Re: [PATCH 1/2] kernel/fork: handle put_user errors for CLONE_CHILD_SETTID/CLEARTID

From: Oleg Nesterov
Date: Fri Feb 06 2015 - 14:56:50 EST


On 02/06, Oleg Nesterov wrote:
>
> On 02/06, Konstantin Khlebnikov wrote:
> >
> > Whole sequence looks like: task calls fork, glibc calls syscall clone with
> > CLONE_CHILD_SETTID and passes pointer to TLS THREAD_SELF->tid as argument.
> > Child task gets read-only copy of VM including TLS. Child calls put_user()
> > to handle CLONE_CHILD_SETTID from schedule_tail(). put_user() trigger page
> > fault and it fails because do_wp_page() hits memcg limit without invoking
> > OOM-killer because this is page-fault from kernel-space.
>
> Because of !FAULT_FLAG_USER?
>
> Perhaps we should fix this? Say mem_cgroup_oom_enable/disable around put_user(),
> I dunno.
>
> > Put_user returns
> > -EFAULT, which is ignored. Child returns into user-space and catches here
> > assert (THREAD_GETMEM (self, tid) != ppid),
>
> If only I understood why else we need CLONE_CHILD_SETTID ;)
>
> > --- a/kernel/sched/core.c
> > +++ b/kernel/sched/core.c
> > @@ -2312,8 +2312,20 @@ asmlinkage __visible void schedule_tail(struct task_struct *prev)
> > post_schedule(rq);
> > preempt_enable();
> >
> > - if (current->set_child_tid)
> > - put_user(task_pid_vnr(current), current->set_child_tid);
> > + if (current->set_child_tid &&
> > + unlikely(put_user(task_pid_vnr(current), current->set_child_tid))) {
> > + int dummy;
> > +
> > + /*
> > + * If this address is unreadable then userspace has not set
> > + * proper pointer. Application either doesn't care or will
> > + * notice this soon. If this address is readable then task
> > + * will be mislead about its own tid. It's better to die.
> > + */
> > + if (!get_user(dummy, current->set_child_tid) &&
> > + !fatal_signal_pending(current))
> > + force_sig(SIGSEGV, current);
> > + }
>
> Well, get_user() can fail the same way? The page we need to cow can be
> swapped out.
>
> At first glance, to me this problem should be solved somewhere else...
> I'll try to reread this all tomorrow.

And in fact I think that this is not set_child_tid/etc-specific. Perhaps
I am totally confused, but I think that put_user() simply should not fail
this way. Say, why a syscall should return -EFAULT if memory allocation
"silently" fails? Confused.

Oleg.

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