[PATCH] rpadlpar: fix potential drc_name corruption in store functions

Michael Ellerman michaele at au1.ibm.com
Mon Mar 15 13:52:31 AEDT 2021


Tyrel Datwyler <tyreld at linux.ibm.com> writes:
> On 3/13/21 1:17 AM, Michal Suchánek wrote:
>> On Wed, Mar 10, 2021 at 04:30:21PM -0600, Tyrel Datwyler wrote:
>>> Both add_slot_store() and remove_slot_store() try to fix up the drc_name
>>> copied from the store buffer by placing a NULL terminator at nbyte + 1
>>> or in place of a '\n' if present. However, the static buffer that we
>>> copy the drc_name data into is not zeored and can contain anything past
>>> the n-th byte. This is problematic if a '\n' byte appears in that buffer
>>> after nbytes and the string copied into the store buffer was not NULL
>>> terminated to start with as the strchr() search for a '\n' byte will mark
>>> this incorrectly as the end of the drc_name string resulting in a drc_name
>>> string that contains garbage data after the n-th byte. The following
>>> debugging shows an example of the drmgr utility writing "PHB 4543" to
>>> the add_slot sysfs attribute, but add_slot_store logging a corrupted
>>> string value.
>>>
>>> [135823.702864] drmgr: drmgr: -c phb -a -s PHB 4543 -d 1
>>> [135823.702879] add_slot_store: drc_name = PHB 4543°|<82>!, rc = -19
>>>
>>> Fix this by NULL terminating the string when we copy it into our static
>>> buffer by coping nbytes + 1 of data from the store buffer. The code has
>> Why is it OK to copy nbytes + 1 and why is it expected that the buffer
>> contains a nul after the content?
>
> It is my understanding that the store function buffer is allocated as a
> zeroed-page which the kernel copies up to at most (PAGE_SIZE - 1) of user data
> into. Anything after nbytes would therefore be zeroed.

I think that's true, but it would be nice if we didn't have to rely on
that obscure detail in order for this code to be correct & understandable.

>> Isn't it much saner to just nul terminate the string after copying?
>
> At the cost of an extra line of code, sure.

Is there a reason we can't use strscpy()? That should deal with all the
corner cases around the string copy, and then all you have to do is look
for a newline and turn it into nul.

cheers


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