Re: scsi: use-after-free in bio_copy_from_iter

From: Johannes Thumshirn
Date: Sat Dec 03 2016 - 13:20:08 EST


On Sat, Dec 03, 2016 at 04:22:39PM +0100, Dmitry Vyukov wrote:
> On Sat, Dec 3, 2016 at 11:38 AM, Johannes Thumshirn <jthumshirn@xxxxxxx> wrote:
> > On Fri, Dec 02, 2016 at 05:50:39PM +0100, Dmitry Vyukov wrote:
> >> On Fri, Nov 25, 2016 at 8:08 PM, Dmitry Vyukov <dvyukov@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

[...]

Hi Dmitry,

>
> Thanks for looking into this!
>
> As I noted I don't think this is use-after-free, more likely it is an
> out-of-bounds access against non-slab range.
>
> Report says that we are copying 0x1000 bytes starting at 0xffff880062c6e02a.
> The first bad address is 0xffff880062c6f000, this address was freed
> previously and that's why KASAN reports UAF.

We're copying 65499 bytes (65535 - sizeof(sg_header)) and we've got 2 order 3
page allocations to do this. It fails somewhere in there. I have seen fails at
0x2000, 0xe000 and all (0x1000 aligned) offsets inbetween.

> But this is already next page, and KASAN does not insert redzones
> around pages (only around slab allocations).
> So most likely the code should have not touch 0xffff880062c6f000 as it
> is not his memory.
> Also I noticed that the report happens after few minutes of repeatedly
> running this program, so I would expect that this is some kind of race
> -- either between kernel threads, or maybe between user space threads
> and kernel.

I somehow think it's a race as well, especially as I have to run the
reproducer in an endless loop and break out of it once I have the 1st
stacktrace in dmesg. This takes between some minutes up to one hour on my
setup.

But the race against a userspace thread... Could it be that the reproducer has
already exited it's threads while the copy_from_iter() is still running?
Normally I'd say no, as user-space shouldn't run while the kernel is doing
things in it's address space, but this is highly suspicious.

> Or maybe it's just that the next page is not always marked
> as free, so we just don't detect the bad access.

Could be, but I lack the memory management knowledge to say more than a 'could
be'.

>
> Does it all make any sense to you?
> Can you think of any additional sanity checks that will ensure that
> this code copies only memory it owns?

Given that we pass the 0xffff as dxfer_len it thinks it owns all memory, so
this is OK, kinda. All that could be would be that user-space has already
exited and thus it's memory is already freed.

Byte,
Johannes
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