RE: [PATCH v3 2/4] x86/microcode: Fix __user annotations around generic_load_microcode()

From: David Laight
Date: Tue Apr 02 2019 - 05:54:43 EST


From: Jann Horn
> Sent: 01 April 2019 18:54
...
> > This ->get_ucode_data() BIOS-code-like contraption has always bugged me
> > for being too ugly to live.
> >
> > How about we vmalloc() a properly sized buffer - both
> > generic_load_microcode() callers have the size - and then hand that
> > buffer into generic_load_microcode() ?
> >
> > That solves the __user annotation fun immediately and would simplify
> > generic_load_microcode() additionally.
> >
> > The disadvantage would be having to vmalloc() a couple of... , I think
> > it is megabytes, with that old loading method request_microcode_user()
> > but then if vmalloc() fails, then it was clearly too big. I don't think
> > the blob can ever be that big though, to fail vmalloc(), but I'm not
> > going to bet on it...
>
> Hm. request_microcode_fw() gets that buffer from
> request_firmware_direct(), which does this:
>
> __module_get(THIS_MODULE);
> ret = _request_firmware(firmware_p, name, device, NULL, 0,
> FW_OPT_UEVENT | FW_OPT_NO_WARN |
> FW_OPT_NOFALLBACK);
> module_put(THIS_MODULE);
> return ret;
>
> What is that module_get()/module_put() supposed to be good for? Are we
> expecting that caller to do something ridiculous like calling
> module_put() on us? This doesn't seem to make any sense.

At least it isn't doing a try_module_get(THIS_MODULE) :-)

> And then _request_firmware() goes and ends up in places like
> kernel_read_file(), which already use vmalloc().
>
>
> Anyway, isn't this kind of thing exactly why we have that iov_iter
> stuff? request_microcode_fw() can build an ITER_KVEC,
> request_microcode_user() can build an ITER_IOVEC. And then
> generic_load_microcode() can use something like copy_from_iter(). Does
> that sound reasonable?

That ought to allow the microcode be copied in chunks - removing the
need for a massive buffer?

The largest file we ever copy to PCIe cards is a 6MB fpga image.
But we do that by mmapping the PCIe registers directly into userspace.

David

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