Re: [PATCH 1/1] ACPI: fix acpi table use after free

From: Mike Rapoport
Date: Wed Mar 10 2021 - 14:41:37 EST


On Wed, Mar 10, 2021 at 08:10:42PM +0100, David Hildenbrand wrote:
>
> > > > Memory gets allocated and used in a different order, which seems to have
> > > > exposed (yet another) latent BUG.
> > >
> > > Well, you can call it that, or you can say that things worked under
> > > certain assumptions regarding the memory allocation order which are
> > > not met any more.

Regardless of the assumptions in the page allocator we had a page used by
the firmware on a free list, which is a bug.

> > > > The same could be reproduced via zone shuffling with a little luck.
> > >
> > > But nobody does that in practice.
> > >
>
> Dan will most certainly object. And I don't know what makes you speak in
> absolute words here.
>
> > > This would be relatively straightforward to address if ACPICA was not
> > > involved in it, but unfortunately that's not the case.
> > >
> > > Changing this part of ACPICA is risky, because such changes may affect
> > > other OSes using it, so that requires some serious consideration.
> > > Alternatively, the previous memory allocation order in Linux could be
> > > restored.
> >
> > Of course, long-term this needs to be addressed in the ACPI
> > initialization code, because it clearly is not robust enough, but in
> > the meantime there's practical breakage observable in the field, so
> > what can be done about that?
>
> *joke* enable zone shuffling.
>
> No seriously, fix the latent BUG. What again is problematic about excluding
> these pages from the page allcoator, for example, via memblock_reserve()?
>
> @Mike?

There is some care that should be taken to make sure we get the order
right, but I don't see a fundamental issue here.

If I understand correctly, Rafael's concern is about changing the parts of
ACPICA that should be OS agnostic, so I think we just need another place to
call memblock_reserve() rather than acpi_tb_install_table_with_override().

Since the reservation should be done early in x86::setup_arch() (and
probably in arm64::setup_arch()) we might just have a function that parses
table headers and reserves them, similarly to how we parse the tables
during KASLR setup.

--
Sincerely yours,
Mike.