On Sun, 2020-06-28 at 17:25 +0200, Bartosz Golaszewski wrote: > From: Bartosz Golaszewski <bgolaszewski@xxxxxxxxxxxx> > > Memory allocated with kstrdup_const() must not be passed to regular > krealloc() as it is not aware of the possibility of the chunk residing > in .rodata. Since there are no potential users of krealloc_const() > at the moment, let's just update the doc to make it explicit. Another option would be to return NULL if it's used from krealloc with a pointer into rodata --- mm/slab_common.c | 6 ++++++ 1 file changed, 6 insertions(+) diff --git a/mm/slab_common.c b/mm/slab_common.c index 37d48a56431d..f8b49656171b 100644 --- a/mm/slab_common.c +++ b/mm/slab_common.c @@ -1683,6 +1683,9 @@ static __always_inline void *__do_krealloc(const void *p, size_t new_size, * @new_size: how many bytes of memory are required. * @flags: the type of memory to allocate. * + * If the object pointed to is in rodata (likely from kstrdup_const) + * %NULL is returned. + * * The contents of the object pointed to are preserved up to the * lesser of the new and old sizes. If @p is %NULL, krealloc() * behaves exactly like kmalloc(). If @new_size is 0 and @p is not a @@ -1694,6 +1697,9 @@ void *krealloc(const void *p, size_t new_size, gfp_t flags) { void *ret; + if (unlikely(is_kernel_rodata((unsigned long)p))) + return NULL; + if (unlikely(!new_size)) { kfree(p); return ZERO_SIZE_PTR;