Re: [PATCH v3 2/4] lib/string_helpers.c: protect string_get_size() against blk_size=0

From: James Bottomley
Date: Thu Oct 29 2015 - 23:34:14 EST


On Fri, 2015-10-30 at 01:32 +0200, Andy Shevchenko wrote:
> On Fri, Oct 30, 2015 at 1:00 AM, James Bottomley <jbottomley@xxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > On Thu, 2015-10-29 at 17:30 +0100, Vitaly Kuznetsov wrote:
> >> Division by zero happens if blk_size=0 is supplied to string_get_size().
> >> Add WARN_ON() and set size to 0 to report '0 B'.
> >>
> >> Signed-off-by: Vitaly Kuznetsov <vkuznets@xxxxxxxxxx>
> >> ---
> >> lib/string_helpers.c | 5 +++++
> >> 1 file changed, 5 insertions(+)
> >>
> >> diff --git a/lib/string_helpers.c b/lib/string_helpers.c
> >> index f6c27dc..ff3575b 100644
> >> --- a/lib/string_helpers.c
> >> +++ b/lib/string_helpers.c
> >> @@ -50,6 +50,11 @@ void string_get_size(u64 size, u32 blk_size, const enum string_size_units units,
> >>
> >> tmp[0] = '\0';
> >> i = 0;
> >> +
> >> + /* Calling string_get_size() with blk_size=0 is wrong! */
> >> + if (WARN_ON(!blk_size))
> >
> > Get rid of the WARN_ON; it's the standard thing to do for a partially
> > connected device. Seeing zero is standard in a whole variety of
> > situations. SCSI shims the zero but most other drivers don't.
>
> For *block* size? It will crash the kernel. I've checked, it wasn't
> changed from the beginning (b9f28d863594).

The standard signal for a drive error in capacity is zero size and zero
block size. We have to take that case as standard without emitting
scary warnings.

James