Jan Bujak <j@xxxxxxx> writes: > Hi. > > I recently updated my kernel and one of my programs started segfaulting. > > The issue seems to be related to how the kernel interprets PT_LOAD headers; > consider the following program headers (from 'readelf' of my reproduction): > > Program Headers: > Type Offset VirtAddr PhysAddr FileSiz MemSiz Flg Align > LOAD 0x001000 0x10000 0x10000 0x000010 0x000010 R 0x1000 > LOAD 0x002000 0x11000 0x11000 0x000010 0x000010 RW 0x1000 > LOAD 0x002010 0x11010 0x11010 0x000000 0x000004 RW 0x1000 > LOAD 0x003000 0x12000 0x12000 0x0000d2 0x0000d2 R E 0x1000 > LOAD 0x004000 0x20000 0x20000 0x000004 0x000004 RW 0x1000 > > Old kernels load this ELF file in the following way ('/proc/self/maps'): > > 00010000-00011000 r--p 00001000 00:02 131 ./bug-reproduction > 00011000-00012000 rw-p 00002000 00:02 131 ./bug-reproduction > 00012000-00013000 r-xp 00003000 00:02 131 ./bug-reproduction > 00020000-00021000 rw-p 00004000 00:02 131 ./bug-reproduction > > And new kernels do it like this: > > 00010000-00011000 r--p 00001000 00:02 131 ./bug-reproduction > 00011000-00012000 rw-p 00000000 00:00 0 > 00012000-00013000 r-xp 00003000 00:02 131 ./bug-reproduction > 00020000-00021000 rw-p 00004000 00:02 131 ./bug-reproduction > > That map between 0x11000 and 0x12000 is the program's '.data' and '.bss' > sections to which it tries to write to, and since the kernel doesn't map > them anymore it crashes. > > I bisected the issue to the following commit: > > commit 585a018627b4d7ed37387211f667916840b5c5ea > Author: Eric W. Biederman <ebiederm@xxxxxxxxxxxx> > Date: Thu Sep 28 20:24:29 2023 -0700 > > binfmt_elf: Support segments with 0 filesz and misaligned starts > > I can confirm that with this commit the issue reproduces, and with it > reverted it doesn't. > > I have prepared a minimal reproduction of the problem available here, > along with all of the scripts I used for bisecting: > > https://github.com/koute/linux-elf-loading-bug > > You can either compile it from source (requires Rust and LLD), or there's > a prebuilt binary in 'bin/bug-reproduction` which you can run. (It's tiny, > so you can easily check with 'objdump -d' that it isn't malicious). > > On old kernels this will run fine, and on new kernels it will > segfault. Frankly your ELF binary is buggy, and probably the best fix would be to fix the linker script that is used to generate your binary. The problem is the SYSV ABI defines everything in terms of pages and so placing two ELF segments on the same page results in undefined behavior. The code was fixed to honor your .bss segment and now your .data segment is being stomped, because you defined them to overlap. Ideally your linker script would place both your .data and .bss in the same segment. That would both fix the issue and give you a more compact elf binary, while not changing the generated code at all. That said regressions suck and it would be good if we could update the code to do something reasonable in this case. We can perhaps we can update the .bss segment to just memset an existing page if one has already been mapped. Which would cleanly handle a case like yours. I need to think about that for a moment to see what the code would look like to do that. Eric