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arm64: Avoid premature usercopy failure
authorRobin Murphy <robin.murphy@arm.com>
Mon, 12 Jul 2021 14:27:46 +0000 (15:27 +0100)
committerWill Deacon <will@kernel.org>
Thu, 15 Jul 2021 16:29:14 +0000 (17:29 +0100)
commit295cf156231ca3f9e3a66bde7fab5e09c41835e0
tree90ab5ec9602af7f98bffa5b05d3a8ec4beb33a88
parent8cdd23c23c3d481a43b4aa03dcb5738812831115
arm64: Avoid premature usercopy failure

Al reminds us that the usercopy API must only return complete failure
if absolutely nothing could be copied. Currently, if userspace does
something silly like giving us an unaligned pointer to Device memory,
or a size which overruns MTE tag bounds, we may fail to honour that
requirement when faulting on a multi-byte access even though a smaller
access could have succeeded.

Add a mitigation to the fixup routines to fall back to a single-byte
copy if we faulted on a larger access before anything has been written
to the destination, to guarantee making *some* forward progress. We
needn't be too concerned about the overall performance since this should
only occur when callers are doing something a bit dodgy in the first
place. Particularly broken userspace might still be able to trick
generic_perform_write() into an infinite loop by targeting write() at
an mmap() of some read-only device register where the fault-in load
succeeds but any store synchronously aborts such that copy_to_user() is
genuinely unable to make progress, but, well, don't do that...

CC: stable@vger.kernel.org
Reported-by: Chen Huang <chenhuang5@huawei.com>
Suggested-by: Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk>
Reviewed-by: Catalin Marinas <catalin.marinas@arm.com>
Signed-off-by: Robin Murphy <robin.murphy@arm.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/dc03d5c675731a1f24a62417dba5429ad744234e.1626098433.git.robin.murphy@arm.com
Signed-off-by: Will Deacon <will@kernel.org>
arch/arm64/lib/copy_from_user.S
arch/arm64/lib/copy_in_user.S
arch/arm64/lib/copy_to_user.S