Re: [PATCH] time: copy tai value (International Atomic Time, in seconds) to output __user struct in get_old_timex32().

From: Thomas Gleixner
Date: Thu Dec 01 2022 - 07:42:08 EST


On Wed, Nov 23 2022 at 20:53, Arnd Bergmann wrote:
> On Wed, Nov 23, 2022, at 19:54, John Stultz wrote:
>>> --- a/kernel/time/time.c
>>> +++ b/kernel/time/time.c
>>> @@ -311,6 +311,7 @@ int get_old_timex32(struct __kernel_timex *txc, const struct old_timex32 __user
>>> txc->calcnt = tx32.calcnt;
>>> txc->errcnt = tx32.errcnt;
>>> txc->stbcnt = tx32.stbcnt;
>>> + txc->tai = tx32.tai;
>>>
>>
>> This does seem like something that was overlooked.
>>
>> Arnd: There isn't something more subtle I'm missing here, right?
>
> I agree. Looking at the git history, it seems that the tai field
> was added a long time ago in 153b5d054ac2 ("ntp: support for TAI").
> The commit correctly did the conversion for copying the data out
> of the kernel and did not copy the value in because it wasn't
> needed at the time.
>
> I don't see any user of the tai field that gets copied into
> the kernel, so the bug appears harmless, but Jacob's fix is
> nevertheless correct, as we should not use any uninitialized
> data in a structure that comes from userspace.

There is no uninitialized data. txc is zeroed at the beginning of that
function.

I agree that it's inconsistent vs. the regular adjtimex(), but as there
is no usage of the txc->tai value coming from user space it's pretty
much cosmetic.

Thanks,

tglx