• Alexandru Elisei's avatar
    arm64: compat: Do not treat syscall number as ESR_ELx for a bad syscall · 3fed9e55
    Alexandru Elisei authored
    If a compat process tries to execute an unknown system call above the
    __ARM_NR_COMPAT_END number, the kernel sends a SIGILL signal to the
    offending process. Information about the error is printed to dmesg in
    compat_arm_syscall() -> arm64_notify_die() -> arm64_force_sig_fault() ->
    arm64_show_signal().
    
    arm64_show_signal() interprets a non-zero value for
    current->thread.fault_code as an exception syndrome and displays the
    message associated with the ESR_ELx.EC field (bits 31:26).
    current->thread.fault_code is set in compat_arm_syscall() ->
    arm64_notify_die() with the bad syscall number instead of a valid ESR_ELx
    value. This means that the ESR_ELx.EC field has the value that the user set
    for the syscall number and the kernel can end up printing bogus exception
    messages*. For example, for the syscall number 0x68000000, which evaluates
    to ESR_ELx.EC value of 0x1A (ESR_ELx_EC_FPAC) the kernel prints this error:
    
    [   18.349161] syscall[300]: unhandled exception: ERET/ERETAA/ERETAB, ESR 0x68000000, Oops - bad compat syscall(2) in syscall[10000+50000]
    [   18.350639] CPU: 2 PID: 300 Comm: syscall Not tainted 5.18.0-rc1 #79
    [   18.351249] Hardware name: Pine64 RockPro64 v2.0 (DT)
    [..]
    
    which is misleading, as the bad compat syscall has nothing to do with
    pointer authentication.
    
    Stop arm64_show_signal() from printing exception syndrome information by
    having compat_arm_syscall() set the ESR_ELx value to 0, as it has no
    meaning for an invalid system call number. The example above now becomes:
    
    [   19.935275] syscall[301]: unhandled exception: Oops - bad compat syscall(2) in syscall[10000+50000]
    [   19.936124] CPU: 1 PID: 301 Comm: syscall Not tainted 5.18.0-rc1-00005-g7e08006d4102 #80
    [   19.936894] Hardware name: Pine64 RockPro64 v2.0 (DT)
    [..]
    
    which although shows less information because the syscall number,
    wrongfully advertised as the ESR value, is missing, it is better than
    showing plainly wrong information. The syscall number can be easily
    obtained with strace.
    
    *A 32-bit value above or equal to 0x8000_0000 is interpreted as a negative
    integer in compat_arm_syscal() and the condition scno < __ARM_NR_COMPAT_END
    evaluates to true; the syscall will exit to userspace in this case with the
    ENOSYS error code instead of arm64_notify_die() being called.
    Signed-off-by: default avatarAlexandru Elisei <alexandru.elisei@arm.com>
    Reviewed-by: default avatarMarc Zyngier <maz@kernel.org>
    Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20220425114444.368693-3-alexandru.elisei@arm.comSigned-off-by: default avatarCatalin Marinas <catalin.marinas@arm.com>
    3fed9e55
sys_compat.c 2.95 KB