Re: [RFC PATCH for 4.18 1/2] rseq: validate rseq_cs fields are < TASK_SIZE

From: Andy Lutomirski
Date: Mon Jul 02 2018 - 13:11:37 EST


On Mon, Jul 2, 2018 at 7:32 AM Mathieu Desnoyers
<mathieu.desnoyers@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> ----- On Jun 29, 2018, at 4:39 PM, Andy Lutomirski luto@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
>
> > On Fri, Jun 29, 2018 at 12:48 PM, Mathieu Desnoyers
> > <mathieu.desnoyers@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> >> There are two aspects I'm concerned about here:
> >>
> >> 1) security: we don't want 32-bit user-space to feed a 64-bit value over 4GB
> >> as abort_ip that may end up causing OOPSes on architectures that would
> >> lack proper validation of those values on return to userspace.
> >
> > I'm not too worried about this. As long as you're doing it from
> > signal-delivery context (which you are AFAICT) you're fine.
>
> No, it's not just signal-delivery context. It's _also_ called from
> return to usermode loop, which can by called on return from
> interrupt/trap/syscall.
>

TIF_NOTIFY_RESUME context in the exit slowpath is fine, too.

> >
> > But I re-read the code and I think I have a really straightforward
> > solution. Two choices:
> >
> > (1) Change instruction_pointer_set() to return an error code if the
> > address passed in is garbage in a way that could cause unexpected
> > behavior (like >=2^32 on x86_64 if regs->cs is 32-bit). It has very
> > very few callers.
>
> This would take care of my security concern wrt abort_ip, but would not
> provide consistent behavior for the other fields. Also, perhaps this
> kind of change should aim the next merge window ?

It's not about security. The idea is that instruction_pointer_set()
should return some indication of whether it actually set the
instruction pointer to the requested value. On x86, if you have
!user_64bit_mode(regs) and you call instruction_pointer_set() to set
ip to 0xbaadc0de12345678, then you end up with a state where we will
probably execute user code at the address 0x12345678. Conversely, if
you have user_64bit_mode(regs) == true and you set ip to
0xbaadc0de12345678, then you will end up sending a signal to the task
because 0xbaadc0de12345678 is not executable (and, in fact, is highly
likely to be noncanonical).

So I would argue that the semantics *should* be:

/*
* Attempts to modify @regs such that the next user instruction to be
executed is
* the instruction at @addr. instruction_pointer_set() may return
false to indicate
* that addr was invalid in the sense that the next user instruction executed
* might be some other address instead. The most likely cause is that
* regs refers to a 32-bit compat context, addr != (u32)addr, and the
architecture
* might silently truncate the address on the next return to user code.
*
* instruction_pointer_set() must only be called from a context in
which the architecture
* allows arbitrary modifications of @regs.
*
* Architecture implementations promise that calling
instruction_pointer_set() will not
* crash or otherwise corrupt the kernel when called from a valid
context, regardless
* of what value is passed in @addr.
*/
bool instruction_pointer_set(struct pt_regs *regs, unsigned long addr);

>
> >
> > (2) Add instruction_pointer_validate() to go along with
> > instruction_pointer_set().
> >
> > That should be enough to solve the problem, right?
>
> This would only handle the "security" part of the matter, which
> is specifically related to rseq->rseq_cs->abort_ip.
>
> What is left is ensuring that we have consistent behavior for
> other fields:
>
> [ Note: we have introduced this helper macro: LINUX_FIELD_u32_u64
> which defines a field which is 64-bit for 64-bit processes, and 32-bit
> with 32-bit of padding for 32-bit processes. ]
>
> * rseq->rseq_cs: (userspace pointer to user-space, updated by user-space
> with single-copy atomicity): current type: LINUX_FIELD_u32_u64,
> cannot be changed to __u64 due to single-copy atomicity requirement,
>
> * rseq->rseq_cs->start_ip: currently a LINUX_FIELD_u32_u64,
> could become a __u64,
>
> * rseq->rseq_cs->post_commit_ip: currently a LINUX_FIELD_u32_u64,
> could become a __u64,
>
> * rseq->rseq_cs->abort_ip: currently a LINUX_FIELD_u32_u64,
> could become a __u64,
>
> For abort_ip, changing the type to __u64 and using the
> instruction_pointer_validate() approach you propose would work.
>
> For start_ip and post_commit_ip, we need to decide whether we
> want to kill a 32-bit process setting the high bits or if we just
> accept and use the full __u64 content on both 32-bit and 64-bit
> kernels. Those two fields are only used for arithmetic comparison.
> Using the full __u64 content means using 64-bit arithmetic on
> 32-bit native kernels though.

Just use the 64-bit values, I think. I see no point in killing the task.


>
> For rseq->rseq_cs, we cannot use __u64 due to single-copy atomicity
> update requirement for 32-bit processes. However, we are using this
> field in a copy_from_user(), so it will EFAULT if the high-bits are
> set by a compat 32-bit task on a 64-bit kernel. We can therefore check
> that the padding is zeroed explicitly on a native 32-bit kernel to
> provide a consistent behavior. Specifically because rseq->rseq_cs is
> checked with access_ok(), it is therefore enough to check the padding
> when __LP64__ is not defined by the preprocessor.

Agreed.

>
> But rather than trying to play games with input validation, I would
> favor an approach that would allow rseq to validate all its inputs
> straightforwardly. Introducing user_64bit_mode(struct pt_regs *)
> across all architectures would allow doing just that.

I would be okay with that, too, but I think it would have to be
user_64bit_mode(task, regs), since
sane architectures would have the task bitness somewhere other than in
regs. x86 is IMO rather
weird in this regard. When I added user_64bit_mode(), I didn't
envision its use outside x86 arch code.

> AFAIU this could be achieved by re-introducing is_compat_task() on x86 as:
>
> #ifdef CONFIG_COMPAT
> static bool is_compat_task(void)
> {
> return user_64bit_mode(current_pt_regs()));
> }
> #else
> static bool is_compat_task(void) { return false; };
> #endif
>
> Or am I missing something ?

is_compat_task() historically literally meant "am I in a compat system
call". It never worked consistently on x86 outside of syscall
context. While I do have fundamental objections to having a generic
concept of "is this a compat task?" on Linux, that's not why I removed
is_compat_task(). I removed it because it didn't do what the name
suggested.

Unfortunately, while it's gone from generic code, it's still there on
non-x86 arches, and it probably still has inconsistent semantics. So
I don't want to re-add it.

But I think that the limited solution of changing
instruction_pointer_set() really is a sufficient
architecture-dependent change to fully solve your problem.