Re: [PATCH] bpf: Fix pointer-leak due to insufficient speculative store bypass mitigation

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On 1/9/23 4:05 PM, Luis Gerhorst wrote:
To mitigate Spectre v4, 2039f26f3aca ("bpf: Fix leakage due to
insufficient speculative store bypass mitigation") inserts lfence
instructions after 1) initializing a stack slot and 2) spilling a
pointer to the stack.

However, this does not cover cases where a stack slot is first
initialized with a pointer (subject to sanitization) but then
overwritten with a scalar (not subject to sanitization because the slot
was already initialized). In this case, the second write may be subject
to speculative store bypass (SSB) creating a speculative
pointer-as-scalar type confusion. This allows the program to
subsequently leak the numerical pointer value using, for example, a
branch-based cache side channel.

To fix this, also sanitize scalars if they write a stack slot that
previously contained a pointer. Assuming that pointer-spills are only
generated by LLVM on register-pressure, the performance impact on most
real-world BPF programs should be small.

The following unprivileged BPF bytecode drafts a minimal exploit and the
mitigation:

   [...]
   // r6 = 0 or 1 (skalar, unknown user input)
   // r7 = accessible ptr for side channel
   // r10 = frame pointer (fp), to be leaked
   //
   r9 = r10 # fp alias to encourage ssb
   *(u64 *)(r9 - 8) = r10 // fp[-8] = ptr, to be leaked
   // lfence added here because of pointer spill to stack.
   //
   // Ommitted: Dummy bpf_ringbuf_output() here to train alias predictor
   // for no r9-r10 dependency.
   //
   *(u64 *)(r10 - 8) = r6 // fp[-8] = scalar, overwrites ptr
   // 2039f26f3aca: no lfence added because stack slot was not STACK_INVALID,
   // store may be subject to SSB
   //
   // fix: also add an lfence when the slot contained a ptr
   //
   r8 = *(u64 *)(r9 - 8)
   // r8 = architecturally a scalar, speculatively a ptr
   //
   // leak ptr using branch-based cache side channel:
   r8 &= 1 // choose bit to leak
   if r8 == 0 goto SLOW // no mispredict
   // architecturally dead code if input r6 is 0,
   // only executes speculatively iff ptr bit is 1
   r8 = *(u64 *)(r7 + 0) # encode bit in cache (0: slow, 1: fast)
SLOW:
   [...]

After running this, the program can time the access to *(r7 + 0) to
determine whether the chosen pointer bit was 0 or 1. Repeat this 64
times to recover the whole address on amd64.

In summary, sanitization can only be skipped if one scalar is
overwritten with another scalar. Scalar-confusion due to speculative
store bypass can not lead to invalid accesses because the pointer bounds
deducted during verification are enforced using branchless logic. See
979d63d50c0c ("bpf: prevent out of bounds speculation on pointer
arithmetic") for details.

Do not make the mitigation depend on
!env->allow_{uninit_stack,ptr_leaks} because speculative leaks are
likely unexpected if these were enabled. For example, leaking the
address to a protected log file may be acceptable while disabling the
mitigation might unintentionally leak the address into the cached-state
of a map that is accessible to unprivileged processes.

Fixes: 2039f26f3aca ("bpf: Fix leakage due to insufficient speculative store bypass mitigation")
Signed-off-by: Luis Gerhorst <gerhorst@xxxxxxxxx>
Acked-by: Henriette Hofmeier <henriette.hofmeier@xxxxxx>

This looks good to me, thank you for the research on this topic! Applied
to bpf tree. (I've also added a link tag to your other mail.)

https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/bpf/bpf.git/commit/?id=e4f4db47794c9f474b184ee1418f42e6a07412b6

Thanks,
Daniel



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