On 4/29/24 6:16 PM, Nicolas Bouchinet wrote: > On 4/29/24 16:52, Chengming Zhou wrote: >> On 2024/4/29 22:32, Nicolas Bouchinet wrote: >>> On 4/29/24 15:35, Chengming Zhou wrote: >>>> On 2024/4/29 20:59, Nicolas Bouchinet wrote: >>>>>> >>>>>> I help maintaining the Linux-Hardened patchset in which we have a slab object canary feature that helps detecting overflows. It is located just after the object freepointer. >>>>> I've tried a patch where the freepointer is avoided but it results in the same bug. It seems that the commit 0f181f9fbea8bc7ea ("mm/slub.c: init_on_free=1 should wipe freelist ptr for bulk allocations") inits the freepointer on allocation if init_on_free is set in order to return a clean initialized object to the caller. >>>>> >>>> Good catch! You may need to change maybe_wipe_obj_freeptr() too, >>>> I haven't tested this, not sure whether it works for you. :) >>>> >>>> diff --git a/mm/slub.c b/mm/slub.c >>>> index 3e33ff900d35..3f250a167cb5 100644 >>>> --- a/mm/slub.c >>>> +++ b/mm/slub.c >>>> @@ -3796,7 +3796,8 @@ static void *__slab_alloc_node(struct kmem_cache *s, >>>> static __always_inline void maybe_wipe_obj_freeptr(struct kmem_cache *s, >>>> void *obj) >>>> { >>>> - if (unlikely(slab_want_init_on_free(s)) && obj) >>>> + if (unlikely(slab_want_init_on_free(s)) && obj && >>>> + !freeptr_outside_object(s)) >>>> memset((void *)((char *)kasan_reset_tag(obj) + s->offset), >>>> 0, sizeof(void *)); >>>> } >>>> >>>> Thanks! >>> Indeed since check_object() avoids objects for which freepointer is in the object and since val is equal to SLUB_RED_ACTIVE in our specific case it should work. Do you want me to add you as Co-authored ? >>> >> Ok, it's great. Thanks! > > Now I think of it, doesn't it seems a bit odd to only properly > init_on_free object's freepointer only if it's inside the object ? IMHO > it is equally necessary to avoid information leaking about the > freepointer whether it is inside or outside the object. > I think it break the semantic of the commit 0f181f9fbea8bc7ea > ("mm/slub.c: init_on_free=1 should wipe freelist ptr for bulk > allocations") ? Hm, AFAIU, wiping inside object prevents misuse of some buggy kernel code that would allocate and accidentally leak prior content (including the in-object freepointer) somewhere the attacker can read. Now for wiping the freepointer outside the object to be useful it would have assume said leak-prone code to additionally be reading past the allocated object size, i.e. a read buffer overflow. That to me seems to be a much more rare combination, and also in that case such code could also likely read even further past the object, i.e. leak the next object's data? IOW I don't think it buys us much additional security protection in practice? > Thanks. >