On 20.03.24 16:02, Bart Van Assche wrote:
On 3/20/24 04:08, Alexander Wetzel wrote:
sg_remove_sfp_usercontext() must not use sg_device_destroy() after
calling scsi_device_put().
sg_device_destroy() is accessing the parent scsi device request_queue.
Which will already be set to NULL when the preceding call to
scsi_device_put() removed the last reference to the parent scsi device.
The resulting NULL pointer exception will then crash the kernel.
Link:
https://lore.kernel.org/r/20240305150509.23896-1-Alexander@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Cc: <stable@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Wetzel <Alexander@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
---
Changes compared to V1:
Reworked the commit message
Alexander
---
drivers/scsi/sg.c | 2 +-
1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-)
diff --git a/drivers/scsi/sg.c b/drivers/scsi/sg.c
index 86210e4dd0d3..80e0d1981191 100644
--- a/drivers/scsi/sg.c
+++ b/drivers/scsi/sg.c
@@ -2232,8 +2232,8 @@ sg_remove_sfp_usercontext(struct work_struct *work)
"sg_remove_sfp: sfp=0x%p\n", sfp));
kfree(sfp);
- scsi_device_put(sdp->device);
kref_put(&sdp->d_ref, sg_device_destroy);
+ scsi_device_put(sdp->device);
module_put(THIS_MODULE);
}
Is it guaranteed that the above kref_put() call is the last kref_put()
call on sdp->d_ref? If not, how about inserting code between the
kref_put() call and the scsi_device_put() call that waits until
sg_device_destroy() has finished?
While I'm not familiar with the code, I'm pretty sure kref_put() is
removing the last reference to d_ref here. Anything else would be odd,
based on my - really sketchy - understanding of the flows.
Also waiting for another process looks wrong. I guess we would then have
to delay the call to sg_release().
And at least for me it's always the last d_ref reference.
I changed the section to:
kref_put(&sdp->d_ref, sg_device_destroy);
printk("XXXX scsi=%u, dref=%u\n", \
kref_read(&sdp->device->sdev_gendev.kobj.kref), \
kref_read(&sdp->d_ref));
scsi_device_put(sdp->device);
And connected/disconnected my test USB device a few times:
XXXX scsi=2, dref=0
XXXX scsi=1, dref=0
XXXX scsi=2, dref=0
XXXX scsi=1, dref=0
XXXX scsi=1, dref=0
XXXX scsi=1, dref=0
XXXX scsi=1, dref=0
XXXX scsi=1, dref=0
XXXX scsi=1, dref=0
XXXX scsi=1, dref=0
(scsi=1 are the cases which would cause the NULL pointer exceptions with
the unpatched driver.)
Alexander