Hello Daniel, On 5/4/22 11:47, Daniel Vetter wrote: > On Mon, May 02, 2022 at 03:09:44PM +0200, Javier Martinez Canillas wrote: >> A reference to the framebuffer device struct fb_info is stored in the file >> private data, but this reference could no longer be valid and must not be >> accessed directly. Instead, the file_fb_info() accessor function must be >> used since it does sanity checking to make sure that the fb_info is valid. >> >> This can happen for example if the fbdev driver was one that is using a >> framebuffer provided by the system firmware. In that case, the fbdev core >> could unregister the framebuffer device if a real video driver is probed. >> >> Reported-by: Maxime Ripard <maxime@xxxxxxxxxx> >> Signed-off-by: Javier Martinez Canillas <javierm@xxxxxxxxxx> > > Doesn't this mean we just leak the references? Also anything the driver > might refcount in fb_open would be leaked too. > It maybe result in leaks, that's true. But I don't think we can do anything at this point since the fb_info just went away and the file->private_data reference is no longer valid... > I'm not sure what exactly you're trying to fix here, but this looks a bit > wrong. > This is fixing a NULL pointer deref that at least 3 people reported, i.e: https://github.com/raspberrypi/linux/issues/5011 Because if a real DRM driver is probed, then the registered framebuffer is unregistered and the fb_info just freed. But user-space has no way to know and on close the kernel will try to dereference a NULL pointer. > Maybe stepping back what fbdev would need, but doesn't have (see the > commit reference I dropped on the previous version) is drm_dev_enter/exit > around hw access. the file_fb_info check essentially provides that, but > with races and everything. > Yes, but I don't know how that could work since user-space can just open the fbdev, mmap it, write to the mmap'ed memory and then close it. The only way that this could be done safely AFAICT is if we prevent the real video drivers to be registered if the fbdev is currently mmap'ed. Otherwise, the firmware initialized framebuffer will go away anyways and things will break for the user-space process that's currently using it. -- Best regards, Javier Martinez Canillas Linux Engineering Red Hat