Hi, Le jeudi 25 septembre 2014 à 22:57 +0200, Heinrich Schuchardt a écrit : > On 24.09.2014 15:11, Yann Droneaud wrote: > > According to commit 80af258867648 ('fanotify: groups can specify > > their f_flags for new fd'), file descriptors created as part of > > file access notification events inherit flags from the > > event_f_flags argument passed to syscall fanotify_init(2). > > > > So while it is legal for userspace to call fanotify_init() with > > O_CLOEXEC as part of its second argument, O_CLOEXEC is currently > > silently ignored. > > > > Indeed event_f_flags are only given to dentry_open(), which only > > seems to care about O_ACCMODE and O_PATH in do_dentry_open(), > > O_DIRECT in open_check_o_direct() and O_LARGEFILE in > > generic_file_open(). > > I tested on kernel 3.17.0-rc5. I passed O_CLOEXEC in event_f_flags. > When I called fcnt(event_metadata->fd, F_GETFD) it did not return > FD_CLOEXEC. So I can confirm your observation that O_CLOEXEC is not > working as expected. > > I found this definition > #define get_unused_fd() get_unused_fd_flags(0) > > So essentially when get_unused_fd() is called for a fanotify event > O_CLOEXEC is ignored. > > This is what your patch fixes. > > > > > More, there's no effective check on event_f_flags value that > > would catch unknown / unsupported values, unlike the one on > > f_flags argument of the syscall (see FAN_ALL_INIT_FLAGS in > > include/uapi/linux/fanotify.h). > > The fanotify_init(2) man page describes which flags are allowable in > event_f_flags. > > Could you, please, explain why the following code in fanotify_user.c is > not to be considered an effective check: > > if (event_f_flags & ~FANOTIFY_INIT_ALL_EVENT_F_BITS) > return -EINVAL; > > switch (event_f_flags & O_ACCMODE) { > case O_RDONLY: > case O_RDWR: > case O_WRONLY: > break; > default: > return -EINVAL; > } > > I CC Jan Kara as he reviewed the code. > I missed the opportunity to update my commit message. I've sent my initial version of the patch (with the same wording) on 5th, January, 2014: http://mid.gmane.org/3d9591f81e62a78a726721c8052b3910870db35e.1388952061.git.ydroneaud@xxxxxxxxxx http://lkml.kernel.org/r/3d9591f81e62a78a726721c8052b3910870db35e.1388952061.git.ydroneaud@xxxxxxxxxx The patch was sent again on March, 11: http://lkml.kernel.org/r/baab31b572b216d13f2149bdf07e0f79a1bae660.1394532336.git.ydroneaud@xxxxxxxxxx http://mid.gmane.org/baab31b572b216d13f2149bdf07e0f79a1bae660.1394532336.git.ydroneaud@xxxxxxxxxx And another time, on June, 1st: http://lkml.kernel.org/r/2c6ab28980f0007ea3b9afa7ecd7497806a6a451.1401630396.git.ydroneaud@xxxxxxxxxx http://mid.gmane.org/2c6ab28980f0007ea3b9afa7ecd7497806a6a451.1401630396.git.ydroneaud@xxxxxxxxxx So as you can see, my patch predate yours: http://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=48149e9d3a7e924010a0daab30a6197b7d7b6580 But I have to apologize: I haven't noticed your patch was merged between my previous submission and the current one. My bad. I will update the commit message to remove my obsolete comment on the input parameter check. Thanks again for review and testing. Regards. -- Yann Droneaud OPTEYA -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-api" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html