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Message-ID: <202401111001.78284D8F@keescook>
Date: Thu, 11 Jan 2024 10:13:44 -0800
From: Kees Cook <keescook@...omium.org>
To: Dan Carpenter <dan.carpenter@...aro.org>
Cc: "Gustavo A. R. Silva" <gustavo@...eddedor.com>,
Harshit Mogalapalli <harshit.m.mogalapalli@...cle.com>,
linux-hardening@...r.kernel.org, error27@...il.com,
gustavoars@...nel.org, Bryan Tan <bryantan@...are.com>,
Vishnu Dasa <vdasa@...are.com>,
VMware PV-Drivers Reviewers <pv-drivers@...are.com>,
Arnd Bergmann <arnd@...db.de>,
Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@...uxfoundation.org>,
linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org, vegard.nossum@...cle.com,
darren.kenny@...cle.com, syzkaller <syzkaller@...glegroups.com>
Subject: Re: [PATCH v2 2/2] VMCI: Fix memcpy() run-time warning in
dg_dispatch_as_host()
On Thu, Jan 11, 2024 at 10:15:40AM +0300, Dan Carpenter wrote:
> On Wed, Jan 10, 2024 at 04:03:28PM -0800, Kees Cook wrote:
> >
> > Oops, yes, thanks for fixing my confusion. Right, this is a direct write
> > across members into the flex array, not a composite destination. Yay
> > all the corner cases. :P
>
> Is there a document somewhere which explains what will trigger a runtime
> warning? For example, if you write across members but it's not into a
> flex array does that cause an issue? Or if you read across members?
There isn't a good place to find this. There are some code comments near
the memcpy macros, but that's not really sufficient.
At present FORTIFY is only being pedantic about _writes_, as that's
generally a higher priority problem. The implemented restriction is that
the destination buffer must be a single addressable struct member. That
destination can be a composite member (i.e. an entire substruct), but
going beyond a single member in a single memcpy() is no longer allowed
because the compiler cannot reason about whether such a copy is
"intentional".
> For example, this line reads from bulletin->vlan and
> bulletin->vlan_padding. This causes a compiler warning in Clang and
> GCC depending on the options but does it also trigger a runtime warning?
> https://elixir.bootlin.com/linux/latest/source/drivers/net/ethernet/broadcom/bnx2x/bnx2x_sriov.c#L2655
Right, the -Wstringop-overread and related compiler flags are doing the
source buffer size checking.
Note that for the compile-time warnings, GCC has the capacity to be much
more strict than the FORTIFY checks because it can perform value _range_
tracking, where as FORTIFY compile-time checks are limited to having the
copy size being a constant expression. (i.e. GCC may produce compile
time warnings for cases that FORTIFY will only warn about at runtime if
the range is violated.)
> (I wrote a patch for this a few months back but didn't send it because
> of the merge window. I forgot about it until now that we're in a merge
> window again... :P)
memcpy(&ivi->vlan, &bulletin->vlan, VLAN_HLEN);
#define VLAN_HLEN 4
ivi->vlan is u32
bulletin has:
u16 vlan;
u8 vlan_padding[6];
yeah, ew. Should it even be reading padding? i.e. should this be:
ivi->vlan = bulletin->vlan << 16;
?
Or should bulletin be:
union {
struct {
u16 vlan;
u8 vlan_padding[6];
};
struct {
u32 vlan_header;
u8 vlan_header_padding[4];
};
};
with:
ivi->vlan = bulletin->vlan_header;
?
I've been finding that almost all memcpy()s and memset()s into non-array
types are better just rewritten as a direct assignment. :P
--
Kees Cook
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