Hi, Earlier i used local buffer of array causes issue to me. Instead of local buffer array, i declared buffer as a pointer and allocating a memory of wrq->u.data.length using kmalloc. This change fixed my issue. Thanks & Regards, Sateesh. On 07/20/2013 01:21 PM, Sudip Mukherjee wrote: > Hi Sateesh > Apart from the simple check as Kristof has suggested , you can also > print the value of wrq->u.data.length to see exactly how much data you > are receiving from the user. > > Regards > Sudip > > On Fri, Jul 19, 2013 at 9:28 PM, Kristof Provost <kristof@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> On 2013-07-19 21:20:07 (+0530), Sateesh Kumar <sateesh.kumar@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>> I am declaring an array of 200 bytes as destination in ioctl >>> processing function itself even i am sending 12 bytes from application. >>> Here is the sample code how i am doing in kernel. >>> >>> ioctl_process(struct iwreq *wrq) >>> { >>> uint8 buffer[200]; >>> copy_from_user(buffer, wrq->u.data.pointer, >>> wrq->u.data.length); //This line itself is causing the problem for me. >>> } >>> >> I'll quote the error message you got here: >> >>>>> "call to ‘copy_from_user_overflow’ declared with attribute warning: >>>>> copy_from_user() buffer size is not provably correct" >>>>> >> It looks very much like you're taking a user supplied size >> (wrq->u.data.length) and trusting it to be less than 200. That's bad. >> Don't do that. It'll let any user panic or exploit your system. >> >> A simple check (if wrq->u.data.length > 200 return -E2BIG;) would >> probably be sufficient. >> >> (You'll also want to check the return value of copy_from_user().) >> >> Regards, >> Kristof >> > _______________________________________________ Kernelnewbies mailing list Kernelnewbies@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.kernelnewbies.org/mailman/listinfo/kernelnewbies