On 5/12/20 8:04 AM, Miklos Szeredi wrote: > On Tue, Apr 7, 2020 at 12:06 AM Mike Kravetz <mike.kravetz@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> On 4/5/20 8:06 PM, syzbot wrote: >> >> The routine is_file_hugepages() is just comparing the file ops to huegtlbfs: >> >> if (file->f_op == &hugetlbfs_file_operations) >> return true; >> >> Since the file is in an overlayfs, file->f_op == ovl_file_operations. >> Therefore, length will not be rounded up to huge page size and we create a >> mapping with incorrect size which leads to the BUG. >> >> Because of the code in mmap, the hugetlbfs mmap() routine assumes length is >> rounded to a huge page size. I can easily add a check to hugetlbfs mmap >> to validate length and return -EINVAL. However, I think we really want to >> do the 'round up' earlier in mmap. This is because the man page says: >> >> Huge page (Huge TLB) mappings >> For mappings that employ huge pages, the requirements for the arguments >> of mmap() and munmap() differ somewhat from the requirements for map‐ >> pings that use the native system page size. >> >> For mmap(), offset must be a multiple of the underlying huge page size. >> The system automatically aligns length to be a multiple of the underly‐ >> ing huge page size. >> >> Since the location for the mapping is chosen BEFORE getting to the hugetlbfs >> mmap routine, we can not wait until then to round up the length. Is there a >> defined way to go from a struct file * to the underlying filesystem so we >> can continue to do the 'round up' in early mmap code? > > That's easy enough: > > static inline struct file *real_file(struct file *file) > { > return file->f_op != ovl_file_operations ? file : file->private_data; > } > > But adding more filesystem specific code to generic code does not > sound like the cleanest way to solve this... We can incorporate the above 'real_file' functionality in the filesystem specific routine is_file_hugepages(), and I think that would address this specific issue. I'll code that up. >> One other thing I noticed with overlayfs is that it does not contain a >> specific get_unmapped_area file_operations routine. I would expect it to at >> least check for and use the get_unmapped_area of the underlying filesystem? >> Can someone comment if this is by design? > > Not sure. What exactly is f_op->get_unmapped_area supposed to do? > IIUC, filesystems can define their own routines to get addresses for mmap operations. Quite a few filesystems define get_unmapped_area. The generic mmap code does the following, get_area = current->mm->get_unmapped_area; if (file) { if (file->f_op->get_unmapped_area) get_area = file->f_op->get_unmapped_area; } else if (flags & MAP_SHARED) { /* * mmap_region() will call shmem_zero_setup() to create a file, * so use shmem's get_unmapped_area in case it can be huge. * do_mmap_pgoff() will clear pgoff, so match alignment. */ pgoff = 0; get_area = shmem_get_unmapped_area; } addr = get_area(file, addr, len, pgoff, flags); If the filesystem provides a get_unmapped_area, it will use it. I beleive overlayfs prevents this from happening for the underlying filesystem. Perhaps we do need to add something like a call 'real_file' to this generic code? I can't think of any other way to get to the underlying filesystem get_unmapped_area here. -- Mike Kravetz