Hi James On Mon, Sep 19, 2011 at 4:42 PM, James Hogan <james.hogan@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > The following patch I think fixes a bug in hidraw_disconnect(). However I'm unsure whether it's safe to call device_destroy with the minors_lock held. can the device_destroy ever end up calling hidraw_release, resulting in recursive locking? I've never seen that happen, but I don't understand the inner workings on device_destroy. > > The bug can be revealed with SLAB debugging on (poisoning free'd memory), and: > cat /dev/hw_random > /dev/hidraw0 > then unplug the device. the disconnect is called, the device_destroy seems to cause "cat"'s write syscall to return a timeout error, so it exits/closes, which frees the hidraw because hidraw->exists==0, then the disconnect function writes to hidraw_table[hidraw->minor] which blows up because hidraw->minor has been poisoned with 0x6b6b6b6b. > > This has been tested on 2.6.39 and appears to fix it, and I'll hopefully be able to test it on the latest kernel tonight. > > Cheers > James > > The function hidraw_disconnect() only acquires the hidraw minors_lock > when clearing the entry in hidraw_table. However the device_destroy() > call can cause a userland read/write to return with an error. It may > cause the program to release the file descripter before the disconnect > is finished. hidraw_disconnect() has already set hidraw->exist to 0, > which makes hidraw_release() kfree the hidraw structure, which > hidraw_disconnect() continues to access and even tries to kfree again. > Similarly if a hidraw_release() occurs after setting hidraw->exist to 0, > the same thing can happen. > > This is fixed by expanding the mutex critical section to cover the whole > function from setting hidraw->exist to 0 to freeing the hidraw > structure, preventing a hidraw_release() from interfering. > > Signed-off-by: James Hogan <james.hogan@xxxxxxxxxx> > --- > drivers/hid/hidraw.c | 4 ++-- > 1 files changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) > > diff --git a/drivers/hid/hidraw.c b/drivers/hid/hidraw.c > index c79578b..a8c2b7b 100644 > --- a/drivers/hid/hidraw.c > +++ b/drivers/hid/hidraw.c > @@ -510,13 +510,12 @@ void hidraw_disconnect(struct hid_device *hid) > { > struct hidraw *hidraw = hid->hidraw; > > + mutex_lock(&minors_lock); > hidraw->exist = 0; > > device_destroy(hidraw_class, MKDEV(hidraw_major, hidraw->minor)); This does not destroy any open file descriptor and we haven't registered any kind of hook so hidraw_destroy() will not be called here. This seems safe to me. We also do not check for hidraw->exist on *_open() callback so including this in the critical section seems fine. > - mutex_lock(&minors_lock); > hidraw_table[hidraw->minor] = NULL; > - mutex_unlock(&minors_lock); > > if (hidraw->open) { > hid_hw_close(hid); > @@ -524,6 +523,7 @@ void hidraw_disconnect(struct hid_device *hid) > } else { > kfree(hidraw); > } > + mutex_unlock(&minors_lock); > } > EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(hidraw_disconnect); > > -- > 1.7.2.3 Nice catch. I've tested it on linux-next tree and I can confirm the bug. The fix seems ok to me. Regards David -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-input" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html