BUG: possible NULL pointer dereference in nfs server
Rick Macklem
rmacklem at uoguelph.ca
Mon Jan 27 23:04:20 UTC 2014
Roman Divacky wrote:
> On Sat, Jan 25, 2014 at 09:05:54PM -0500, Rick Macklem wrote:
> > Bruce Evans wrote:
> > > On Sat, 25 Jan 2014, Dimitry Andric wrote:
> > >
> > > > On 25 Jan 2014, at 01:38, Rick Macklem <rmacklem at uoguelph.ca>
> > > > wrote:
> > > > ...
> > > > If it inlines this, the result looks approximately like:
> > > >
> > > > 1 {
> > > > 2 fhandle_t *fhp = NULL;
> > > > 3 struct nfslockfile *new_lfp;
> > > > 4 int error;
> > > > 5
> > > > 6 if (new_stp->ls_flags & NFSLCK_OPEN) {
> > > > 7 new_lfp = *NULL;
> > > > 8 fhp = &new_lfp->lf_fh;
> > > > 9 } else if (&nfh) {
> > > > 10 fhp = &nfh;
> > > > 11 } else {
> > > > 12 panic("nfsrv_getlockfh");
> > > > 13 }
> > > > 14 error = nfsvno_getfh(vp, fhp, p);
> > > > 15 NFSEXITCODE(error);
> > > > 16 getlckret = error;
> > > > 17 }
> > > >
> > > > The code in line 7 is the problematic part. Since this is
> > > > undefined,
> > > > the compiler inserts a trap instruction here. I think the
> > > > problem
> > > > Roman
> > > > encountered is that on sparc64, there is no equivalent to x86's
> > > > ud2
> > > > instruction, so it inserts a call to abort() instead, and that
> > > > function
> > > > is not available in kernel-land.
> > >
> > > Compiler bug. abort() is not available in freestanding
> > > implementations.
> > > The behaviour is only undefined if the null pointer is
> > > dereferenced
> > > at
> > > runtime, so it doesn't include failing to link to abort() at
> > > compile
> > > time.
> > >
> > > > ...
> > > >> Sorry, I'm not a compiler guy, so I don't know why a compiler
> > > >> would
> > > >> generate a trap instruction, but since new_lfpp is never NULL
> > > >> when
> > > >> this is executed, I don't see a problem.
> > > >>
> > > >> If others feel that this needs to be re-coded, please let me
> > > >> know
> > > >> what
> > > >> you think the code should look like? (A test for non-NULL with
> > > >> a
> > > >> panic()
> > > >> before it is used?)
> > > >>
> > > >> Is a trap instruction that never gets executed a problem?
> > > >
> > > > It's better to avoid undefined behavior in any case. Just add
> > > > a
> > > > NULL
> > > > check, that should be sufficient.
> > >
> > > That might only add bloat and unimprove debugging. Since the
> > > null
> > > pointer
> > > case cannot happen, it cannot be handed properly. It can be
> > > mishandled in
> > > the following ways:
> > > - return an error, so that all callers have to handle the null
> > > pointer case
> > > that can't happen. If the compiler is too smart, it will
> > > notice
> > > more
> > > undefined behaviour (that can't happen) in callers and "force"
> > > you
> > > to
> > > handle it there too
> > > - KASSERT() that the pointer cannot be null. Then:
> > > - on production systems where KASSERT() is null, this won't
> > > work
> > > around
> > > the compiler bug. Use a panic() instead. To maximize
> > > source
> > > code
> > > bloat, ifdef all of this.
> > > - when KASSERT() is not null, it will work around the compiler
> > > bug.
> > > If the case that can't happen actually happens, then this
> > > unimproves
> > > the debugging by messing up stack traces and turning
> > > restartable
> > > null pointer or SIGILL traps to non-restartable panics.
> > > Optimizations that replace a large block of code ending with
> > > a
> > > null pointer trap by a single unimplemented instruction
> > > would
> > > probably break restarting anyway.
> > >
> > > Bruce
> > >
> > So Roman, all I can suggest is to try adding something like:
> > if (new_lfpp == NULL)
> > panic("new_lfpp NULL");
> > after line#6. If that makes the compiler happy, I can commit it in
> > April. (Can't do commits before then.)
>
> The compiler already inserts "trap" instruction when such a condition
> happens so this seem superfluous.
>
Ok, now I'm confused. I thought the problem was an "abort()" call for
sparc64. I certainly run the code with the trap instruction in it and
since it never gets executed, it doesn't bother me on i386.
> > I agree with Bruce, but the check might be a good idea, in case a
> > future code change introduces a bug where the function is called
> > with
> > new_lfpp NULL and NFSLCK_OPEN set.
> >
> > If this doesn't make the compiler happy, all I can suggest is to
> > play around until you come up with something that works.
>
> KASSERT() doesnt communicate that it's an assert, because it can
> just log into console a carry on. Would you be ok with this patch?
>
> Index: fs/nfsserver/nfs_nfsdstate.c
> ===================================================================
> --- fs/nfsserver/nfs_nfsdstate.c (revision 261037)
> +++ fs/nfsserver/nfs_nfsdstate.c (working copy)
> @@ -1384,7 +1384,8 @@
> * If we are doing Lock/LockU and local locking is enabled,
> sleep
> * lock the nfslockfile structure.
> */
> - getlckret = nfsrv_getlockfh(vp, new_stp->ls_flags, NULL,
> &nfh, p);
> + KASSERT((new_stp->ls_flags & NFSLCK_OPEN) == 0,
> ("nfsrv_lockctrl: calling nfsrv_getlockfh with NFSLCK_OPEN"));
> + getlckret = nfsrv_getlockfh(vp, new_stp->ls_flags &
> ~NFSLCK_OPEN, NULL, &nfh, p);
> NFSLOCKSTATE();
> if (getlckret == 0) {
> if ((new_stp->ls_flags & (NFSLCK_LOCK |
> NFSLCK_UNLOCK)) != 0 &&
>
>
> > Have fun with it, rick
> > ps: I haven't seen this reported by tinderbox. Is the problem
> > specific to your setup?
>
Yea, so long as it includes a comment that states this is done to
work around a stupid compiler bug.
> It is present even in your setup :) Just "objdump -d kernel | grep
> ud2" on kernel compiled
> by clang.
>
I actually use gcc, but I believe you. I'll admit I still don't understand
why having a trap instruction that never gets executed is a bad thing?
I can commit the above in April. If for some reason the fix is needed sooner,
we'll need to find someone else willing to do the commit.
rick
> Roman
>
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