Re: [PATCH v2] ACPI/IORT: Fix GCC 12 warning

From: Robin Murphy
Date: Fri Feb 11 2022 - 05:34:55 EST


Hi Kees,

On 2022-02-10 23:47, Kees Cook wrote:
On Thu, Feb 10, 2022 at 08:41:51PM +0100, Ard Biesheuvel wrote:
On Thu, 10 Feb 2022 at 19:48, Victor Erminpour
<victor.erminpour@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

When building with automatic stack variable initialization, GCC 12
complains about variables defined outside of switch case statements.
Move the variable into the case that uses it, which silences the warning:

./drivers/acpi/arm64/iort.c:1670:59: error: statement will never be executed [-Werror=switch-unreachable]
1670 | struct acpi_iort_named_component *ncomp;
| ^~~~~

Signed-off-by: Victor Erminpour <victor.erminpour@xxxxxxxxxx>

Please cc people that commented on your v1 when you send a v2.

Still NAK, for the same reasons.

Let me see if I can talk you out of this. ;)

So, on the face of it, I agree with you: this is a compiler bug. However,
it's still worth fixing. Just because it's valid C isn't a good enough
reason to leave it as-is: we continue to minimize the subset of the
C language the kernel uses if it helps us get the most out of existing
compiler features. We've eliminated all kinds of other "valid C" from the
kernel because it improves robustness, security, etc. This is certainly
nothing like removing VLAs or implicit fallthrough, but given that this
is, I think, the only remaining case of it (I removed all the others a
while ago when I had the same issues with the GCC plugins), I'd like to
get it fixed.

It concerns me if minimising the subset of the C language that the kernel uses is achieved by converting more of the kernel to a not-quite-C language that is not formally specified anywhere, by prematurely adopting newly-invented compiler options that clearly don't work properly (the GCC warning message quoted above may as well be "error: giraffes are not purple" for all the sense it makes.)

And I should point out that Clang suffers[1] from the same problem (the
variables will be missed for auto-initialization), but actually has a
worse behavior: it does not even warn about it.

And note that the problem isn't limited to -ftrivial-auto-var-init. This
code pattern seems to also hide the variables from similar instrumentation
like KASan, etc. (Which is similarly silent like above.)

From your security standpoint (and believe me, I really do have faith in your expertise here), which of these sounds better:

1: Being able to audit code based on well-defined language semantics

2: Playing whack-a-mole as issues are discovered empirically.

3: Neither of the above, but a warm fuzzy feeling because hey someone said "security" in a commit message.

AFAICS you're effectively voting against #1, and the examples you've given demonstrate that #2 is nowhere near reliable enough either, so where does that leave us WRT actual secure and robust code in Linux?

In both compilers, it seems fixing this is not "easy", and given its
corner-case nature and ease of being worked around in the kernel source,
it isn't being highly prioritized. But since I both don't want these
blinds spots with Clang (and GCC) var-init, and I don't want these
warnings to suddenly appear once GCC 12 _does_ get released, so I'd like
to get this case fixed as well.

All that said, I think this patch could be improved.

I'd recommend, instead, just simply:

diff --git a/drivers/acpi/arm64/iort.c b/drivers/acpi/arm64/iort.c
index f2f8f05662de..9e765d30da82 100644
--- a/drivers/acpi/arm64/iort.c
+++ b/drivers/acpi/arm64/iort.c
@@ -1671,13 +1671,14 @@ phys_addr_t __init acpi_iort_dma_get_max_cpu_address(void)
end = ACPI_ADD_PTR(struct acpi_iort_node, iort, iort->header.length);
for (i = 0; i < iort->node_count; i++) {
+ struct acpi_iort_named_component *ncomp;
+ struct acpi_iort_root_complex *rc;
+ phys_addr_t local_limit;
+
if (node >= end)
break;
switch (node->type) {
- struct acpi_iort_named_component *ncomp;
- struct acpi_iort_root_complex *rc;
- phys_addr_t local_limit;
case ACPI_IORT_NODE_NAMED_COMPONENT:
ncomp = (struct acpi_iort_named_component *)node->node_data;

This results in no change in binary instruction output (when there is no
auto-init).

In fairness I'd have no objection to that patch if it came with a convincing justification, but that is so far very much lacking. My aim here is not to be a change-averse Luddite, but to try to find a compromise where I can actually have some confidence in such changes being made. Let's not start pretending that 3 100ml bottles of shampoo are somehow "safer" than a 300ml bottle of shampoo...

Thanks,
Robin.


-Kees

[1] https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/44261



---
drivers/acpi/arm64/iort.c | 12 ++++++------
1 file changed, 6 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-)

diff --git a/drivers/acpi/arm64/iort.c b/drivers/acpi/arm64/iort.c
index 3b23fb775ac4..65395f0decf9 100644
--- a/drivers/acpi/arm64/iort.c
+++ b/drivers/acpi/arm64/iort.c
@@ -1645,7 +1645,7 @@ void __init acpi_iort_init(void)
*/
phys_addr_t __init acpi_iort_dma_get_max_cpu_address(void)
{
- phys_addr_t limit = PHYS_ADDR_MAX;
+ phys_addr_t local_limit, limit = PHYS_ADDR_MAX;
struct acpi_iort_node *node, *end;
struct acpi_table_iort *iort;
acpi_status status;
@@ -1667,17 +1667,16 @@ phys_addr_t __init acpi_iort_dma_get_max_cpu_address(void)
break;

switch (node->type) {
+ case ACPI_IORT_NODE_NAMED_COMPONENT: {
struct acpi_iort_named_component *ncomp;
- struct acpi_iort_root_complex *rc;
- phys_addr_t local_limit;
-
- case ACPI_IORT_NODE_NAMED_COMPONENT:
ncomp = (struct acpi_iort_named_component *)node->node_data;
local_limit = DMA_BIT_MASK(ncomp->memory_address_limit);
limit = min_not_zero(limit, local_limit);
break;

- case ACPI_IORT_NODE_PCI_ROOT_COMPLEX:
+ }
+ case ACPI_IORT_NODE_PCI_ROOT_COMPLEX: {
+ struct acpi_iort_root_complex *rc;
if (node->revision < 1)
break;

@@ -1686,6 +1685,7 @@ phys_addr_t __init acpi_iort_dma_get_max_cpu_address(void)
limit = min_not_zero(limit, local_limit);
break;
}
+ }
node = ACPI_ADD_PTR(struct acpi_iort_node, node, node->length);
}
acpi_put_table(&iort->header);

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