On Tue, 8 Jan 2019 07:37:44 +0000 (UTC) Christophe Leroy <christophe.leroy@xxxxxx> wrote:
In powerpc code, there are several places implementing safe
access to user data. This is sometimes implemented using
probe_kernel_address() with additional access_ok() verification,
sometimes with get_user() enclosed in a pagefault_disable()/enable()
pair, etc. :
show_user_instructions()
bad_stack_expansion()
p9_hmi_special_emu()
fsl_pci_mcheck_exception()
read_user_stack_64()
read_user_stack_32() on PPC64
read_user_stack_32() on PPC32
power_pmu_bhrb_to()
In the same spirit as probe_kernel_read(), this patch adds
probe_user_read().
probe_user_read() does the same as probe_kernel_read() but
first checks that it is really a user address.
...
--- a/include/linux/uaccess.h
+++ b/include/linux/uaccess.h
@@ -263,6 +263,40 @@ extern long strncpy_from_unsafe(char *dst, const void *unsafe_addr, long count);
#define probe_kernel_address(addr, retval) \
probe_kernel_read(&retval, addr, sizeof(retval))
+/**
+ * probe_user_read(): safely attempt to read from a user location
+ * @dst: pointer to the buffer that shall take the data
+ * @src: address to read from
+ * @size: size of the data chunk
+ *
+ * Returns: 0 on success, -EFAULT on error.
+ *
+ * Safely read from address @src to the buffer at @dst. If a kernel fault
+ * happens, handle that and return -EFAULT.
+ *
+ * We ensure that the copy_from_user is executed in atomic context so that
+ * do_page_fault() doesn't attempt to take mmap_sem. This makes
+ * probe_user_read() suitable for use within regions where the caller
+ * already holds mmap_sem, or other locks which nest inside mmap_sem.
+ */
+
+#ifndef probe_user_read
+static __always_inline long probe_user_read(void *dst, const void __user *src,
+ size_t size)
+{
+ long ret;
+
+ if (!access_ok(src, size))
+ return -EFAULT;
+
+ pagefault_disable();
+ ret = __copy_from_user_inatomic(dst, src, size);
+ pagefault_enable();
+
+ return ret ? -EFAULT : 0;
+}
+#endif
Why was the __always_inline needed?
This function is pretty large. Why is it inlined?