On 11/7/2024 7:24 PM, Dmitry Baryshkov wrote: > On Thu, Nov 07, 2024 at 07:05:15PM +0530, Vikash Garodia wrote: >> >> On 11/7/2024 6:52 PM, Dmitry Baryshkov wrote: >>> On Thu, Nov 07, 2024 at 06:32:33PM +0530, Vikash Garodia wrote: >>>> >>>> On 11/7/2024 5:37 PM, Bryan O'Donoghue wrote: >>>>> On 07/11/2024 10:41, Dmitry Baryshkov wrote: >>>>>>> init_codecs() parses the payload received from firmware and . I don't think we >>>>>>> can control this part when we have something like this from a malicious firmware >>>>>>> payload >>>>>>> HFI_PROPERTY_PARAM_CODEC_SUPPORTED >>>>>>> HFI_PROPERTY_PARAM_CODEC_SUPPORTED >>>>>>> HFI_PROPERTY_PARAM_CODEC_SUPPORTED >>>>>>> ... >>>>>>> Limiting it to second iteration would restrict the functionality when property >>>>>>> HFI_PROPERTY_PARAM_CODEC_SUPPORTED is sent for supported number of codecs. >>>>>> If you can have a malicious firmware (which is owned and signed by >>>>>> Qualcomm / OEM), then you have to be careful and skip duplicates. So >>>>>> instead of just adding new cap to core->caps, you have to go through >>>>>> that array, check that you are not adding a duplicate (and report a >>>>>> [Firmware Bug] for duplicates), check that there is an empty slot, etc. >>>>>> >>>>>> Just ignoring the "extra" entries is not enough. >>>> Thinking of something like this >>>> >>>> for_each_set_bit(bit, &core->dec_codecs, MAX_CODEC_NUM) { >>>> if (core->codecs_count >= MAX_CODEC_NUM) >>>> return; >>>> cap = &caps[core->codecs_count++]; >>>> if (cap->codec == BIT(bit)) --> each code would have unique bitfield >>>> return; >>> >>> This won't work and it's pretty obvious why. >> Could you please elaborate what would break in above logic ? > > After the "cap=&caps[core->codecs_count++]" line 'cap' will point to the > new entry, which should not contain valid data. > > Instead, when processing new 'bit' you should loop over the existing > caps and check that there is no match. And only if there is no match > the code should be allocating new entry, checking that codecs_count > doesn't overflow, etc. Got it. Regards, Vikash >> >>> >>>>> +1 >>>>> >>>>> This is a more rational argument. If you get a second message, you should surely >>>>> reinit the whole array i.e. update the array with the new list, as opposed to >>>>> throwing away the second message because it over-indexes your local storage.. >>>> That would be incorrect to overwrite the array with new list, whenever new >>>> payload is received. >>> >>> I'd say, don't overwrite the array. Instead the driver should extend it >>> with the new information. >> That is exactly the existing patch is currently doing. > > _new_ information, not a copy of the existing information. > >> >> Regards, >> Vikash >>> >>>> >>>> Regards, >>>> Vikash >>> >