Hello everyone, On Sat, Oct 10, 2020 at 11:24:56PM -0700, Lokesh Gidra wrote: > With this change, when the knob is set to 0, it allows unprivileged > users to call userfaultfd, like when it is set to 1, but with the > restriction that page faults from only user-mode can be handled. > In this mode, an unprivileged user (without SYS_CAP_PTRACE capability) > must pass UFFD_USER_MODE_ONLY to userfaultd or the API will fail with > EPERM. > > This enables administrators to reduce the likelihood that > an attacker with access to userfaultfd can delay faulting kernel > code to widen timing windows for other exploits. > > The default value of this knob is changed to 0. This is required for > correct functioning of pipe mutex. However, this will fail postcopy > live migration, which will be unnoticeable to the VM guests. To avoid > this, set 'vm.userfault = 1' in /sys/sysctl.conf. For more details, > refer to Andrea's reply [1]. > > [1] https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/20200904033438.GI9411@xxxxxxxxxx/ > > Signed-off-by: Lokesh Gidra <lokeshgidra@xxxxxxxxxx> Nobody commented so it seems everyone is on board with this change to synchronize the kernel default with the post-boot Android default. The email in the link above was pretty long, so the below would be a summary that could be added to the commit header: == The main reason this change is desirable as in the short term is that the Android userland will behave as with the sysctl set to zero. So without this commit, any Linux binary using userfaultfd to manage its memory would behave differently if run within the Android userland. == Reviewed-by: Andrea Arcangeli <aarcange@xxxxxxxxxx> BTW, this is still a minor nitpick, but a printk_once of the 1/2 could be added before the return -EPERM too, that's actually what I meant when I suggested to add a printk_once :), however the printk_once you added can turn out to be useful too for devs converting code to use bounce buffers, so it's fine too, just it could go under DEBUG_VM and to be ratelimited (similarly to the "FAULT_FLAG_ALLOW_RETRY missing %x\n" printk). Thanks, Andrea