On Wed, Feb 26, 2020 at 08:01:52PM +0800, Macpaul Lin wrote: > This issue was found when adbd trying to open functionfs with AIO mode. > Usually, we need to set "setprop sys.usb.ffs.aio_compat 0" to enable > adbd with AIO mode on Android. > > When adbd is opening functionfs, it will try to read 24 bytes at the > first read I/O control. If this reading has been failed, adbd will > try to send FUNCTIONFS_CLEAR_HALT to functionfs. When adbd is in AIO > mode, functionfs will be acted with asyncronized I/O path. After the > successful read transfer has been completed by gadget hardware, the > following series of functions will be called. > ffs_epfile_async_io_complete() -> ffs_user_copy_worker() -> > copy_to_iter() -> _copy_to_iter() -> copyout() -> > iterate_and_advance() -> iterate_iovec() > > Adding debug trace to these functions, it has been found that in > copyout(), access_ok() will check if the user space address is valid > to write. However if CONFIG_ARM64_TAGGED_ADDR_ABI is enabled, adbd > always passes user space address start with "0x3C" to gadget's AIO > blocks. This tagged address will cause access_ok() check always fail. > Which causes later calculation in iterate_iovec() turn zero. > Copyout() won't copy data to user space since the length to be copied > "v.iov_len" will be zero. Finally leads ffs_copy_to_iter() always return > -EFAULT, causes adbd cannot open functionfs and send > FUNCTIONFS_CLEAR_HALT. > > Signed-off-by: Macpaul Lin <macpaul.lin@xxxxxxxxxxxx> > Cc: Peter Chen <peter.chen@xxxxxxx> > Cc: Catalin Marinas <catalin.marinas@xxxxxxx> > Cc: Miles Chen <miles.chen@xxxxxxxxxxxx> > --- > Changes for v4: > - Abandon solution v3 by adding "TIF_TAGGED_ADDR" flag to gadget driver. > According to Catalin's suggestion, change the solution by untagging > user space address passed by AIO in gadget driver. Well, this was suggested in case you have a strong reason not to do the untagging in adbd. As I said, tagged pointers in user space were supported long before we introduced CONFIG_ARM64_TAGGED_ADDR_ABI. How did adb cope with such tagged pointers before? It was not supposed to pass them to the kernel. > diff --git a/drivers/usb/gadget/function/f_fs.c b/drivers/usb/gadget/function/f_fs.c > index ce1d023..192935f 100644 > --- a/drivers/usb/gadget/function/f_fs.c > +++ b/drivers/usb/gadget/function/f_fs.c > @@ -715,7 +715,20 @@ static void ffs_epfile_io_complete(struct usb_ep *_ep, struct usb_request *req) > > static ssize_t ffs_copy_to_iter(void *data, int data_len, struct iov_iter *iter) > { > - ssize_t ret = copy_to_iter(data, data_len, iter); > + ssize_t ret; > + > +#if defined(CONFIG_ARM64) > + /* > + * Replace tagged address passed by user space application before > + * copying. > + */ > + if (IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_ARM64_TAGGED_ADDR_ABI) && > + (iter->type == ITER_IOVEC)) { > + *(unsigned long *)&iter->iov->iov_base = > + (unsigned long)untagged_addr(iter->iov->iov_base); > + } > +#endif > + ret = copy_to_iter(data, data_len, iter); Here you should probably drop all the #ifdefs and IS_ENABLED checks since untagged_addr() is defined globally as a no-op (and overridden by arm64 and sparc). Please don't send another patch until we understand (a) whether this is a user-space problem to fix or (b) if we fix it in the kernel, is this the only/right place? If we settle for the in-kernel untagging, do we explicitly untag the addresses in such kernel threads or we default to TIF_TAGGED_ADDR for all kernel threads, in case they ever call use_mm() (or we could even hook something in use_mm() to set this TIF flag temporarily). Looking for feedback from the Android folk and a better analysis of the possible solution. -- Catalin