On Tue, Mar 11, 2025 at 04:11:57PM +0000, Qasim Ijaz wrote: > In mii_nway_restart() during the line: > > bmcr = mii->mdio_read(mii->dev, mii->phy_id, MII_BMCR); > > The code attempts to call mii->mdio_read which is ch9200_mdio_read(). > > ch9200_mdio_read() utilises a local buffer, which is initialised > with control_read(): > > unsigned char buff[2]; > > However buff is conditionally initialised inside control_read(): > > if (err == size) { > memcpy(data, buf, size); > } > > If the condition of "err == size" is not met, then buff remains > uninitialised. Once this happens the uninitialised buff is accessed > and returned during ch9200_mdio_read(): > > return (buff[0] | buff[1] << 8); > > The problem stems from the fact that ch9200_mdio_read() ignores the > return value of control_read(), leading to uinit-access of buff. > > To fix this we should check the return value of control_read() > and return early on error. > > Furthermore the get_mac_address() function has a similar problem where > it does not directly check the return value of each control_read(), > instead it sums up the return values and checks them all at the end > which means if any call to control_read() fails the function just > continues on. > > Handle this by validating the return value of each call and fail fast > and early instead of continuing. > > Lastly ch9200_bind() ignores the return values of multiple > control_write() calls. > > Validate each control_write() call to ensure it succeeds before > continuing with the next call. Hi Qasim, I see that these problems are related, but this is quite a lot of fixes for one patch: the rule of thumb is one fix per patch. Could you consider splitting it up along those lines? > > Reported-by: syzbot <syzbot+3361c2d6f78a3e0892f9@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > Closes: https://syzkaller.appspot.com/bug?extid=3361c2d6f78a3e0892f9 > Tested-by: syzbot <syzbot+3361c2d6f78a3e0892f9@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > Fixes: 4a476bd6d1d9 ("usbnet: New driver for QinHeng CH9200 devices") > Cc: stable@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > Signed-off-by: Qasim Ijaz <qasdev00@xxxxxxxxx> ... > diff --git a/drivers/net/usb/ch9200.c b/drivers/net/usb/ch9200.c > index f69d9b902da0..e938501a1fc8 100644 > --- a/drivers/net/usb/ch9200.c > +++ b/drivers/net/usb/ch9200.c > @@ -178,6 +178,7 @@ static int ch9200_mdio_read(struct net_device *netdev, int phy_id, int loc) > { > struct usbnet *dev = netdev_priv(netdev); > unsigned char buff[2]; > + int ret; > > netdev_dbg(netdev, "%s phy_id:%02x loc:%02x\n", > __func__, phy_id, loc); > @@ -185,8 +186,10 @@ static int ch9200_mdio_read(struct net_device *netdev, int phy_id, int loc) > if (phy_id != 0) > return -ENODEV; > > - control_read(dev, REQUEST_READ, 0, loc * 2, buff, 0x02, > - CONTROL_TIMEOUT_MS); > + ret = control_read(dev, REQUEST_READ, 0, loc * 2, buff, 0x02, > + CONTROL_TIMEOUT_MS); > + if (ret != 2) > + return ret; If I understand things correctly, control_read() can (only) return: * 2: success * negative error value: a different failure mode If so, I think it would be more idiomatic to write this as: if (ret < 0) return ret; This makes it easier for those reading the code to see that an error value is being returns on error. Likewise elsewhere in this patch. > > return (buff[0] | buff[1] << 8); > } ...