Commit 65afac7d authored by Rusty Russell's avatar Rusty Russell

param: fix lots of bugs with writing charp params from sysfs, by leaking mem.

e180a6b7 "param: fix charp parameters set via sysfs" fixed the case
where charp parameters written via sysfs were freed, leaving drivers
accessing random memory.

Unfortunately, storing a flag in the kparam struct was a bad idea: it's
rodata so setting it causes an oops on some archs.  But that's not all:

1) module_param_array() on charp doesn't work reliably, since we use an
   uninitialized temporary struct kernel_param.
2) there's a fundamental race if a module uses this parameter and then
   it's changed: they will still access the old, freed, memory.

The simplest fix (ie. for 2.6.32) is to never free the memory.  This
prevents all these problems, at cost of a memory leak.  In practice, there
are only 18 places where a charp is writable via sysfs, and all are
root-only writable.
Reported-by: default avatarTakashi Iwai <tiwai@suse.de>
Cc: Sitsofe Wheeler <sitsofe@yahoo.com>
Cc: Frederic Weisbecker <fweisbec@gmail.com>
Cc: Christof Schmitt <christof.schmitt@de.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: default avatarRusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Cc: stable@kernel.org
parent 964fe080
...@@ -37,7 +37,6 @@ typedef int (*param_set_fn)(const char *val, struct kernel_param *kp); ...@@ -37,7 +37,6 @@ typedef int (*param_set_fn)(const char *val, struct kernel_param *kp);
typedef int (*param_get_fn)(char *buffer, struct kernel_param *kp); typedef int (*param_get_fn)(char *buffer, struct kernel_param *kp);
/* Flag bits for kernel_param.flags */ /* Flag bits for kernel_param.flags */
#define KPARAM_KMALLOCED 1
#define KPARAM_ISBOOL 2 #define KPARAM_ISBOOL 2
struct kernel_param { struct kernel_param {
......
...@@ -218,13 +218,9 @@ int param_set_charp(const char *val, struct kernel_param *kp) ...@@ -218,13 +218,9 @@ int param_set_charp(const char *val, struct kernel_param *kp)
return -ENOSPC; return -ENOSPC;
} }
if (kp->flags & KPARAM_KMALLOCED)
kfree(*(char **)kp->arg);
/* This is a hack. We can't need to strdup in early boot, and we /* This is a hack. We can't need to strdup in early boot, and we
* don't need to; this mangled commandline is preserved. */ * don't need to; this mangled commandline is preserved. */
if (slab_is_available()) { if (slab_is_available()) {
kp->flags |= KPARAM_KMALLOCED;
*(char **)kp->arg = kstrdup(val, GFP_KERNEL); *(char **)kp->arg = kstrdup(val, GFP_KERNEL);
if (!kp->arg) if (!kp->arg)
return -ENOMEM; return -ENOMEM;
...@@ -605,11 +601,7 @@ void module_param_sysfs_remove(struct module *mod) ...@@ -605,11 +601,7 @@ void module_param_sysfs_remove(struct module *mod)
void destroy_params(const struct kernel_param *params, unsigned num) void destroy_params(const struct kernel_param *params, unsigned num)
{ {
unsigned int i; /* FIXME: This should free kmalloced charp parameters. It doesn't. */
for (i = 0; i < num; i++)
if (params[i].flags & KPARAM_KMALLOCED)
kfree(*(char **)params[i].arg);
} }
static void __init kernel_add_sysfs_param(const char *name, static void __init kernel_add_sysfs_param(const char *name,
......
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