On Fri, Apr 5, 2024 at 9:30 AM Alexei Starovoitov <alexei.starovoitov@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Fri, Apr 5, 2024 at 4:36 AM Russell King (Oracle) > <linux@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > On Fri, Apr 05, 2024 at 12:02:36PM +0100, Mark Rutland wrote: > > > On Thu, Apr 04, 2024 at 03:57:04PM -0700, Alexei Starovoitov wrote: > > > > On Wed, Apr 3, 2024 at 6:56 PM Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundationorg> wrote: > > > > > > > > > > On Mon, 01 Apr 2024 22:19:25 -0700 syzbot <syzbot+186522670e6722692d86@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > > > > > > > Hello, > > > > > > > > > > Thanks. Cc: bpf@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > > > > > > > > I suspect the issue is not on bpf side. > > > > Looks like the bug is somewhere in arm32 bits. > > > > copy_from_kernel_nofault() is called from lots of places. > > > > bpf is just one user that is easy for syzbot to fuzz. > > > > Interestingly arm defines copy_from_kernel_nofault_allowed() > > > > that should have filtered out user addresses. > > > > In this case ffffffe9 is probably a kernel address? > > > > > > It's at the end of the kernel range, and it's ERR_PTR(-EINVAL). > > > > > > 0xffffffe9 is -0x16, which is -22, which is -EINVAL. > > > > > > > But the kernel is doing a write? > > > > Which makes no sense, since copy_from_kernel_nofault is probe reading. > > > > > > It makes perfect sense; the read from 'src' happened, then the kernel tries to > > > write the result to 'dst', and that aligns with the disassembly in the report > > > below, which I beleive is: > > > > > > 8: e4942000 ldr r2, [r4], #0 <-- Read of 'src', fault fixup is elsewhere > > > c: e3530000 cmp r3, #0 > > > * 10: e5852000 str r2, [r5] <-- Write to 'dst' > > > > > > As above, it looks like 'dst' is ERR_PTR(-EINVAL). > > > > > > Are you certain that BPF is passing a sane value for 'dst'? Where does that > > > come from in the first place? > > > > It looks to me like it gets passed in from the BPF program, and the > > "type" for the argument is set to ARG_PTR_TO_UNINIT_MEM. What that > > means for validation purposes, I've no idea, I'm not a BPF hacker. > > > > Obviously, if BPF is allowing copy_from_kernel_nofault() to be passed > > an arbitary destination address, that would be a huge security hole. > > If that's the case that's indeed a giant security hole, > but I doubt it. We would be crashing other archs as well. > I cannot really tell whether arm32 JIT is on. > If it is, it's likely a bug there. > Puranjay, > could you please take a look. > I dumped the BPF program that repro.c is loading, it works on x86-64 and there is nothing special there. We are probe-reading 5 bytes from somewhere into the stack. Everything is unaligned here, but stays within a well-defined memory slot. Note the r3 = (s8)r1, that's a new-ish thing, maybe bug is somewhere there (but then it would be JIT, not verifier itself) 0: (7a) *(u64 *)(r10 -8) = 896542069 1: (bf) r1 = r10 2: (07) r1 += -7 3: (b7) r2 = 5 4: (bf) r3 = (s8)r1 5: (85) call bpf_probe_read_kernel#-72390 6: (b7) r0 = 0 7: (95) exit