Re: [PATCH 4.19 41/48] x86/unwind/orc: Prevent unwinding before ORC initialization

From: Josh Poimboeuf
Date: Thu May 14 2020 - 15:45:11 EST


On Wed, May 13, 2020 at 11:52:10PM +0200, Pavel Machek wrote:
> Hi!
>
> > From: Josh Poimboeuf <jpoimboe@xxxxxxxxxx>
> >
> > commit 98d0c8ebf77e0ba7c54a9ae05ea588f0e9e3f46e upstream.
> >
> > If the unwinder is called before the ORC data has been initialized,
> > orc_find() returns NULL, and it tries to fall back to using frame
> > pointers. This can cause some unexpected warnings during boot.
> >
> > Move the 'orc_init' check from orc_find() to __unwind_init(), so that it
> > doesn't even try to unwind from an uninitialized state.
>
> > @@ -563,6 +560,9 @@ EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(unwind_next_frame);
> > void __unwind_start(struct unwind_state *state, struct task_struct *task,
> > struct pt_regs *regs, unsigned long *first_frame)
> > {
> > + if (!orc_init)
> > + goto done;
> > +
> > memset(state, 0, sizeof(*state));
> > state->task = task;
> >
>
> As this returns the *state to the caller, should the "goto done" move
> below the memset? Otherwise we are returning partialy-initialized
> struct, which is ... weird.

Yeah, it is a little weird. In most cases it should be fine, but there
is an edge case where if there's a corrupt ORC table and this returns
early, 'arch_stack_walk_reliable() -> unwind_error()' could check an
uninitialized value.

Also the __unwind_start() error handling needs to set that error bit
anyway, in its error cases. I'll fix it up.

--
Josh