Hi all, On Mon, Nov 25, 2024 at 10:26:12AM +0300, Michael Tokarev wrote: > 21.11.2024 17:33, Kees Cook wrote: > > Hi stable tree maintainers, > > > > Please revert the backports of > > > > 44c76825d6ee ("x86: Increase brk randomness entropy for 64-bit systems") > > > > namely: > > > > 5.4: 03475167fda50b8511ef620a27409b08365882e1 > > 5.10: 25d31baf922c1ee987efd6fcc9c7d4ab539c66b4 > > 5.15: 06cb3463aa58906cfff72877eb7f50cb26e9ca93 > > 6.1: b0cde867b80a5e81fcbc0383e138f5845f2005ee > > 6.6: 1a45994fb218d93dec48a3a86f68283db61e0936 > > > > There seems to be a bad interaction between this change and older > > PIE-built qemu-user-static (for aarch64) binaries[1]. Investigation > > continues to see if this will need to be reverted from 6.6, 6.11, > > and mainline. But for now, it's clearly a problem for older kernels with > > older qemu. > > > > Thanks! > > > > -Kees > > > > [1] https://lore.kernel.org/all/202411201000.F3313C02@keescook/ > Unfortunately I haven't seen this thread and this email before now, > when things are already too late. > > And it turned out it's entirely my fault with all this. Let me > explain so things become clear to everyone. > > The problem here is entirely in qemu-user. The fundamental issue > is that qemu-user does not implement an MMU, instead, it implements > just address shift, searching for a memory region for the guest address > space which is hopefully not used by qemu-user itself. > > In practice, this is rarely an issue though, when - and this is the > default - qemu is built as a static-pie executable. This is important: > it's the default mode for the static build - it builds as static-pie > executable, which works around the problem in almost all cases. > This is done for quite a long time, too. > > However, I, as qemu maintainer in debian, got a bug report saying > that qemu-user-static isn't "static enough" - because for some tools > used on debian (lintian), static-pie was something unknown and the > tool issued a warning. And at the time, I just added --disable-pie > flag to the build, without much thinking. This is where things went > wrong. > > Later I reverted this change with a shame, because it causes numerous > configurations to fail randomly, and each of them is very difficult to > debug (especially due to randomness of failures, sometimes it can work > 50 times in a row but fail on the 51th). > > But unfortunately, I forgot to revert this "de-PIEsation" change in > debian stable, and that's exactly where the original bug report come > from, stating kernel broke builds in qemu. > > The same qemu-user-static configuration has been used by some other > distributions too, but hopefully everything's fixed now. Except of > debian bookworm, and probably also ubuntu jammy (previous LTS). > > It is not an "older qemu" anymore (though for a very old qemu this is > true again, that old one can't be used anymore with modern executables > anyway due to other reasons). It is just my build mistake which is > *still* unfixed on debian stable (bookworm). And even there, this > issue can trivially be fixed locally, since qemu-user-static is > self-contained and can be installed on older debian releases, and I > always provide up-to-date backports of qemu packages for debian stable. > > And yes, qemu had numerous improvements in this area since bookworm > version, which addressed many other issues around this and fixed many > other configurations (which are not related to this kernel change), > but the fundamental issue (lack of full-blown MMU) remains. > > Hopefully this clears things up, and it can be seen that this is not > a kernel bug. And I'm hoping we'll fix this in debian bookworm soon > too. > > Thanks, and sorry for all the buzz which caused my 2 mistakes. So catching up with that as we currently did cherry-pick the revert in Debian but I defintivelfy would like to align with upstream (and drop the cherry-pick again if it's not going to be picked for 6.1.y upstream): I'm a bit lost here. What are we going to do? Is the commit still temporarly be applied to the stable series or are we staying at the status quo and we should solely deal it within Debian on qemu side to address the issue above and then we are fine? Or are there other cases outside Debian making it necessary apply the above proposed revert to the stable series? Regards, Salvatore