On Wed, Aug 26, 2020 at 7:32 AM Dan Carpenter <dan.carpenter@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > There are a few bugs in the error handling for security_load_policy(). > > 1) If the newpolicy->sidtab allocation fails then it leads to a NULL > dereference. Also the error code was not set to -ENOMEM on that > path. > 2) If policydb_read() failed then we call policydb_destroy() twice > which meands we call kvfree(p->sym_val_to_name[i]) twice. > 3) If policydb_load_isids() failed then we call sidtab_destroy() twice > and that results in a double free in the sidtab_destroy_tree() > function because entry.ptr_inner and entry.ptr_leaf are not set to > NULL. > > One thing that makes this code nice to deal with is that none of the > functions return partially allocated data. In other words, the > policydb_read() either allocates everything successfully or it frees > all the data it allocates. It never returns a mix of allocated and > not allocated data. > > I re-wrote this to only free the successfully allocated data which > avoids the double frees. I also re-ordered selinux_policy_free() so > it's in the reverse order of the allocation function. > > Fixes: c7c556f1e81b ("selinux: refactor changing booleans") > Signed-off-by: Dan Carpenter <dan.carpenter@xxxxxxxxxx> I guess this wasn't against current selinux next branch? patching file security/selinux/ss/services.c Hunk #1 succeeded at 2145 (offset 18 lines). Hunk #2 succeeded at 2263 (offset 39 lines). Hunk #3 succeeded at 2303 with fuzz 1 (offset 47 lines). Hunk #4 succeeded at 2323 (offset 42 lines). But otherwise it looked good to me. Acked-by: Stephen Smalley <stephen.smalley.work@xxxxxxxxx>