Hello Christopher, Thanks for your reply. On 17.07.2017 21:04, Christopher Lameter wrote: > On Mon, 17 Jul 2017, Matthew Wilcox wrote: > >> On Mon, Jul 17, 2017 at 07:45:07PM +0300, Alexander Popov wrote: >>> Add an assertion similar to "fasttop" check in GNU C Library allocator: >>> an object added to a singly linked freelist should not point to itself. >>> That helps to detect some double free errors (e.g. CVE-2017-2636) without >>> slub_debug and KASAN. Testing with hackbench doesn't show any noticeable >>> performance penalty. >> >>> { >>> + BUG_ON(object == fp); /* naive detection of double free or corruption */ >>> *(void **)(object + s->offset) = fp; >>> } >> >> Is BUG() the best response to this situation? If it's a corruption, then >> yes, but if we spot a double-free, then surely we should WARN() and return >> without doing anything? > > The double free debug checking already does the same thing in a more > thourough way (this one only checks if the last free was the same > address). So its duplicating a check that already exists. Yes, absolutely. Enabled slub_debug (or KASAN with its quarantine) can detect more double-free errors. But it introduces much bigger performance penalty and it's disabled by default. > However, this one is always on. Yes, I would propose to have this relatively cheap check enabled by default. I think it will block a good share of double-free errors. Currently it's really easy to turn such a double-free into use-after-free and exploit it, since, as I wrote, next two kmalloc() calls return the same address. So we could make exploiting harder for a relatively low price. Christopher, if I change BUG_ON() to VM_BUG_ON(), it will be disabled by default again, right? Best regards, Alexander -- To unsubscribe, send a message with 'unsubscribe linux-mm' in the body to majordomo@xxxxxxxxx. For more info on Linux MM, see: http://www.linux-mm.org/ . Don't email: <a href=mailto:"dont@xxxxxxxxx"> email@xxxxxxxxx </a>