Re: [PATCH] serial: fix parisc boot hang

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On Fri, 2015-01-02 at 10:51 -0800, Greg Kroah-Hartman wrote:
> On Fri, Jan 02, 2015 at 10:05:13AM -0800, James Bottomley wrote:
> > From: James Bottomley <JBottomley@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> > 
> > This is a partial revert of 2f2dafe (serial: serial_core.c: printk
> > replacement) which gets us booting again.  The real problem seems to be
> > the _emit path in early boot.  However, until we can root cause it, we
> > need at least to get boot working.
> > 
> > Fixes: 2f2dafe77df2c78e189a9fa6b1879dffd06ae5a1
> > Cc: stable@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> > Signed-off-by: James Bottomley <JBottomley@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> > 
> > ---
> > 
> > diff --git a/drivers/tty/serial/serial_core.c b/drivers/tty/serial/serial_core.c
> > index 57ca61b..984605b 100644
> > --- a/drivers/tty/serial/serial_core.c
> > +++ b/drivers/tty/serial/serial_core.c
> > @@ -2164,7 +2164,9 @@ uart_report_port(struct uart_driver *drv, struct uart_port *port)
> >  		break;
> >  	}
> >  
> > -	dev_info(port->dev, "%s%d at %s (irq = %d, base_baud = %d) is a %s\n",
> > +	printk(KERN_INFO "%s%s%s%d at %s (irq = %d, base_baud = %d) is a %s\n",
> > +	       port->dev ? dev_name(port->dev) : "",
> > +	       port->dev ? ": " : "",
> >  	       drv->dev_name,
> >  	       drv->tty_driver->name_base + port->line,
> >  	       address, port->irq, port->uartclk / 16, uart_type(port));
> 
> Very odd, but I'll go queue it up, thanks.

OK, well this turned out to be one of the weirder fishing expeditions
I've been on.  The problem is this strange linux specific printf format
flag %pV.  The way to fix the bug is not to indirect the dev_xxx printks
via %pV.  What's happening is that in some circumstances, using %pV
corrupts the stack.

The reason seems to be that whoever came up with %pV didn't read the man
pages carefully enough. In all the examples and use cases, the va_list
is passed by *copy* not by reference.  For some inexplicable reason it's
passed by reference in struct va_format.  Sure enough when I fix up my
local tree to pass by copy it all works (at least as far as I can tell:
most of the time the stack corruption passes unnoticed and minor
disturbances can affect that.  However, the type and size of the va_list
is the same in reference and copy, so I think it's reasonably
definitive).

I'd really like one of our gcc experts to comment here because all of
these are builtin_ types and functions, so why there's a problem is a
mystery (translate: I don't understand enough of gcc to make sense of
the source code), but the surmise would be that the builtins are taking
some stack frame information from the source and, because it's a pointer
not a copy, it's in the wrong frame.

Assuming this turns out to be the problem, fixing it is going to be a
real bugger because on most platforms, the type of va_list is void *
meaning you can't tell the difference at compile time between a copy and
a reference, because typeof(void *) == typeof(void **),  and this %pV is
sprayed all over our code base.

We should probably also have the security experts look it over because
any way of inducing stack frame corruption is potentially exploitable,
although, in this case, I think all of the uses are internal so the user
doesn't have the ability to influence the source data.

James


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