Message ID | 20210901175144.121048-1-stephen.s.brennan@oracle.com (mailing list archive) |
---|---|
Headers | show |
Series | namei: fix use-after-free and adjust calling conventions | expand |
On Wed, Sep 01, 2021 at 10:51:40AM -0700, Stephen Brennan wrote: > Drawing from the comments on the last two patches from me and Dmitry, > the concensus is that __filename_parentat() is inherently buggy, and > should be removed. But there's some nice consistency to the way that > the other functions (filename_create, filename_lookup) are named which > would get broken. > > I looked at the callers of filename_create and filename_lookup. All are > small functions which are trivial to modify to include a putname(). It > seems to me that adding a few more lines to these functions is a good > traedoff for better clarity on lifetimes (as it's uncommon for functions > to drop references to their parameters) and better consistency. > > This small series combines the UAF fix from me, and the removal of > __filename_parentat() from Dmitry as patch 1. Then I standardize > filename_create() and filename_lookup() and their callers. For kern_path_locked() itself, I'd probably go for static struct dentry *__kern_path_locked(struct filename *name, struct path *path) { struct dentry *d; struct qstr last; int type, error; error = filename_parentat(AT_FDCWD, name, 0, path, &last, &type); if (error) return ERR_PTR(error); if (unlikely(type != LAST_NORM)) { path_put(path); return ERR_PTR(-EINVAL); } inode_lock_nested(path->dentry->d_inode, I_MUTEX_PARENT); d = __lookup_hash(&last, path->dentry, 0); if (IS_ERR(d)) { inode_unlock(path->dentry->d_inode); path_put(path); } return d; } static struct dentry *kern_path_locked(const char *name, struct path *path) { struct filename *filename = getname_kernel(name); struct dentry *res = __kern_path_locked(filename, path); putname(filename); return res; } instead of that messing with gotos - and split renaming from fix in that commit. In 3/3 you have a leak; trivial to fix, fortunately. Another part I really dislike in that area (not your fault, obviously) is void putname(struct filename *name) { if (IS_ERR_OR_NULL(name)) return; in mainline right now. Could somebody explain when the hell has NULL become a possibility here? OK, I buy putname(ERR_PTR(...)) being a no-op, but IME every sodding time we mixed NULL and ERR_PTR() in an API we ended up with headache later. IS_ERR_OR_NULL() is almost always wrong. NULL as argument for destructor makes sense when constructor can fail with NULL; not the case here. How about the variant in vfs.git#misc.namei?
Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk> writes: > On Wed, Sep 01, 2021 at 10:51:40AM -0700, Stephen Brennan wrote: >> Drawing from the comments on the last two patches from me and Dmitry, >> the concensus is that __filename_parentat() is inherently buggy, and >> should be removed. But there's some nice consistency to the way that >> the other functions (filename_create, filename_lookup) are named which >> would get broken. >> >> I looked at the callers of filename_create and filename_lookup. All are >> small functions which are trivial to modify to include a putname(). It >> seems to me that adding a few more lines to these functions is a good >> traedoff for better clarity on lifetimes (as it's uncommon for functions >> to drop references to their parameters) and better consistency. >> >> This small series combines the UAF fix from me, and the removal of >> __filename_parentat() from Dmitry as patch 1. Then I standardize >> filename_create() and filename_lookup() and their callers. > > For kern_path_locked() itself, I'd probably go for > > static struct dentry *__kern_path_locked(struct filename *name, struct path *path) > { > struct dentry *d; > struct qstr last; > int type, error; > > error = filename_parentat(AT_FDCWD, name, 0, path, > &last, &type); > if (error) > return ERR_PTR(error); > if (unlikely(type != LAST_NORM)) { > path_put(path); > return ERR_PTR(-EINVAL); > } > inode_lock_nested(path->dentry->d_inode, I_MUTEX_PARENT); > d = __lookup_hash(&last, path->dentry, 0); > if (IS_ERR(d)) { > inode_unlock(path->dentry->d_inode); > path_put(path); > } > return d; > } > > static struct dentry *kern_path_locked(const char *name, struct path *path) > { > struct filename *filename = getname_kernel(name); > struct dentry *res = __kern_path_locked(filename, path); > > putname(filename); > return res; > } > > instead of that messing with gotos - and split renaming from fix in that > commit. In 3/3 you have a leak; trivial to fix, fortunately. Got it. My v2 crossed paths with your message here, it only fixes the leak but not the kern_path_locked() change and split. Please ignore it and I'll adjust patch 1 for v3. > > Another part I really dislike in that area (not your fault, obviously) > is > > void putname(struct filename *name) > { > if (IS_ERR_OR_NULL(name)) > return; > > in mainline right now. Could somebody explain when the hell has NULL > become a possibility here? OK, I buy putname(ERR_PTR(...)) being > a no-op, but IME every sodding time we mixed NULL and ERR_PTR() in > an API we ended up with headache later. From the links in the blame it seems this was suggested by Linus here[1]. The core frustration having been with the state of __filename_create() and friends freeing filenames at different times depending on whether an error occurred. [1] https://lore.kernel.org/io-uring/CAHk-=wgCac9hBsYzKMpHk0EbLgQaXR=OUAjHaBtaY+G8A9KhFg@mail.gmail.com/ Thanks, Stephen > IS_ERR_OR_NULL() is almost always wrong. NULL as argument > for destructor makes sense when constructor can fail with NULL; > not the case here. > > How about the variant in vfs.git#misc.namei?
On Tue, Sep 07, 2021 at 02:43:48PM -0700, Stephen Brennan wrote: > >From the links in the blame it seems this was suggested by Linus > here[1]. The core frustration having been with the state of > __filename_create() and friends freeing filenames at different times > depending on whether an error occurred. Sure, but that's an argument for IS_ERR(), not the IS_ERR_OR_NULL() shite...
Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk> writes: > [snip] > Another part I really dislike in that area (not your fault, obviously) > is > > void putname(struct filename *name) > { > if (IS_ERR_OR_NULL(name)) > return; > > in mainline right now. Could somebody explain when the hell has NULL > become a possibility here? OK, I buy putname(ERR_PTR(...)) being > a no-op, but IME every sodding time we mixed NULL and ERR_PTR() in > an API we ended up with headache later. > > IS_ERR_OR_NULL() is almost always wrong. NULL as argument > for destructor makes sense when constructor can fail with NULL; > not the case here. > > How about the variant in vfs.git#misc.namei? I went and looked through the changelog of fs/namei.c since this was changed and don't see anything setting a filename NULL, so it seems safe and good to me. I couldn't check *every* user of filename but the change was only two months ago. Feel free to use my r-b for that commit if you want. Reviewed-by: Stephen Brennan <stephen.s.brennan@oracle.com>