On Mon, Jun 29, 2020 at 04:02:25PM -0400, Andres Beltran wrote: > Currently, VMbus drivers use pointers into guest memory as request IDs > for interactions with Hyper-V. To be more robust in the face of errors > or malicious behavior from a compromised Hyper-V, avoid exposing > guest memory addresses to Hyper-V. Also avoid Hyper-V giving back a > bad request ID that is then treated as the address of a guest data > structure with no validation. Instead, encapsulate these memory > addresses and provide small integers as request IDs. > > Signed-off-by: Andres Beltran <lkmlabelt@xxxxxxxxx> > --- > Changes in v2: > - Get rid of "rqstor" variable in __vmbus_open(). > > drivers/hv/channel.c | 146 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ > include/linux/hyperv.h | 21 ++++++ > 2 files changed, 167 insertions(+) > > diff --git a/drivers/hv/channel.c b/drivers/hv/channel.c > index 3ebda7707e46..c89d57d0c2d2 100644 > --- a/drivers/hv/channel.c > +++ b/drivers/hv/channel.c > @@ -112,6 +112,70 @@ int vmbus_alloc_ring(struct vmbus_channel *newchannel, > } > EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(vmbus_alloc_ring); > > +/** > + * request_arr_init - Allocates memory for the requestor array. Each slot > + * keeps track of the next available slot in the array. Initially, each > + * slot points to the next one (as in a Linked List). The last slot > + * does not point to anything, so its value is U64_MAX by default. > + * @size The size of the array > + */ > +static u64 *request_arr_init(u32 size) > +{ > + int i; > + u64 *req_arr; > + > + req_arr = kcalloc(size, sizeof(u64), GFP_KERNEL); > + if (!req_arr) > + return NULL; > + > + for (i = 0; i < size - 1; i++) > + req_arr[i] = i + 1; > + > + /* Last slot (no more available slots) */ > + req_arr[i] = U64_MAX; > + > + return req_arr; > +} > + > +/* > + * vmbus_alloc_requestor - Initializes @rqstor's fields. > + * Slot at index 0 is the first free slot. > + * @size: Size of the requestor array > + */ > +static int vmbus_alloc_requestor(struct vmbus_requestor *rqstor, u32 size) > +{ > + u64 *rqst_arr; > + unsigned long *bitmap; > + > + rqst_arr = request_arr_init(size); > + if (!rqst_arr) > + return -ENOMEM; > + > + bitmap = bitmap_zalloc(size, GFP_KERNEL); > + if (!bitmap) { > + kfree(rqst_arr); > + return -ENOMEM; > + } > + > + rqstor->req_arr = rqst_arr; > + rqstor->req_bitmap = bitmap; > + rqstor->size = size; > + rqstor->next_request_id = 0; > + spin_lock_init(&rqstor->req_lock); > + > + return 0; > +} > + > +/* > + * vmbus_free_requestor - Frees memory allocated for @rqstor > + * @rqstor: Pointer to the requestor struct > + */ > +static void vmbus_free_requestor(struct vmbus_requestor *rqstor) > +{ > + kfree(rqstor->req_arr); > + bitmap_free(rqstor->req_bitmap); > +} > + > static int __vmbus_open(struct vmbus_channel *newchannel, > void *userdata, u32 userdatalen, > void (*onchannelcallback)(void *context), void *context) > @@ -132,6 +196,12 @@ static int __vmbus_open(struct vmbus_channel *newchannel, > if (newchannel->state != CHANNEL_OPEN_STATE) > return -EINVAL; > > + /* Create and init requestor */ > + if (newchannel->rqstor_size) { > + if (vmbus_alloc_requestor(&newchannel->requestor, newchannel->rqstor_size)) > + return -ENOMEM; > + } > + Sorry for not noticing this in the last round: this infrastructure is initialized conditionally but used unconditionally. I can think of two options here: 1. Mandate rqstor_size to be non-zero. Always initialize this infra. 2. Modify vmbus_next_request_id and vmbus_request_addr to deal with uninitialized state. For #2, you can simply check rqstor->size _before_ taking the lock (because it may be uninitialized, and the assumption is ->size will not change during the channel's lifetime, hence no lock is needed) and simply return the same value to the caller. Wei.