On Mon, Nov 25, 2019 at 3:57 PM Hans Verkuil <hverkuil@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On 11/11/19 9:38 PM, Arnd Bergmann wrote: > > switch (cmd) { > > +#ifdef COMPAT_32BIT_TIME > > + case VIDIOC_QUERYBUF_TIME32: > > + case VIDIOC_QBUF_TIME32: > > + case VIDIOC_DQBUF_TIME32: > > + case VIDIOC_PREPARE_BUF_TIME32: { > > + struct v4l2_buffer_time32 vb32; > > + struct v4l2_buffer *vb = parg; > > + > > + if (copy_from_user(&vb32, arg, sizeof(vb32))) > > + return -EFAULT; > > + > > + memcpy(vb, &vb32, offsetof(struct v4l2_buffer, timestamp)); > > + vb->timestamp.tv_sec = vb32.timestamp.tv_sec; > > + vb->timestamp.tv_usec = vb32.timestamp.tv_usec; > > + memcpy(&vb->timecode, &vb32.timecode, > > + sizeof(*vb) - offsetof(struct v4l2_buffer, timecode)); > > I have similar concerns as with dqevent about whether this memcpy is the right approach. > Unless you can prove with a utility like pahole that this memcpy is safe. This is the video_get_user() function, so the input data comes from user space and gets copied into the kernel, which has to check each field for validity already, so I think this is safe regardless of the padding (which exists before the 64-bit timestamp on 32-bit architectures). The fields match because the definition of all members other than the timeval is the same. On the other hand, I agree it's not obvious from the code why this is correct. I've changed my copy to this version below now, do you like that better? struct v4l2_buffer_time32 vb32; struct v4l2_buffer *vb = parg; if (copy_from_user(&vb32, arg, sizeof(vb32))) return -EFAULT; *vb = (struct v4l2_buffer) { .index = vb32.index, .type = vb32.type, .bytesused = vb32.bytesused, .flags = vb32.flags, .field = vb32.field, .timestamp.tv_sec = vb32.timestamp.tv_sec, .timestamp.tv_usec = vb32.timestamp.tv_usec, .timecode = vb32.timecode, .memory = vb32.memory, .m.userptr = vb32.usercopy, .length = vb32.length, .request_fd = vb32.request_fd, }; if (cmd == VIDIOC_QUERYBUF_TIME32) memset(&vb->length, 0, sizeof(*vb) - offsetof(struct v4l2_buffer, length)); This way, all padding is zeroed out, and it's obvious to human readers that each field gets set in the correct location. > > + memcpy(&vb32, vb, offsetof(struct v4l2_buffer, timestamp)); > > + vb32.timestamp.tv_sec = vb->timestamp.tv_sec; > > + vb32.timestamp.tv_usec = vb->timestamp.tv_usec; > > + memcpy(&vb32.timecode, &vb->timecode, > > + sizeof(*vb) - offsetof(struct v4l2_buffer, timecode)); > > Ditto. This is my new version: struct v4l2_buffer *vb = parg; struct v4l2_buffer_time32 vb32 = { .index = vb->index, .type = vb->type, .bytesused = vb->bytesused, .flags = vb->flags, .field = vb->field, .timestamp.tv_sec = vb->timestamp.tv_sec, .timestamp.tv_usec = vb->timestamp.tv_usec, .timecode = vb->timecode, .memory = vb->memory, .m.userptr = vb->usercopy, .length = vb->length, .request_fd = vb->request_fd, }; if (copy_to_user(arg, &vb32, sizeof(vb32))) return -EFAULT; > > __u32 field; > > +#ifdef __KERNEL__ > > + /* match glibc timeval64 format */ > > + struct { > > + long long tv_sec; > > +# if defined(__sparc__) && defined(__arch64__) > > + int tv_usec; > > + int __pad; > > +# else > > + long long tv_usec; > > +# endif > > + } timestamp; > > Ewww! > > Are there more places where this is needed? If so, then I very much prefer > that a __kernel_timeval struct is defined somewhere, with appropriate > comments. I was trying hard to avoid adding a modern version of timeval, because all new code should be encouraged to use __kernel_timespec instead. There are not many users of timeval in the uapi, and this is the last one after the others all got invididual treatment. Usually what I would do is to have a kernel-internal type based on timespec or u64, and then define three uapi types: old native (based on __kernel_old_timeval), old compat (using old_timeval32) and the new type with 64-bit time_t. The problem with v4l2_buffer is that it includes another compat-incompatible field (m.userptr) and that it's passed between kernel functions, so then I'd probably need five variants of it in total, and it would slow down the common case (64-bit native) because it would require an extra copy. I can try a few more things here, but I don't expect to find anything much better than this. > > +#ifdef __KERNEL__ > > +struct v4l2_buffer_time32 { > > + __u32 index; > > + __u32 type; > > + __u32 bytesused; > > + __u32 flags; > > + __u32 field; > > + struct old_timeval32 timestamp; > > struct v4l2_timecode timecode; > > __u32 sequence; > > > > @@ -1009,6 +1049,7 @@ struct v4l2_buffer { > > __u32 reserved; > > }; > > }; > > +#endif > > Can this be moved to v4l2-ioctls.h? done. > > #ifndef __KERNEL__ > > /** > > @@ -2446,12 +2487,15 @@ struct v4l2_create_buffers { > > #define VIDIOC_S_FMT _IOWR('V', 5, struct v4l2_format) > > #define VIDIOC_REQBUFS _IOWR('V', 8, struct v4l2_requestbuffers) > > #define VIDIOC_QUERYBUF _IOWR('V', 9, struct v4l2_buffer) > > +#define VIDIOC_QUERYBUF_TIME32 _IOWR('V', 9, struct v4l2_buffer_time32) > > And all these should be moved there as well. done. Arnd