On 07/31/2018 04:05 PM, Andrey Konovalov wrote: > On Wed, Jul 25, 2018 at 3:44 PM, Vincenzo Frascino@Foss > <vincenzo.frascino@xxxxxxx> wrote: >> On 06/26/2018 02:15 PM, Andrey Konovalov wrote: >> >>> @@ -325,18 +341,41 @@ void kasan_init_slab_obj(struct kmem_cache *cache, >>> const void *object) >>> void *kasan_slab_alloc(struct kmem_cache *cache, void *object, gfp_t >>> flags) >>> { >>> - return kasan_kmalloc(cache, object, cache->object_size, flags); >>> + object = kasan_kmalloc(cache, object, cache->object_size, flags); >>> + if (IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_KASAN_HW) && unlikely(cache->ctor)) { >>> + /* >>> + * Cache constructor might use object's pointer value to >>> + * initialize some of its fields. >>> + */ >>> + cache->ctor(object); >>> >> This seams breaking the kmem_cache_create() contract: "The @ctor is run when >> new pages are allocated by the cache." >> (https://elixir.bootlin.com/linux/v3.7/source/mm/slab_common.c#L83) >> >> Since there might be preexisting code relying on it, this could lead to >> global side effects. Did you verify that this is not the case? >> >> Another concern is performance related if we consider this solution suitable >> for "near-production", since with the current implementation you call the >> ctor (where present) on an object multiple times and this ends up memsetting >> and repopulating the memory every time (i.e. inode.c: inode_init_once). Do >> you know what is the performance impact? > > We can assign tags to objects with constructors when a slab is > allocated and call constructors once as usual. The downside is that > such object would always have the same tag when it is reallocated, so > we won't catch use-after-frees. Actually you should do this for SLAB_TYPESAFE_BY_RCU slabs. Usually they are with ->ctors but there are few without constructors. We can't reinitialize or even retag them. The latter will definitely cause false-positive use-after-free reports. As for non-SLAB_TYPESAFE_BY_RCU caches with constructors, it's probably ok to reinitialize and retag such objects. I don't see how could any code rely on the current ->ctor() behavior in non-SLAB_TYPESAFE_BY_RCU case, unless it does something extremely stupid or weird. But let's not do it now. If you care, you cand do it later, with a separate patch, so we could just revert it if anything goes wrong.