Re: [PATCH] Kbuild: Disable the -Wformat-security gcc flag

From: Floris Kraak
Date: Thu Feb 05 2009 - 05:15:29 EST


On Thu, Feb 5, 2009 at 9:26 AM, Floris Kraak <randakar@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> On Thu, Feb 5, 2009 at 7:37 AM, Roland Dreier <rdreier@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>> > Just how many of these warnings are showing up? In the cases you
>> > posted it's presumably no problem, but if the string could either a)
>> > be potentially set by a malicious user or b) accidentally contain
>> > printk format characters then this code has a risk that things could
>> > blow up..
>>
>> I get ~150 of them on an x86 allyesconfig build here (see below). Many
>> but not all are trivial; some at least appear to be passing in strings
>> that come from random hardware/firmware or DNS names etc (ie there's at
>> least a chance of a '%'); and I didn't exhaustively audit to make sure
>> none of them could print something from an unprivileged user.
>>
>
> There are probably some real bugs in there. On the other hand there is
> some overhead to fixing the warnings. Kernel text size increase,
> possibly some CPU overhead from parsing the format string. Hopefully
> none of these calls are in really hot code paths ;-)
> As I noted applying a patch that does the reverse and enables the
> check instead is perfectly acceptable to me. Long term somebody
> probably needs to go through all of them and fix (most of) them
> anyway.
>
> What remains an open question to me though is what to do with cases
> where the warning not only can be ignored but literally should be. eg.
> when there is zero chance of something unexpected getting passed in
> and 'fixing' it would just bloat the kernel.
> Can sparse be used to check this kind of thing for correctness?
>

Example:

kernel/power/main.c:717: warning: format not a string literal and no
format arguments

This complains about:
..
if (!rtc) {
printk(warn_no_rtc);
goto done;
}
..

So what is this "warn_no_rtc" thing?

static char warn_no_rtc[] __initdata =
KERN_WARNING "PM: no wakealarm-capable RTC driver is ready\n";

That's pretty much GCC failing to recognize that the format is a
string literal and then complaining that it isn't.
How do we make the warning go away without growing the kernel text?
Given the use of __initdata flags I'm not even sure if doing the
obvious printk("%s", warn_no_rtc) isn't going to introduce a subtle
bug somehow..

Regards,
Floris
---
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deserve neither liberty nor safety."
-- Ben Franklin

"The course of history shows that as a government grows, liberty
decreases."
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