Re: Possible null pointer dereference in rcar-dmac.ko
From: Laurent Pinchart
Date: Wed Aug 09 2017 - 03:58:19 EST
Hello,
On Wednesday 09 Aug 2017 00:49:40 Kuninori Morimoto wrote:
> Hi Anton
>
> # add Laurent
>
> > While searching for races in the Linux kernel I've come across
> > "drivers/dma/sh/rcar-dmac.ko" module. Here is a question that I came
> > up with while analyzing results. Lines are given using the info from
> > Linux v4.12.
> >
> > Consider the following case:
> >
> > Thread 1: Thread 2:
> > rcar_dmac_probe
> > ->rcar_dmac_chan_probe
> >
> > (&dmac->channels[i])
> >
> > rchan = &dmac->channels[i]
> > chan = &rchan->chan
> > devm_request_threaded_irq(rchan)
> > chan->device = &dmac->engine rcar_dmac_isr_channel
> >
> > ->rcar_dmac_isr_transfer_end(chan)
> >
> > ->rcar_dmac_chan_start_xfer(chan)
> >
> > engine->dev = &pdev->dev; <READ chan->chan.device->dev>
> > (rcar-dmac.c: line 1828) (rcar-dmac.c: line 351)
> >
> > As far as I understand engine->dev is NULL before its initialization
> > in probe. Thus there might be a NULL pointer dereference in
> > rcar_dmac_chan_start_xfer while accessing chan->chan.device->dev which
> > is equal to (&dmac->engine)->dev. Is this possible from your point of
> > view?
>
> Very rare case, but not impossible (?).
> I think these engine->xxx initialize should be done before
> of_dma_controller_register();
> engine.channels is initialized independently somehow...
There should be no interrupt pending at the time the interrupt handler is
registered, but to be safe it's indeed a good practice to register the
interrupt handler after everything else has been initialized. Patches are
welcome :-)
--
Regards,
Laurent Pinchart