On 6/15/20 11:30 PM, Eric Biggers wrote:
On Mon, Jun 15, 2020 at 09:57:16PM -0400, Waiman Long wrote:
The kzfree() function is normally used to clear some sensitive
information, like encryption keys, in the buffer before freeing it back
to the pool. Memset() is currently used for the buffer clearing. However,
it is entirely possible that the compiler may choose to optimize away the
memory clearing especially if LTO is being used. To make sure that this
optimization will not happen, memzero_explicit(), which is introduced
in v3.18, is now used in kzfree() to do the clearing.
Fixes: 3ef0e5ba4673 ("slab: introduce kzfree()")
Cc: stable@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Signed-off-by: Waiman Long <longman@xxxxxxxxxx>
---
mm/slab_common.c | 2 +-
1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-)
diff --git a/mm/slab_common.c b/mm/slab_common.c
index 9e72ba224175..37d48a56431d 100644
--- a/mm/slab_common.c
+++ b/mm/slab_common.c
@@ -1726,7 +1726,7 @@ void kzfree(const void *p)
if (unlikely(ZERO_OR_NULL_PTR(mem)))
return;
ks = ksize(mem);
- memset(mem, 0, ks);
+ memzero_explicit(mem, ks);
kfree(mem);
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(kzfree);
This is a good change, but the commit message isn't really accurate. AFAIK, no
one has found any case where this memset() gets optimized out. And even with
LTO, it would be virtually impossible due to all the synchronization and global
data structures that kfree() uses. (Remember that this isn't the C standard
function "free()", so the compiler can't assign it any special meaning.)
Not to mention that LTO support isn't actually upstream yet.
I still agree with the change, but it might be helpful if the commit message
were honest that this is really a hardening measure and about properly conveying
the intent. As-is this sounds like a critical fix, which might confuse people.
Yes, I agree that the commit log may look a bit scary. How about the
following:
The kzfree() function is normally used to clear some sensitive
information, like encryption keys, in the buffer before freeing it back
to the pool. Memset() is currently used for buffer clearing. However
unlikely, there is still a non-zero probability that the compiler may
choose to optimize away the memory clearing especially if LTO is being
used in the future. To make sure that this optimization will never
happen, memzero_explicit(), which is introduced in v3.18, is now used
in kzfree() to future-proof it.
Cheers,
Longman