On Mon, Jul 20, 2020 at 10:55:43AM -0700, Eric Biggers wrote: > On Mon, Jul 20, 2020 at 07:43:22PM +0200, Christoph Hellwig wrote: > > On Mon, Jul 20, 2020 at 09:37:48AM -0700, Eric Biggers wrote: > > > How does this not introduce a massive security hole when > > > CONFIG_ARCH_HAS_NON_OVERLAPPING_ADDRESS_SPACE? > > > > > > AFAICS, userspace can pass in a pointer >= TASK_SIZE, > > > and this code makes it be treated as a kernel pointer. > > > > Yeah, we'll need to validate that before initializing the pointer. > > > > But thinking this a little further: doesn't this mean any > > set_fs(KERNEL_DS) that has other user pointers than the one it is > > intended for has the same issue? Pretty much all of these are gone > > in mainline now, but in older stable kernels there might be some > > interesting cases, especially in the compat ioctl handlers. > > Yes. I thought that eliminating that class of bug is one of the main > motivations for your "remove set_fs" work. See commit 128394eff343 > ("sg_write()/bsg_write() is not fit to be called under KERNEL_DS") for a case > where this type of bug was fixed. > > Are you aware of any specific cases that weren't already fixed? If there are > any, they need to be urgently fixed. current mainline has almost no set_fs left, and setsockopt seems pretty much safe. But if we go back a long term stable release or two I bet I'd find one or two.