On Tue, Apr 26, 2022 at 05:41:15PM +0800, Yongji Xie wrote:
On Tue, Apr 26, 2022 at 4:07 PM Greg KH gregkh@linuxfoundation.org wrote:
On Tue, Apr 26, 2022 at 03:36:56PM +0800, Xie Yongji wrote:
The control device has no drvdata. So we will get a NULL pointer dereference when accessing control device's msg_timeout attribute via sysfs:
[ 132.841881][ T3644] BUG: kernel NULL pointer dereference, address: 00000000000000f8 [ 132.850619][ T3644] RIP: 0010:msg_timeout_show (drivers/vdpa/vdpa_user/vduse_dev.c:1271) [ 132.869447][ T3644] dev_attr_show (drivers/base/core.c:2094) [ 132.870215][ T3644] sysfs_kf_seq_show (fs/sysfs/file.c:59) [ 132.871164][ T3644] ? device_remove_bin_file (drivers/base/core.c:2088) [ 132.872082][ T3644] kernfs_seq_show (fs/kernfs/file.c:164) [ 132.872838][ T3644] seq_read_iter (fs/seq_file.c:230) [ 132.873578][ T3644] ? __vmalloc_area_node (mm/vmalloc.c:3041) [ 132.874532][ T3644] kernfs_fop_read_iter (fs/kernfs/file.c:238) [ 132.875513][ T3644] __kernel_read (fs/read_write.c:440 (discriminator 1)) [ 132.876319][ T3644] kernel_read (fs/read_write.c:459) [ 132.877129][ T3644] kernel_read_file (fs/kernel_read_file.c:94) [ 132.877978][ T3644] kernel_read_file_from_fd (include/linux/file.h:45 fs/kernel_read_file.c:186) [ 132.879019][ T3644] __do_sys_finit_module (kernel/module.c:4207) [ 132.879930][ T3644] __ia32_sys_finit_module (kernel/module.c:4189) [ 132.880930][ T3644] do_int80_syscall_32 (arch/x86/entry/common.c:112 arch/x86/entry/common.c:132) [ 132.881847][ T3644] entry_INT80_compat (arch/x86/entry/entry_64_compat.S:419)
To fix it, don't create the unneeded attribute for control device anymore.
Fixes: c8a6153b6c59 ("vduse: Introduce VDUSE - vDPA Device in Userspace") Reported-by: kernel test robot oliver.sang@intel.com Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org Signed-off-by: Xie Yongji xieyongji@bytedance.com
drivers/vdpa/vdpa_user/vduse_dev.c | 7 +++---- 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-)
diff --git a/drivers/vdpa/vdpa_user/vduse_dev.c b/drivers/vdpa/vdpa_user/vduse_dev.c index f85d1a08ed87..160e40d03084 100644 --- a/drivers/vdpa/vdpa_user/vduse_dev.c +++ b/drivers/vdpa/vdpa_user/vduse_dev.c @@ -1344,9 +1344,9 @@ static int vduse_create_dev(struct vduse_dev_config *config,
dev->minor = ret; dev->msg_timeout = VDUSE_MSG_DEFAULT_TIMEOUT;
dev->dev = device_create(vduse_class, NULL,
MKDEV(MAJOR(vduse_major), dev->minor),
dev, "%s", config->name);
dev->dev = device_create_with_groups(vduse_class, NULL,
MKDEV(MAJOR(vduse_major), dev->minor),
dev, vduse_dev_groups, "%s", config->name); if (IS_ERR(dev->dev)) { ret = PTR_ERR(dev->dev); goto err_dev;
@@ -1595,7 +1595,6 @@ static int vduse_init(void) return PTR_ERR(vduse_class);
vduse_class->devnode = vduse_devnode;
vduse_class->dev_groups = vduse_dev_groups;
Ok, this looks much better.
But wow, there are some problems in this code overall. I see a number of flat-out-wrong things in there that should have been caught by code reviews. Some examples: - empty release() callbacks. That is a huge sign the code design is wrong and broken and you are just trying to make the driver core quiet for some reason. The documentation in the kernel explains why this is not ok.
Sorry, I failed to find the documentation. Do you mean we should remove the empty release() callbacks?
Yes, why are they needed?
(hint, retorical question, you added them to remove the driver core warning when the device is removed, which means someone added them just because they thought that their code could ignore the hints that the driver core was telling them.)
Please properly free the memory here.
- __module_get(THIS_MODULE); That's racy, buggy, and doesn't do what you think it does. Please never ever ever do that. It too is a sign of a broken design.
I don't find a good way to remove it. We have to make sure the module can't be removed until all vduse devices are destroyed.
That will happen automatically when the module is removed.
And I think __module_get(THIS_MODULE) should be safe in our case since we always call it when we have a reference from open().
What happened if someone removed the module _right before_ this was called? You can not grab your own reference count safely.
Please just remove it, it's not needed and is broken. There should not be any reason that the module can not be unloaded, UNLESS a file handle is open, and you properly handle that already.
thanks,
greg k-h