From: Hou Tao <houtao1@xxxxxxxxxx> On 32-bit hosts (e.g., arm32), when a bpf program passes a u64 to bpf_iter_bits_new(), bpf_iter_bits_new() will use bits_copy to store the content of the u64. However, bits_copy is only 4 bytes, leading to stack corruption. The straightforward solution would be to replace u64 with unsigned long in bpf_iter_bits_new(). However, this introduces confusion and problems for 32-bit hosts because the size of ulong in bpf program is 8 bytes, but it is treated as 4-bytes after passed to bpf_iter_bits_new(). Fix it by changing the type of both bits and bit_count from unsigned long to u64. However, the change is not enough. The main reason is that bpf_iter_bits_next() uses find_next_bit() to find the next bit and the pointer passed to find_next_bit() is an unsigned long pointer instead of a u64 pointer. For 32-bit little-endian host, it is fine but it is not the case for 32-bit big-endian host. Because under 32-bit big-endian host, the first iterated unsigned long will be the bits 32-63 of the u64 instead of the expected bits 0-31. Therefore, in addition to changing the type, swap the two unsigned longs within the u64 for 32-bit big-endian host. Signed-off-by: Hou Tao <houtao1@xxxxxxxxxx> --- kernel/bpf/helpers.c | 33 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++--- 1 file changed, 30 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) diff --git a/kernel/bpf/helpers.c b/kernel/bpf/helpers.c index daec74820dbe..824718349958 100644 --- a/kernel/bpf/helpers.c +++ b/kernel/bpf/helpers.c @@ -2855,13 +2855,36 @@ struct bpf_iter_bits { struct bpf_iter_bits_kern { union { - unsigned long *bits; - unsigned long bits_copy; + __u64 *bits; + __u64 bits_copy; }; int nr_bits; int bit; } __aligned(8); +/* On 64-bit hosts, unsigned long and u64 have the same size, so passing + * a u64 pointer and an unsigned long pointer to find_next_bit() will + * return the same result, as both point to the same 8-byte area. + * + * For 32-bit little-endian hosts, using a u64 pointer or unsigned long + * pointer also makes no difference. This is because the first iterated + * unsigned long is composed of bits 0-31 of the u64 and the second unsigned + * long is composed of bits 32-63 of the u64. + * + * However, for 32-bit big-endian hosts, this is not the case. The first + * iterated unsigned long will be bits 32-63 of the u64, so swap these two + * ulong values within the u64. + */ +static void swap_ulong_in_u64(u64 *bits, unsigned int nr) +{ +#if !defined(CONFIG_64BIT) && defined(__BIG_ENDIAN) + unsigned int i; + + for (i = 0; i < nr; i++) + bits[i] = (bits[i] >> 32) | ((u64)(u32)bits[i] << 32); +#endif +} + /** * bpf_iter_bits_new() - Initialize a new bits iterator for a given memory area * @it: The new bpf_iter_bits to be created @@ -2906,6 +2929,8 @@ bpf_iter_bits_new(struct bpf_iter_bits *it, const u64 *unsafe_ptr__ign, u32 nr_w if (err) return -EFAULT; + swap_ulong_in_u64(&kit->bits_copy, nr_words); + kit->nr_bits = nr_bits; return 0; } @@ -2924,6 +2949,8 @@ bpf_iter_bits_new(struct bpf_iter_bits *it, const u64 *unsafe_ptr__ign, u32 nr_w return err; } + swap_ulong_in_u64(kit->bits, nr_words); + kit->nr_bits = nr_bits; return 0; } @@ -2941,7 +2968,7 @@ __bpf_kfunc int *bpf_iter_bits_next(struct bpf_iter_bits *it) { struct bpf_iter_bits_kern *kit = (void *)it; int bit = kit->bit, nr_bits = kit->nr_bits; - const unsigned long *bits; + const void *bits; if (!nr_bits || bit >= nr_bits) return NULL; -- 2.29.2