On 15.08.2020 21:54, Matthew Wilcox wrote: > On Thu, Aug 13, 2020 at 06:19:21PM +0300, Alexander Popov wrote: >> +config SLAB_QUARANTINE >> + bool "Enable slab freelist quarantine" >> + depends on !KASAN && (SLAB || SLUB) >> + help >> + Enable slab freelist quarantine to break heap spraying technique >> + used for exploiting use-after-free vulnerabilities in the kernel >> + code. If this feature is enabled, freed allocations are stored >> + in the quarantine and can't be instantly reallocated and >> + overwritten by the exploit performing heap spraying. >> + This feature is a part of KASAN functionality. > > After this patch, it isn't part of KASAN any more ;-) Ok, I'll change that to "this feature is used by KASAN" :) > The way this is written is a bit too low level. Let's write it in terms > that people who don't know the guts of the slab allocator or security > terminology can understand: > > Delay reuse of freed slab objects. This makes some security > exploits harder to execute. It reduces performance slightly > as objects will be cache cold by the time they are reallocated, > and it costs a small amount of memory. > > (feel free to edit this) Ok, I see. I'll start from high-level description and add low-level details at the end. >> +struct qlist_node { >> + struct qlist_node *next; >> +}; > > I appreciate this isn't new, but why do we have a new singly-linked-list > abstraction being defined in this code? I don't know for sure. I suppose it is caused by SLAB/SLUB freelist implementation details (qlist_node in kasan_free_meta is also used for the allocator freelist). Best regards, Alexander