On Wed, 2019-11-27 at 11:47 -0800, Sean Christopherson wrote: > On Wed, Nov 27, 2019 at 04:25:55PM -0300, Leonardo Bras wrote: > > On Wed, 2019-11-27 at 19:32 +0100, Paolo Bonzini wrote: > > > On 27/11/19 19:24, Leonardo Bras wrote: > > > > By what I could undestand up to now, these functions that use borrowed > > > > references can only be called while the reference (file descriptor) > > > > exists. > > > > So, suppose these threads, where: > > > > - T1 uses a borrowed reference, and > > > > - T2 is releasing the reference (close, release): > > > > > > Nit: T2 is releasing the *last* reference (as implied by your reference > > > to close/release). > > > > Correct. > > > > > > T1 | T2 > > > > kvm_get_kvm() | > > > > ... | kvm_put_kvm() > > > > kvm_put_kvm_no_destroy() | > > > > > > > > The above would not trigger a use-after-free bug, but will cause a > > > > memory leak. Is my above understanding right? > > > > > > Yes, this is correct. > > > > > > > Then, what would not be a bug before (using kvm_put_kvm()) now is a > > memory leak (using kvm_put_kvm_no_destroy()). > > No, using kvm_put_kvm_no_destroy() changes how a bug would manifest, as > you note below. Replacing kvm_put_kvm() with kvm_put_kvm_no_destroy() > when the refcount is _guaranteed_ to be >1 has no impact on correctness. > Humm, so what about the above example with T1 and T2? > > And it's the price to avoid use-after-free on other cases, which is a > > worse bug. Ok, I get it. > > > > > Paolo > > > > On Tue, 2019-11-26 at 10:14 -0800, Sean Christopherson wrote: > > > If one these kvm_put_kvm() calls did unexpectedly free @kvm (due to > > > a bug somewhere else), KVM would still hit a use-after-free scenario > > > as the caller still thinks @kvm is valid. Currently, this would > > > only happen on a subsequent ioctl() on the caller's file descriptor > > > (which holds a pointer to @kvm), as the callers of these functions > > > don't directly dereference @kvm after the functions return. But, > > > not deferencing @kvm isn't deliberate or functionally required, it's > > > just how the code happens to be written. > > > > So, testing if the kvm reference is valid before running ioctl would be > > enough to avoid these bugs? > > No, the only way to avoid use-after-free bugs of this nature is to not > screw up the refcounting :-) This funky "borrowed reference" pattern is > not very common. It's necessary here because KVM needs to take an extra > reference to itself on behalf of the child device before installing the > child's file descriptor, because once the fd is installed it can be > closed by userspace and free the child's reference. The error path, > which uses kvm_put_kvm_no_destroy(), is used if and only if installing > the fd fails, in which case the extra reference is deliberately thrown > away. > > kvm_put_kvm_no_destroy() is asserting "N > 0" as a way to detect a > refcounting bug that wouldn't be detected (until later) by the normal > refcounting behavior, which asserts "N >= 0". > > > Is it possible? > > No. Similar to above, userspace gets a fd by doing open("/dev/kvm"), and > the semantics of KVM are such that each fd is a reference to KVM. From > userspace's perspective, having a valid fd *is* how it knows that it has > a valid KVM reference. > > > Humm, but if it frees kvm before running ->release(), would it mean the > > VM is destroyed incorrectly, and will probably crash? > > More than likely the host will crash due to corrupting memory. The guest > will crash too, but that's a secondary concern. Thanks for explaining, it's way more clear to me now how it works. Best regards, Leonardo Bras
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