On 07/05/2018 23:49, Tetsuo Handa wrote: > On 2018/05/08 2:19, Paolo Bonzini wrote: >>> ------------[ cut here ]------------ >>> DEBUG_LOCKS_WARN_ON(__owner_task(owner) != current) >>> WARNING: CPU: 0 PID: 4525 at kernel/locking/mutex.c:1032 >>> __mutex_unlock_slowpath+0x62e/0x8a0 kernel/locking/mutex.c:1032 >>> Kernel panic - not syncing: panic_on_warn set ... >> >> This doesn't make much sense, unless it's a "generic" memory corruption, >> but at least the reproducer seems to be simple, just (in pseudocode) >> >> ioctl(kvm_vm_fd, KVM_HYPERV_EVENTFD, >> { fd = some_eventfd, conn_id = 0, flags = 0 }) >> ioctl(kvm_vm_fd, KVM_HYPERV_EVENTFD, >> { fd = -1, conn_id = 5, flags = KVM_HYPERV_EVENTFD_DEASSIGN }) >> > > This makes much sense if this is use-after-free memory access which was > manifested differently due to reallocated after released. > > mutex_lock(&hv->hv_lock); > eventfd = idr_remove(&hv->conn_to_evt, conn_id); // <= Memory block containing hv->hv_lock was released by other thread and reallocated by other thread. > mutex_unlock(&hv->hv_lock); // <= Hence, __owner_task(owner) != current at this point. Yes, but hv is part of the "struct kvm" and it should only be freed after kvm_vm_fd (in the above pseudocode) is gone, so after both ioctls are finished. Unlike other syzkaller testcases this one doesn't really require parallelism. Paolo