[PATCH] security/keyring: avoid pagefaults in keyring_read_iterator
Chris von Recklinghausen
crecklin at redhat.com
Fri Oct 25 11:10:29 UTC 2019
On 10/21/2019 11:46 AM, Chris von Recklinghausen wrote:
> On 10/21/2019 10:21 AM, David Howells wrote:
>> Chris von Recklinghausen <crecklin at redhat.com> wrote:
>>
>>> The put_user call from keyring_read_iterator caused a page fault which
>>> attempts to lock mm->mmap_sem and type->lock_class (key->sem) in the reverse
>>> order that keyring_read_iterator did, thus causing the circular locking
>>> dependency.
>>>
>>> Remedy this by using access_ok and __put_user instead of put_user so we'll
>>> return an error instead of faulting in the page.
>> I wonder if it's better to create a kernel buffer outside of the lock in
>> keyctl_read_key(). Hmmm... The reason I didn't want to do that is that
>> keyrings have don't have limits on the size. Maybe that's not actually a
>> problem, since 1MiB would be able to hold a list of a quarter of a million
>> keys.
>>
>> David
>>
> Hi David,
>
> Thanks for the feedback.
>
> I can try to prototype that, but regardless of where the kernel buffer
> is allocated, the important part is causing the initial pagefault in the
> read path outside the lock so __put_user won't fail due to a valid user
> address but page backing the user address isn't in-core.
>
> I'll start work on v2.
Actually I'm going to back off on a v2 effort at this point and request
that folks comment on the code as-is. Changing keyctl_read_key to use
its own kernel buffer might be a worthwhile effort, but it doesn't
appear to me to have any effects on preventing pagefaults on user pages
at inopportune points of the code.
Thanks,
Chris
>
> Thanks,
>
> Chris
>
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