Re: [PATCH] ext4: fix kernel segfault after iterator overflow
From: Theodore Ts'o
Date: Thu Jun 27 2024 - 09:27:52 EST
On Thu, Jun 27, 2024 at 10:56:01AM +0200, Jan Henrik Weinstock wrote:
> When search_buf gets placed at the end of the virtual address space
> de = (struct ext4_dir_entry_2 *) ((char *) de + de_len);
> might overflow to zero and a subsequent loop iteration will crash.
>
> Observed on a simulated riscv32 system using 2GB of memory and a rootfs
> on MMC.
>
> Signed-off-by: Jan Henrik Weinstock <jan@xxxxxx>
This is discussed earlier and the conclusion that it is a bug that on
RiscV architectures the kernel can hand out the last 4k page in the
address space. As Al Viro pointed out on this thread[1]:
>On Sat, Apr 13, 2024 at 07:46:03PM -0600, Andreas Dilger wrote:
>>
>> As to whether the 0xfffff000 address itself is valid for riscv32 is
>> outside my realm, but given that RAM is cheap it doesn't seem unlikely
>> to have 4GB+ of RAM and want to use it all. The riscv32 might consider
>> reserving this page address from allocation to avoid similar issues in
>> other parts of the code, as is done with the NULL/0 page address.
>
>Not a chance. *Any* page mapped there is a serious bug on any 32bit
>box. Recall what ERR_PTR() is...
>
>On any architecture the virtual addresses in range (unsigned long)-512..
>(unsigned long)-1 must never resolve to valid kernel objects.
>In other words, any kind of wraparound here is asking for an oops on
>attempts to access the elements of buffer - kernel dereference of
>(char *)0xfffff000 on a 32bit box is already a bug.
[1] https://lore.kernel.org/all/878r1ibpdn.fsf@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx/
In any case, if on the RiscV platform the mm layer hands out a page at
the very end of the address space, there will be **all** sorts of
failures, not just in this particular ext4 codepath. So this needs to
be fixed for RiscV in the mm layer.
Cheers,
- Ted