Before the change linux allowed individual execve() arguments or environment variable entries to be only as big as 32 pages. Histroically before b6a2fea3931 "mm: variable length argument support" MAX_ARG_STRLEN used to be full allowed size `argv[] + envp[]`. When full limit was abandoned individual parameters were still limited by a safe limit of 128K. Nowadays' linux allows `argv[]+envp[]` to be as laerge as 6MB (3/4 `_STK_LIM`). Some build systems like `autoconf` use a single environment variable to pass `CFLAGS` environment variable around. It's not a bug problem if the argument list is short. But some packaging systems prefer installing each package into individual directory. As a result that requires quite long string of parameters like: CFLAGS="-I/path/to/pkg1 -I/path/to/pkg2 ..." This can easily overflow 128K and does happen for `NixOS` and `nixpkgs` repositories on a regular basis. Similar pattern is exhibited by `gcc` which converts it's input command line into a single environment variable (https://gcc.gnu.org/PR111527): $ big_100k_var=$(printf "%0*d" 100000 0) # this works: 200KB of options for `printf` external command $ $(which printf) "%s %s" $big_100k_var $big_100k_var >/dev/null; echo $? 0 # this fails: 200KB of options for `gcc`, fails in `cc1` $ touch a.c; gcc -c a.c -DA=$big_100k_var -DB=$big_100k_var gcc: fatal error: cannot execute 'cc1': execv: Argument list too long compilation terminated. I would say this 128KB limitation is arbitrary. The change raises the limit of `MAX_ARG_STRLEN` from 32 pakes (128K n `x86_64`) to the maximum limit of stack allowed by Linux today. It has a minor chance of overflowing userspace programs that use `MAX_ARG_STRLEN` to allocate the strings on stack. It should not be a big problem as such programs are already are at risk of overflowing stack. Tested as: $ V=$(printf "%*d" 1000000 0) ls Before the change it failed with `ls: Argument list too long`. After the change `ls` executes as expected. WDYT of abandoning the limit and allow user to fill entire environment with a single command or a single variable? CC: Andrew Morton <akpm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> CC: Eric Biederman <ebiederm@xxxxxxxxxxxx> CC: Kees Cook <keescook@xxxxxxxxxxxx> CC: linux-mm@xxxxxxxxx CC: linux-kernel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Signed-off-by: Sergei Trofimovich <slyich@xxxxxxxxx> --- include/uapi/linux/binfmts.h | 6 +++--- 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) diff --git a/include/uapi/linux/binfmts.h b/include/uapi/linux/binfmts.h index c6f9450efc12..4e828515a22e 100644 --- a/include/uapi/linux/binfmts.h +++ b/include/uapi/linux/binfmts.h @@ -8,11 +8,11 @@ struct pt_regs; /* * These are the maximum length and maximum number of strings passed to the - * execve() system call. MAX_ARG_STRLEN is essentially random but serves to - * prevent the kernel from being unduly impacted by misaddressed pointers. + * execve() system call. MAX_ARG_STRLEN is as large as Linux allows new + * stack to grow. Currently it's `_STK_LIM / 4 * 3 = 6MB` (see fs/exec.c). * MAX_ARG_STRINGS is chosen to fit in a signed 32-bit integer. */ -#define MAX_ARG_STRLEN (PAGE_SIZE * 32) +#define MAX_ARG_STRLEN (6 * 1024 * 1024) #define MAX_ARG_STRINGS 0x7FFFFFFF /* sizeof(linux_binprm->buf) */ -- 2.42.0