The patch below does not apply to the 4.4-stable tree. If someone wants it applied there, or to any other stable or longterm tree, then please email the backport, including the original git commit id to <stable@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>. thanks, greg k-h ------------------ original commit in Linus's tree ------------------ >From 260d9f2fc5655a2552701cdd0b909c4466732f19 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: "Luis R. Rodriguez" <mcgrof@xxxxxxxxxx> Date: Thu, 20 Jul 2017 13:13:11 -0700 Subject: [PATCH] firmware: avoid invalid fallback aborts by using killable wait Commit 0cb64249ca500 ("firmware_loader: abort request if wait_for_completion is interrupted") added via 4.0 added support to abort the fallback mechanism when a signal was detected and wait_for_completion_interruptible() returned -ERESTARTSYS -- for instance when a user hits CTRL-C. The abort was overly *too* effective. When a child process terminates (successful or not) the signal SIGCHLD can be sent to the parent process which ran the child in the background and later triggered a sync request for firmware through a sysfs interface which relies on the fallback mechanism. This signal in turn can be recieved by the interruptible wait we constructed on firmware_class and detects it as an abort *before* userspace could get a chance to write the firmware. Upon failure -EAGAIN is returned, so userspace is also kept in the dark about exactly what happened. We can reproduce the issue with the fw_fallback.sh selftest: Before this patch: $ sudo tools/testing/selftests/firmware/fw_fallback.sh ... tools/testing/selftests/firmware/fw_fallback.sh: error - sync firmware request cancelled due to SIGCHLD After this patch: $ sudo tools/testing/selftests/firmware/fw_fallback.sh ... tools/testing/selftests/firmware/fw_fallback.sh: SIGCHLD on sync ignored as expected Fix this by making the wait killable -- only killable by SIGKILL (kill -9). We loose the ability to allow userspace to cancel a write with CTRL-C (SIGINT), however its been decided the compromise to require SIGKILL is worth the gains. Chances of this issue occuring are low due to the number of drivers upstream exclusively relying on the fallback mechanism for firmware (2 drivers), however this is observed in the field with custom drivers with sysfs triggers to load firmware. Only distributions relying on the fallback mechanism are impacted as well. An example reported issue was on Android, as follows: 1) Android init (pid=1) fork()s (say pid=42) [this child process is totally unrelated to firmware loading, it could be sleep 2; for all we care ] 2) Android init (pid=1) does a write() on a (driver custom) sysfs file which ends up calling request_firmware() kernel side 3) The firmware loading fallback mechanism is used, the request is sent to userspace and pid 1 waits in the kernel on wait_* 4) before firmware loading completes pid 42 dies (for any reason, even normal termination) 5) Kernel delivers SIGCHLD to pid=1 to tell it a child has died, which causes -ERESTARTSYS to be returned from wait_* 6) The kernel's wait aborts and return -EAGAIN for the request_firmware() caller. Cc: stable <stable@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> # 4.0 Fixes: 0cb64249ca500 ("firmware_loader: abort request if wait_for_completion is interrupted") Suggested-by: "Eric W. Biederman" <ebiederm@xxxxxxxxxxxx> Suggested-by: Dmitry Torokhov <dmitry.torokhov@xxxxxxxxx> Tested-by: Martin Fuzzey <mfuzzey@xxxxxxxxxxx> Reported-by: Martin Fuzzey <mfuzzey@xxxxxxxxxxx> Signed-off-by: Luis R. Rodriguez <mcgrof@xxxxxxxxxx> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> diff --git a/drivers/base/firmware_class.c b/drivers/base/firmware_class.c index 76f1b702bdd6..bfbe1e154128 100644 --- a/drivers/base/firmware_class.c +++ b/drivers/base/firmware_class.c @@ -130,8 +130,7 @@ static int __fw_state_wait_common(struct fw_state *fw_st, long timeout) { long ret; - ret = wait_for_completion_interruptible_timeout(&fw_st->completion, - timeout); + ret = wait_for_completion_killable_timeout(&fw_st->completion, timeout); if (ret != 0 && fw_st->status == FW_STATUS_ABORTED) return -ENOENT; if (!ret)