Re: out of bounds access on array error_text[] because of -ETIMEDOUT return from __send_command()

From: Florian Fainelli
Date: Wed Aug 19 2020 - 14:34:24 EST


On 8/18/20 5:21 AM, Colin Ian King wrote:
> Hi,
>
> static analysis with coverity has found a buffer overflow issue with the
> brcmstb driver, I believe it may have been introduced with the following
> commit:
>
> commit a7c25759d8d84b64c437a78f05df7314b02934e5
> Author: Markus Mayer <mmayer@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
> Date: Tue Apr 2 16:01:00 2019 -0700
>
> memory: brcmstb: dpfe: wait for DCPU to be ready
>
> The static analysis is as follows for the source file
> /drivers/memory/brcmstb_dpfe.c :
>
> 684 static ssize_t generic_show(unsigned int command, u32 response[],
> 685 struct brcmstb_dpfe_priv *priv, char *buf)
> 686 {
> 687 int ret;
> 688
> 1. Condition !priv, taking false branch.
>
> 689 if (!priv)
> 690 return sprintf(buf, "ERROR: driver private data not
> set\n");
> 691
> 2. return_constant: Function call __send_command(priv, command,
> response) may return -110.
> 3. assignment: Assigning: ret = __send_command(priv, command,
> response). The value of ret is now -110.
>
> 692 ret = __send_command(priv, command, response);
> 4. Condition ret < 0, taking true branch.
>
> 693 if (ret < 0)
>
> Out-of-bounds read (OVERRUN)
> 5. overrun-local: Overrunning array error_text of 6 8-byte elements
> at element index 110 (byte offset 887) using index -ret (which evaluates
> to 110).
> 694 return sprintf(buf, "ERROR: %s\n", error_text[-ret]);
> 695
> 696 return 0;
> 697 }
>
>
> Function __send_command() can return -ETIMEDOUT and this causes an
> out-of-bounds access on error_text[].

Markus, what do you think of this:

diff --git a/drivers/memory/brcmstb_dpfe.c b/drivers/memory/brcmstb_dpfe.c
index 60e8633b1175..b41c6251ddc3 100644
--- a/drivers/memory/brcmstb_dpfe.c
+++ b/drivers/memory/brcmstb_dpfe.c
@@ -445,7 +445,7 @@ static int __send_command(struct brcmstb_dpfe_priv
*priv, unsigned int cmd,
}
if (resp != 0) {
mutex_unlock(&priv->lock);
- return -ETIMEDOUT;
+ return -ffs(DCPU_RET_ERR_TIMEDOUT);
}

/* Compute checksum over the message */

That way we only return DCPU-style error code from __send_command and we
de-reference error_text accordingly? Or we could just introduce a proper
lookup with a function instead of a direct array de-reference.
--
Florian