On Thu 18-01-24 10:19:53, Zach O'Keefe wrote: > (struct dirty_throttle_control *)->thresh is an unsigned long, but is > passed as the u32 divisor argument to div_u64(). On architectures where > unsigned long is 64 bytes, the argument will be implicitly truncated. > > Use div64_u64() instead of div_u64() so that the value used in the "is > this a safe division" check is the same as the divisor. > > Also, remove redundant cast of the numerator to u64, as that should > happen implicitly. > > This would be difficult to exploit in memcg domain, given the > ratio-based arithmetic domain_drity_limits() uses, but is much easier in > global writeback domain with a BDI_CAP_STRICTLIMIT-backing device, using > e.g. vm.dirty_bytes=(1<<32)*PAGE_SIZE so that dtc->thresh == (1<<32) > > Fixes: f6789593d5ce ("mm/page-writeback.c: fix divide by zero in bdi_dirty_limits()") > Cc: Maxim Patlasov <MPatlasov@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> > Cc: <stable@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > Signed-off-by: Zach O'Keefe <zokeefe@xxxxxxxxxx> I've come across this change today and it is broken in several ways: > diff --git a/mm/page-writeback.c b/mm/page-writeback.c > index cd4e4ae77c40a..02147b61712bc 100644 > --- a/mm/page-writeback.c > +++ b/mm/page-writeback.c > @@ -1638,7 +1638,7 @@ static inline void wb_dirty_limits(struct dirty_throttle_control *dtc) > */ > dtc->wb_thresh = __wb_calc_thresh(dtc); > dtc->wb_bg_thresh = dtc->thresh ? > - div_u64((u64)dtc->wb_thresh * dtc->bg_thresh, dtc->thresh) : 0; > + div64_u64(dtc->wb_thresh * dtc->bg_thresh, dtc->thresh) : 0; Firstly, the removed (u64) cast from the multiplication will introduce a multiplication overflow on 32-bit archs if wb_thresh * bg_thresh >= 1<<32 (which is actually common - the default settings with 4GB of RAM will trigger this). Secondly, the div64_u64() is unnecessarily expensive on 32-bit archs. We have div64_ul() in case we want to be safe & cheap. Thirdly, if thresholds are larger than 1<<32 pages, then dirty balancing is going to blow up in many other spectacular ways - consider only the multiplication on this line - it will not necessarily fit into u64 anymore. The whole dirty limiting code is interspersed with assumptions that limits are actually within u32 and we do our calculations in unsigned longs to avoid worrying about overflows (with occasional typing to u64 to make it more interesting because people expected those entities to overflow 32 bits even on 32-bit archs). Which is lame I agree but so far people don't seem to be setting limits to 16TB or more. And I'm not really worried about security here since this is global-root-only tunable and that has much better ways to DoS the system. So overall I'm all for cleaning up this code but in a sensible way please. E.g. for these overflow issues at least do it one function at a time so that we can sensibly review it. Andrew, can you please revert this patch until we have a better fix? So far it does more harm than good... Thanks! Honza -- Jan Kara <jack@xxxxxxxx> SUSE Labs, CR