On Wed, Oct 17, 2018 at 03:01:17PM -0700, Andrew Morton wrote: > On Fri, 31 Aug 2018 15:05:38 +0100 Colin King <colin.king@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > From: Colin Ian King <colin.king@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> > > > > Currently extent and index i are both being incremented causing > > an array out of bounds read on extent[i]. Fix this by removing > > the extraneous increment of extent. > > > > Detected by CoverityScan, CID#711541 ("Out of bounds read") > > > > Fixes: d1081202f1d0 ("HFS rewrite") > > No such commit here. I assume this is 7cb74be6fd827e314f8. Sorry, I missed that. This bug has actually been here since before the first git commit. > > > --- a/fs/hfs/extent.c > > +++ b/fs/hfs/extent.c > > @@ -300,7 +300,7 @@ int hfs_free_fork(struct super_block *sb, struct hfs_cat_file *file, int type) > > return 0; > > > > blocks = 0; > > - for (i = 0; i < 3; extent++, i++) > > + for (i = 0; i < 3; i++) > > blocks += be16_to_cpu(extent[i].count); > > > > res = hfs_free_extents(sb, extent, blocks, blocks); > > Well, that's quite the bug. Question is, why didn't anyone notice it. > What are the runtime effects? This is only triggered when deleting a file with a resource fork. I may be wrong because the documentation isn't clear, but I don't think you can create those under linux. So I guess nobody was testing them. > A disk space leak, perhaps? That's what it looks like in general. hfs_free_extents() won't do anything if the block count doesn't add up, and the error will be ignored. Now, if the block count randomly does add up, we could see some corruption. > I worry a bit that, given the fs was evidently working "ok", perhaps > this error was corrected elsewhere in the code and that "fixing" this > site will have unexpected and undesirable runtime effects. Can someone > help me out here? I don't think so. This bug also makes extent point to the wrong place on the following call to hfs_free_extents(). There is no way this can work correctly in general.