[PATCH 2/6] treewide: remove using list iterator after loop body as a ptr

Xiaomeng Tong xiam0nd.tong at gmail.com
Thu Mar 3 23:37:18 AEDT 2022


> From: Xiaomeng Tong
> > Sent: 03 March 2022 07:27
> > 
> > On Thu, 3 Mar 2022 04:58:23 +0000, David Laight wrote:
> > > on 3 Mar 2022 10:27:29 +0800, Xiaomeng Tong wrote:
> > > > The problem is the mis-use of iterator outside the loop on exit, and
> > > > the iterator will be the HEAD's container_of pointer which pointers
> > > > to a type-confused struct. Sidenote: The *mis-use* here refers to
> > > > mistakely access to other members of the struct, instead of the
> > > > list_head member which acutally is the valid HEAD.
> > >
> > > The problem is that the HEAD's container_of pointer should never
> > > be calculated at all.
> > > This is what is fundamentally broken about the current definition.
> > 
> > Yes, the rule is "the HEAD's container_of pointer should never be
> > calculated at all outside the loop", but how do you make sure everyone
> > follows this rule?
> > Everyone makes mistakes, but we can eliminate them all from the beginning
> > with the help of compiler which can catch such use-after-loop things.
> > 
> > > > IOW, you would dereference a (NULL + offset_of_member) address here.
> > >
> > >Where?
> > 
> > In the case where a developer do not follows the above rule, and mistakely
> > access a non-list-head member of the HEAD's container_of pointer outside
> > the loop. For example:
> >     struct req{
> >       int a;
> >       struct list_head h;
> >     }
> >     struct req *r;
> >     list_for_each_entry(r, HEAD, h) {
> >       if (r->a == 0x10)
> >         break;
> >     }
> >     // the developer made a mistake: he didn't take this situation into
> >     // account where all entries in the list are *r->a != 0x10*, and now
> >     // the r is the HEAD's container_of pointer.
> >     r->a = 0x20;
> > Thus the "r->a = 0x20" would dereference a (NULL + offset_of_member)
> > address here.
> 
> That is just a bug.
> No different to failing to check anything else might 'return'
> a NULL pointer.

Yes, but it‘s a mistake everyone has made and will make, we should avoid
this at the beginning with the help of compiler.

> Because it is a NULL dereference you find out pretty quickly.

AFAIK,NULL dereference is a undefined bahavior, can compiler quickly
catch it? Or it can only be applied to some simple/restricted cases.

> The existing loop leaves you with a valid pointer to something
> that isn't a list item.
> 
> > > > Please remind me if i missed something, thanks.
> > > >
> > > > Can you share your "alternative definitions" details? thanks!
> > >
> > > The loop should probably use as extra variable that points
> > > to the 'list node' in the next structure.
> > > Something like:
> > > 	for (xxx *iter = head->next;
> > > 		iter == &head ? ((item = NULL),0) : ((item = list_item(iter),1));
> > > 		iter = item->member->next) {
> > > 	   ...
> > > With a bit of casting you can use 'item' to hold 'iter'.
> > 
> > you still can not make sure everyone follows this rule:
> > "do not use iterator outside the loop" without the help of compiler,
> > because item is declared outside the loop.
> 
> That one has 'iter' defined in the loop.

Oh, sorry, I misunderstood. Then this is the same way with my way of
list_for_each_entry_inside(pos, type, head, member), which declare
the iterator inside the loop.
You go further and make things like "&pos->member == (head)" goes away
to avoid calculate the HEAD's container_of pointer, although the
calculation is harmless.

> 
> > BTW, to avoid ambiguity,the "alternative definitions" here i asked is
> > something from you in this context:
> > "OTOH there may be alternative definitions that can be used to get
> > the compiler (or other compiler-like tools) to detect broken code.
> > Even if the definition can't possibly generate a working kerrnel."
> 
> I was thinking of something like:
> 	if ((pos = list_first)), 1) pos = NULL else
> so that unchecked dereferences after the loop will be detectable
> as NULL pointer offsets - but that in itself isn't enough to avoid
> other warnings.
> 

Do you mean put this right after the loop (I changed somthing that i
do not understand, please correct me if i am worng, thanks):
       if (pos == list_first) pos = NULL; else
and compiler can detect the following NULL derefernce?
But if the NULL derefernce is just right after the loop originally,
it will be masked by the *else* keyword。

> > > > The "list_for_each_entry_inside(pos, type, head, member)" way makes
> > > > the iterator invisiable outside the loop, and would be catched by
> > > > compiler if use-after-loop things happened.
> > 
> > > It is also a compete PITA for anything doing a search.
> > 
> > You mean it would be a burden on search? can you show me some examples?
> 
> The whole business of having to save the pointer to the located item
> before breaking the loop, remembering to have set it to NULL earlier etc.

Ok, i see. And then you need pass a "item" to the list_for_each_entry macro
as a new argument.

> 
> It is so much better if you can just do:
> 		if (found)
> 			break;
> 
> 	David

this confused me. this way is better or the "save the pointer to the located item
before breaking the loop" one?

--
Xiaomeng Tong


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