On Wed, Oct 07, 2020 at 04:42:55PM +0200, Jann Horn wrote: > > > @@ -43,7 +43,7 @@ static inline long do_mmap2(unsigned long addr, size_t len, > > > { > > > long ret = -EINVAL; > > > > > > - if (!arch_validate_prot(prot, addr)) > > > + if (!arch_validate_prot(prot, addr, len)) > > > > This call isn't under mmap lock. I also find it rather weird as the > > generic code only calls arch_validate_prot from mprotect, only powerpc > > also calls it from mmap. > > > > This seems to go back to commit ef3d3246a0d0 > > ("powerpc/mm: Add Strong Access Ordering support") > > I'm _guessing_ the idea in the generic case might be that mmap() > doesn't check unknown bits in the protection flags, and therefore > maybe people wanted to avoid adding new error cases that could be > caused by random high bits being set? So while the mprotect() case > checks the flags and refuses unknown values, the mmap() code just lets > the architecture figure out which bits are actually valid to set (via > arch_calc_vm_prot_bits()) and silently ignores the rest? > > And powerpc apparently decided that they do want to error out on bogus > prot values passed to their version of mmap(), and in exchange, assume > in arch_calc_vm_prot_bits() that the protection bits are valid? The problem really is that now programs behave different on powerpc compared to all other architectures. > powerpc's arch_validate_prot() doesn't actually need the mmap lock, so > I think this is fine-ish for now (as in, while the code is a bit > unclean, I don't think I'm making it worse, and I don't think it's > actually buggy). In theory, we could move the arch_validate_prot() > call over into the mmap guts, where we're holding the lock, and gate > it on the architecture or on some feature CONFIG that powerpc can > activate in its Kconfig. But I'm not sure whether that'd be helping or > making things worse, so when I sent this patch, I deliberately left > the powerpc stuff as-is. For now I'd just duplicate the trivial logic from arch_validate_prot in the powerpc version of do_mmap2 and add a comment that this check causes a gratious incompatibility to all other architectures. And then hope that the powerpc maintainers fix it up :)