Re: [PATCH v2] ntp: remove accidental integer wrap-around

From: Thomas Gleixner
Date: Fri May 24 2024 - 08:09:49 EST


On Fri, May 17 2024 at 20:22, Justin Stitt wrote:
> time_maxerror is unconditionally incremented and the result is checked
> against NTP_PHASE_LIMIT, but the increment itself can overflow,
> resulting in wrap-around to negative space.
>
> The user can supply some crazy values which is causing the overflow. Add
> an extra validation step checking that maxerror is reasonable.

The user can supply any value which can cause an overflow as the input
is unchecked. Add ...

Hmm?

> diff --git a/kernel/time/timekeeping.c b/kernel/time/timekeeping.c
> index b58dffc58a8f..321f251c02aa 100644
> --- a/kernel/time/timekeeping.c
> +++ b/kernel/time/timekeeping.c
> @@ -2388,6 +2388,11 @@ static int timekeeping_validate_timex(const struct __kernel_timex *txc)
> }
> }
>
> + if (txc->modes & ADJ_MAXERROR) {
> + if (txc->maxerror < 0 || txc->maxerror > NTP_PHASE_LIMIT)
> + return -EINVAL;
> + }

I dug into history to find a Fixes tag. That unearthed something
interesting. Exactly this check used to be there until commit
eea83d896e31 ("ntp: NTP4 user space bits update") which landed in
2.6.30. The change log says:

"If some values for adjtimex() are outside the acceptable range, they
are now simply normalized instead of letting the syscall fail."

The problem with that commit is that it did not do any normalization at
all and just relied on the actual time_maxerror handling in
second_overflow(), which is both insufficient and also prone to that
overflow issue.

So instead of turning the clock back, we might be better off to actually
put the normalization in place at the assignment:

time_maxerror = min(max(0, txc->maxerror), NTP_PHASE_LIMIT);

or something like that.

Miroslav: Any opinion on that?

Thanks,

tglx