Re: [PATCH 17/23] y2038: time: avoid timespec usage in settimeofday()

From: Arnd Bergmann
Date: Thu Nov 14 2019 - 06:06:52 EST


On Wed, Nov 13, 2019 at 10:53 PM Thomas Gleixner <tglx@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> On Fri, 8 Nov 2019, Arnd Bergmann wrote:
> > -SYSCALL_DEFINE2(settimeofday, struct timeval __user *, tv,
> > +SYSCALL_DEFINE2(settimeofday, struct __kernel_old_timeval __user *, tv,
> > struct timezone __user *, tz)
> > {
> > struct timespec64 new_ts;
> > - struct timeval user_tv;
> > struct timezone new_tz;
> >
> > if (tv) {
> > - if (copy_from_user(&user_tv, tv, sizeof(*tv)))
> > + if (get_user(new_ts.tv_sec, &tv->tv_sec) ||
> > + get_user(new_ts.tv_nsec, &tv->tv_usec))
> > return -EFAULT;
>
> How is that supposed to be correct on a 32bit kernel?

I don't see the problem you are referring to. This should behave the
same way on a 32-bit kernel and on a 64-bit kernel, sign-extending
the tv_sec field, and copying the user tv_usec field into the
kernel tv_nsec, to be multiplied by 1000 a few lines later.

Am I missing something?

> > - if (!timeval_valid(&user_tv))
> > + if (tv->tv_usec > USEC_PER_SEC)
> > return -EINVAL;
>
> That's incomplete:
>
> static inline bool timeval_valid(const struct timeval *tv)
> {
> /* Dates before 1970 are bogus */
> if (tv->tv_sec < 0)
> return false;
>
> /* Can't have more microseconds then a second */
> if (tv->tv_usec < 0 || tv->tv_usec >= USEC_PER_SEC)
> return false;
>
> return true;
> }

My idea was to not duplicate the range check that is done
in do_sys_settimeofday64() and again in do_settimeofday64:

if (!timespec64_valid_settod(ts))
return -EINVAL;

The only check we should need in addition to this is to ensure
that passing an invalid tv_usec number doesn't become an
unexpectedly valid tv_nsec after the multiplication.

I agree the patch looks like I'm missing a check here, but
the code after the patch appears clear enough to me.

Arnd