Re: KASAN: use-after-free Read in percpu_ref_switch_to_atomic_rcu

From: Jens Axboe
Date: Fri Mar 06 2020 - 10:34:33 EST


On 3/6/20 7:57 AM, Jann Horn wrote:
> +paulmck
>
> On Wed, Mar 4, 2020 at 3:40 PM Jens Axboe <axboe@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>> On 3/4/20 12:59 AM, Dmitry Vyukov wrote:
>>> On Fri, Feb 7, 2020 at 9:14 AM syzbot
>>> <syzbot+e017e49c39ab484ac87a@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Hello,
>>>>
>>>> syzbot found the following crash on:
>>>>
>>>> HEAD commit: 4c7d00cc Merge tag 'pwm/for-5.6-rc1' of git://git.kernel.o..
>>>> git tree: upstream
>>>> console output: https://syzkaller.appspot.com/x/log.txt?x=12fec785e00000
>>>> kernel config: https://syzkaller.appspot.com/x/.config?x=e162021ddededa72
>>>> dashboard link: https://syzkaller.appspot.com/bug?extid=e017e49c39ab484ac87a
>>>> compiler: clang version 10.0.0 (https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/ c2443155a0fb245c8f17f2c1c72b6ea391e86e81)
>>>>
>>>> Unfortunately, I don't have any reproducer for this crash yet.
>>>>
>>>> IMPORTANT: if you fix the bug, please add the following tag to the commit:
>>>> Reported-by: syzbot+e017e49c39ab484ac87a@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>>>
>>> +io_uring maintainers
>>>
>>> Here is a repro:
>>> https://gist.githubusercontent.com/dvyukov/6b340beab6483a036f4186e7378882ce/raw/cd1922185516453c201df8eded1d4b006a6d6a3a/gistfile1.txt
>>
>> I've queued up a fix for this:
>>
>> https://git.kernel.dk/cgit/linux-block/commit/?h=io_uring-5.6&id=9875fe3dc4b8cff1f1b440fb925054a5124403c3
>
> I believe that this fix relies on call_rcu() having FIFO ordering; but
> <https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/RCU/Design/Memory-Ordering/Tree-RCU-Memory-Ordering.html#Callback%20Registry>
> says:
>
> | call_rcu() normally acts only on CPU-local state[...] It simply
> enqueues the rcu_head structure on a per-CPU list,
>
> Is this fix really correct?

That's a good point, there's a potentially stronger guarantee we need
here that isn't "nobody is inside an RCU critical section", but rather
that we're depending on a previous call_rcu() to have happened. Hence I
think you are right - it'll shrink the window drastically, since the
previous callback is already queued up, but it's not a full close.

Hmm...

--
Jens Axboe