Re: Change in functionality of futex() system call.
From: Andrew Lutomirski
Date: Tue Jun 07 2011 - 15:04:28 EST
On Tue, Jun 7, 2011 at 3:01 PM, Darren Hart <dvhart@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>> If a group of cooperating processes uses a memory segment to exchange
>>> critical information, do you really think this memory segment will be
>>> readable by other unrelated processes on the machine ?
>>
>> Depends on the design.
>>
>> I have some software I'm working on that uses shared files and could
>> easily use futexes. I don't want random read-only processes to
>> interfere with the futex protocol.
>
>
> So don't use world readable files.
...which prevents people from *reading* them, which was the whole point.
>
>
>>>
>>> How is this related to futex code ?
>>
>> Because this usage is currently safe and would become unsafe with the
>> proposed change.
>>
>>>
>>> Same problem for legacy IPC (shm, msg, sem) : Appropriate protections
>>> are needed, obviously.
>>>
>>> BTW, kernel/futex.c uses a global hash table (futex_queues[256]) and a
>>> very predictable hash_futex(), so its easy to slow down futex users...
>>
>> There's a difference between slowing down users by abusing a kernel
>> hash and deadlocking users by eating a wakeup. (If you eat a wakeup
>> the wakeup won't magically come back later. It's gone.)
>
> That's the nature of SHARED, you have to protect the mapping independent
> of the futex mechanism.
Well... it used to mean you have to protect from untrusted RW users.
Now it will mean you have to protect from untrusted RO users.
AFAICT sys_futex will become the only way that a user with RO access
to a file can actually interfere with the owner of the file (as
opposed to just learning information).
Why do we need this change again?
--Andy
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