Re: [PATCH net-next v2 0/6] Bluetooth: convert remaining bluetooth socket families to getsockopt_iter

From: Breno Leitao

Date: Mon Jun 01 2026 - 10:22:15 EST


Hello Luiz,

On Thu, May 14, 2026 at 01:51:16PM -0400, Luiz Augusto von Dentz wrote:
> On Tue, May 12, 2026 at 7:12 AM Breno Leitao <leitao@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> >
> > Continue the conversion to .getsockopt_iter for the Bluetooth socket
> > families: hci_sock, ISO, RFCOMM, SCO and L2CAP. The first patch is a
> > small precursor that fixes a long-standing 1-byte put_user write in
> > hci_sock_getsockopt_old() so the subsequent conversion stays mechanical.
> >
> > The riskiest change in this series is the SCO BT_CODEC conversion: it
> > is the only one that drops an open-coded ptr cursor in favour of
> > relying on iter_out advancing naturally on every copy_to_iter() call.
> > Every other socket option is a near-mechanical s/copy_to_user/
> > copy_to_iter/ rewrite, but BT_CODEC walks a variable-length list of
> > codecs + capabilities and previously tracked its own write offset by
> > hand. Getting the cursor semantics wrong here would silently truncate
> > or misalign user-visible codec data.
> >
> > For more context about the motivation for this change, please check
> > commit 67fab22a7ad ("net: add getsockopt_iter callback to proto_ops")
> >
> > Signed-off-by: Breno Leitao <leitao@xxxxxxxxxx>
> > ---
> > Changes in v2:
> > - rebase the tree on top of bluetooth-next.
> > - Remove the selftest, which was mixing network and bluetooth together.
> > - Link to v1: https://patch.msgid.link/20260511-getsock_three-v1-0-1461fa8786ab@xxxxxxxxxx
> >
> > To: Marcel Holtmann <marcel@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
> > To: Luiz Augusto von Dentz <luiz.dentz@xxxxxxxxx>
> > Cc: linux-bluetooth@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> > Cc: linux-kernel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> >
> > ---
> > Breno Leitao (6):
> > Bluetooth: hci_sock: write the full optval for getsockopt
> > Bluetooth: hci_sock: convert to getsockopt_iter
> > Bluetooth: ISO: convert to getsockopt_iter
> > Bluetooth: RFCOMM: convert to getsockopt_iter
> > Bluetooth: L2CAP: convert to getsockopt_iter
> > Bluetooth: SCO: convert to getsockopt_iter
> >
> > net/bluetooth/hci_sock.c | 26 +++++++++++--------
> > net/bluetooth/iso.c | 27 ++++++++++----------
> > net/bluetooth/l2cap_sock.c | 61 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++------------------
> > net/bluetooth/rfcomm/sock.c | 30 ++++++++++++----------
> > net/bluetooth/sco.c | 59 ++++++++++++++++++++++---------------------
> > 5 files changed, 114 insertions(+), 89 deletions(-)
> > ---
> > base-commit: c2f0079e8c42fd6814c8d6b1491e3ce0a0e3b3fa
> > change-id: 20260511-getsock_three-d0d7f1b2629e
> >
> > Best regards,
> > --
> > Breno Leitao <leitao@xxxxxxxxxx>
>
> There are some comments from sashiko on this:
>
> https://sashiko.dev/#/patchset/20260512-getsock_three-v2-0-30b7b22ef14c%40debian.org
>
> Now Im not sure the truncating is actually used by our tools, but that
> sounds like it could break userspace if we don't check properly, or
> have you already done this for other socket families and it was
> considered to be ok?

You're right — to clarify, the patch changes behavior when the user
provides a short optlen, preventing the overflow that existed before:

- Old code: put_user(opt, (u32 __user *)optval) unconditionally
writes sizeof(*ptr) bytes regardless of optlen, so optlen < 4
would overflow the user buffer and return 0.

- New code: copy_to_iter() respects the optlen boundary, eliminating
the overflow — but now a short buffer fails the strict length check
and returns -EFAULT instead of 0.

I don't believe any legitimate userspace relies on the old overflow
behavior, though there's a theoretical risk of breakage. I'm not deeply
familiar with the Bluetooth ecosystem specifically, but, I would prefer to
avoid the buffer overflow in such case.

I've addressed a similar issue in another subsystem recently:

https://lore.kernel.org/all/20260521-fix_llc-v2-1-ab44cc09179c@xxxxxxxxxx/

Anyway, let me know if you need me to change it.
--breno