On Wed, May 08, 2024 at 03:06:30PM +0800, Guozihua (Scott) wrote: > On 2024/5/8 10:06, Guozihua (Scott) wrote: > > On 2024/5/7 19:54, Mimi Zohar wrote: > >> On Tue, 2024-05-07 at 09:37 +0000, GUO Zihua wrote: > >>> From: liqiong <liqiong@xxxxxxxxxxxx> > >>> > >>> [ Upstream commit eb0782bbdfd0d7c4786216659277c3fd585afc0e ] > >>> > >>> The current IMA ruleset is identified by the variable "ima_rules" > >>> that default to "&ima_default_rules". When loading a custom policy > >>> for the first time, the variable is updated to "&ima_policy_rules" > >>> instead. That update isn't RCU-safe, and deadlocks are possible. > >>> Indeed, some functions like ima_match_policy() may loop indefinitely > >>> when traversing "ima_default_rules" with list_for_each_entry_rcu(). > >>> > >>> When iterating over the default ruleset back to head, if the list > >>> head is "ima_default_rules", and "ima_rules" have been updated to > >>> "&ima_policy_rules", the loop condition (&entry->list != ima_rules) > >>> stays always true, traversing won't terminate, causing a soft lockup > >>> and RCU stalls. > >>> > >>> Introduce a temporary value for "ima_rules" when iterating over > >>> the ruleset to avoid the deadlocks. > >>> > >>> Addition: > >>> > >>> A rcu_read_lock pair is added within ima_update_policy_flag to avoid > >>> suspicious RCU usage warning. This pair of RCU lock was added with > >>> commit 4f2946aa0c45 ("IMA: introduce a new policy option > >>> func=SETXATTR_CHECK") on mainstream. > >>> > >>> Signed-off-by: liqiong <liqiong@xxxxxxxxxxxx> > >>> Reviewed-by: THOBY Simon <Simon.THOBY@xxxxxxxxxx> > >>> Fixes: 38d859f991f3 ("IMA: policy can now be updated multiple times") > >>> Reported-by: kernel test robot <lkp@xxxxxxxxx> (Fix sparse: incompatible types in comparison expression.) > >>> Signed-off-by: Mimi Zohar <zohar@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> > >>> Sig=ned-off-by: GUO Zihua <guozihua@xxxxxxxxxx> > >> > >> Hi Scott, > >> > >> I'm confused by this patch. Is it meant for upstream? > >> > >> thanks, > >> > >> Mimi > >> > > It's a backport from upstream. > > > To clarify, it's meant for Linux-5.10.y. Now queued up, thanks. greg k-h