Re: use-after-free in sctp_do_sm

From: Vlad Yasevich
Date: Fri Dec 04 2015 - 10:37:37 EST


On 12/04/2015 07:55 AM, Marcelo Ricardo Leitner wrote:
> On Fri, Dec 04, 2015 at 11:40:02AM +0100, Dmitry Vyukov wrote:
>> On Thu, Dec 3, 2015 at 9:51 PM, Joe Perches <joe@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>> (adding lkml as this is likely better discussed there)
>>>
>>> On Thu, 2015-12-03 at 15:42 -0500, Jason Baron wrote:
>>>> On 12/03/2015 03:24 PM, Joe Perches wrote:
>>>>> On Thu, 2015-12-03 at 15:10 -0500, Jason Baron wrote:
>>>>>> On 12/03/2015 03:03 PM, Joe Perches wrote:
>>>>>>> On Thu, 2015-12-03 at 14:32 -0500, Jason Baron wrote:
>>>>>>>> On 12/03/2015 01:52 PM, Aaron Conole wrote:
>>>>>>>>> I think that as a minimum, the following patch should be evaluted,
>>>>>>>>> but am unsure to whom I should submit it (after I test):
>>>>>>> []
>>>>>>>> Agreed - the intention here is certainly to have no side effects. It
>>>>>>>> looks like 'no_printk()' is used in quite a few other places that would
>>>>>>>> benefit from this change. So we probably want a generic
>>>>>>>> 'really_no_printk()' macro.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> https://lkml.org/lkml/2012/6/17/231
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I don't see this in the tree.
>>>>>
>>>>> It never got applied.
>>>>>
>>>>>> Also maybe we should just convert
>>>>>> no_printk() to do what your 'eliminated_printk()'.
>>>>>
>>>>> Some of them at least.
>>>>>
>>>>>> So we can convert all users with this change?
>>>>>
>>>>> I don't think so, I think there are some
>>>>> function evaluation/side effects that are
>>>>> required. I believe some do hardware I/O.
>>>>>
>>>>> It'd be good to at least isolate them.
>>>>>
>>>>> I'm not sure how to find them via some
>>>>> automated tool/mechanism though.
>>>>>
>>>>> I asked Julia Lawall about it once in this
>>>>> thread: https://lkml.org/lkml/2014/12/3/696
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Seems rather fragile to have side effects that we rely
>>>> upon hidden in a printk().
>>>
>>> Yup.
>>>
>>>> Just convert them and see what breaks :)
>>>
>>> I appreciate your optimism. It's very 1995.
>>> Try it and see what happens.
>>
>>
>> Whatever is the resolution for pr_debug, we still need to fix this
>> particular use-after-free. It affects stability of debug builds, gives
>> invalid debug output, prevents us from finding more bugs in SCTP. And
>> maybe somebody uses CONFIG_DYNAMIC_DEBUG in production.
>
> Agreed. I'm already working on a fix for this particular use-after-free.
>
> Another interesting thing about this is that sctp_do_sm() is called for
> nearly every movement that happens on a sctp socket. Said that, that
> always-running IDR search hidden on that debug statement do have some
> nasty performance impact, specially because it's serialized on a
> spinlock.

YUCK! I didn't really pay much attention to those debug macros before, but
debug_post_sfx() is truly awful.

This wasn't such a bad thing where these macros depended on CONFIG_SCTP_DEBUG,
but now that they are always built, we need fix them.

-vlad



> This wouldn't be happening if it was fully ellided and would
> be ok if that pr_debug() was really being printed, but not as it is.
> Kudos to this report that I could notice this. I'm trying to fix this on
> SCTP-side as well.
>
> Marcelo
>

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