> On Feb 15, 2019, at 6:08 PM, Steven Rostedt <rostedt@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Fri, 15 Feb 2019 17:32:55 -0800 > Andy Lutomirski <luto@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >>> I added you just because I wanted help getting the change log correct, >>> as that's what Linus was complaining about. I kept using "kernel >>> address" when the sample bug used for the patch was really a >>> non-canonical address (as Linus said, it's just garbage. Neither kernel >>> or user space). But I pointed out that this can also bug if the >>> address is canonical and in the kernel address space. The old code >>> didn't complain about non-canonical or kernel address faulting before >>> commit 9da3f2b7405, which only talks about kernel address space >>> faulting (which is why I only mentioned that in my messages). >>> >>> Would changing all the mention of "kernel address" to "non user space" >>> be accurate? >>> >> >> I think “kernel address” is right. It’s illegal to access anything that isn’t known to be a valid kernel address while in KERNEL_DS. > > But an non-canonical address is not a "kernel address", and that will > cause a bug too. Indeed. A non-canonical address is not known to be a valid kernel address. I stand by my slightly pedantic statement :) > This patch came about because it was changed that if > we do a uaccess on something other than a user space address and take a > fault (either because it was a non-canonical address, or a kernel > address), we BUG! Where before that one patch, it would just return a > fault. > >> >> The old __copy seems likely to have always been a bit bogus. >> >> BTW, what is this probe_mem_read() thing? Some minimal inspection suggests it’s a buggy reimplementation of probe_kernel_read(). Can you delete it and just use probe_kernel_read() directly? > > Well, the issue is that we have trace_probe_tmpl.h in that same > directory, which does the work for kprobes and uprobes. The > trace_kprobes.c defines all the functions for handling kprobes, and > trace_uprobes.c does all the handling of uprobes, then they include > trace_probe_tmpl.h which does the bulk of the work. > > In the uprobes case, we have: > > static nokprobe_inline int > probe_mem_read(void *dest, void *src, size_t size) > { > void __user *vaddr = (void __force __user *)src; > > return copy_from_user(dest, vaddr, size) ? -EFAULT : 0; > } > > Because that is adding probes on userspace code. > > Can the kprobe case call probe_kernel_read? Maybe it does already?