guess there are other user-triggerable
> paths, so cc:stable is probably justified.

We have around 250 calls to idr_remove() in the kernel today. Many of
them pass an ID which is embedded in the object they're removing, so
they're safe. Picking a few likely candidates:

drivers/firewire/core-cdev.c looks unsafe; the ID comes from an ioctl.
drivers/gpu/drm/amd/amdgpu/amdgpu_ctx.c is similar
drivers/atm/nicstar.c could be taken down by a handcrafted packet