On Thu, Aug 08, 2019 at 02:49:25AM +0100, Al Viro wrote: > On Wed, Aug 07, 2019 at 12:58:21PM -0700, Matthew Wilcox wrote: > > On Wed, Aug 07, 2019 at 12:28:06PM -0700, syzbot wrote: > > > usercopy: Kernel memory exposure attempt detected from wrapped address > > > (offset 0, size 0)! > > > ------------[ cut here ]------------ > > > kernel BUG at mm/usercopy.c:98! > > > > This report is confusing because the arguments to usercopy_abort() are wrong. > > > > /* Reject if object wraps past end of memory. */ > > if (ptr + n < ptr) > > usercopy_abort("wrapped address", NULL, to_user, 0, ptr + n); (Just to reiterate for this branch of the thread: this is an off-by-one false positive already fixed in -mm for -next. However, see below...) > > > > ptr + n is not 'size', it's what wrapped. I don't know what 'offset' > > should be set to, but 'size' should be 'n'. Presumably we don't want to > > report 'ptr' because it'll leak a kernel address ... reporting 'n' will > > leak a range for a kernel address, but I think that's OK? Admittedly an > > attacker can pass in various values for 'n', but it'll be quite noisy > > and leave a trace in the kernel logs for forensics to find afterwards. > > > > > Call Trace: > > > check_bogus_address mm/usercopy.c:151 [inline] > > > __check_object_size mm/usercopy.c:260 [inline] > > > __check_object_size.cold+0xb2/0xba mm/usercopy.c:250 > > > check_object_size include/linux/thread_info.h:119 [inline] > > > check_copy_size include/linux/thread_info.h:150 [inline] > > > copy_to_user include/linux/uaccess.h:151 [inline] > > > hidraw_ioctl+0x38c/0xae0 drivers/hid/hidraw.c:392 > > > > The root problem would appear to be: > > > > else if (copy_to_user(user_arg + offsetof( > > struct hidraw_report_descriptor, > > value[0]), > > dev->hid->rdesc, > > min(dev->hid->rsize, len))) > > > > That 'min' should surely be a 'max'? > > Surely not. ->rsize is the amount of data available to copy out; len > is the size of buffer supplied by userland to copy into. include/uapi/linux/hid.h:#define HID_MAX_DESCRIPTOR_SIZE 4096 drivers/hid/hidraw.c: if (get_user(len, (int __user *)arg)) ret = -EFAULT; else if (len > HID_MAX_DESCRIPTOR_SIZE - 1) ret = -EINVAL; else if (copy_to_user(user_arg + offsetof( struct hidraw_report_descriptor, value[0]), dev->hid->rdesc, min(dev->hid->rsize, len))) ret = -EFAULT; The copy size must be less than 4096, which means dev->hid->rdesc is allocated at the highest page of memory. That whole space collides with the ERR_PTR region which has two bad potential side-effects: 1) something that checks for ERR_PTRs combined with a high allocation will think it failed and leak the allocation. 2) something that doesn't check ERR_PTRs might try to stomp on an actual allocation in that area. How/why is there memory allocated there, I thought it was intentionally left unused specifically for ERR_PTR: Documentation/x86/x86_64/mm.rst: Start addr | Offset | End addr | Size | VM area description ========================================================================== ... ffffffffffe00000 | -2 MB | ffffffffffffffff | 2 MB | ...unused hole or is this still a real bug with an invalid dev->hid->rdesc which was about to fault but usercopy got in the way first? -- Kees Cook