Re: [PATCH v2 07/19] x86: introduce __uaccess_begin_nospec and ASM_IFENCE

From: Josh Poimboeuf
Date: Fri Jan 12 2018 - 12:51:17 EST


On Thu, Jan 11, 2018 at 04:47:02PM -0800, Dan Williams wrote:
> For 'get_user' paths, do not allow the kernel to speculate on the value
> of a user controlled pointer. In addition to the 'stac' instruction for
> Supervisor Mode Access Protection, an 'ifence' causes the 'access_ok'
> result to resolve in the pipeline before the cpu might take any
> speculative action on the pointer value.

So I understand the need to "patch first and ask questions later". I
also understand that usercopy is an obvious attack point for speculative
bugs. However, I'm still hopelessly confused about what exactly this
patch (and the next one) are supposed to accomplish.

I can't figure out if:

a) I'm missing something completely obvious;
b) this is poorly described; or
c) it doesn't actually fix/protect/harden anything.

The commit log doesn't help me at all. In fact, it confuses me more.
For example, this paragraph:

> Since this is a major kernel interface that deals with user controlled
> data, the '__uaccess_begin_nospec' mechanism will prevent speculative
> execution past an 'access_ok' permission check. While speculative
> execution past 'access_ok' is not enough to lead to a kernel memory
> leak, it is a necessary precondition.

That just sounds wrong. What if the speculation starts *after* the
access_ok() check? Then the barrier has no purpose.

Most access_ok/get_user/copy_from_user calls are like this:

if (copy_from_user(...uptr..)) /* or access_ok() or get_user() */
return -EFAULT;

So in other words, the usercopy function is called *before* the branch.

But to halt speculation, the lfence needs to come *after* the branch.
So putting lfences *before* the branch doesn't solve anything.

So what am I missing?

--
Josh