On Mon, Nov 13, 2017 at 10:14:36PM +0100, Thomas Gleixner wrote:
> On Mon, 13 Nov 2017, Kirill A. Shutemov wrote:
> > On Mon, Nov 13, 2017 at 08:14:54PM +0100, Thomas Gleixner wrote:
> > > > > It will succeed with 5-level paging.
> > > > 
> > > > And why is this allowed?
> > > > 
> > > > > It should be safe as with 4-level paging such request would fail and 
> > > > > it's
> > > > > reasonable to expect that userspace is not relying on the failure to
> > > > > function properly.
> > > > 
> > > > Huch?
> > > > 
> > > > The first rule when looking at user space is that is broken or
> > > > hostile. Reasonable and user space are mutually exclusive.
> > > 
> > > Aside of that in case of get_unmapped_area:
> > > 
> > > If va_unmapped_area() fails, then the address and the len which caused the
> > > overlap check to trigger are handed in to arch_get_unmapped_area(), which
> > > again can create an invalid mapping if I'm not missing something.
> > > 
> > > If mappings which overlap the boundary are invalid then we have to make
> > > sure at all ends that they wont happen.
> > 
> > They are not invalid.
> > 
> > The patch tries to address following theoretical issue:
> > 
> > We have an application that tries, for some reason, to allocate memory
> > with mmap(addr), without MAP_FIXED, where addr is near the borderline of
> > 47-bit address space and addr+len is above the border.
> > 
> > On 4-level paging machine this request would succeed, but the address will
> > always be within 47-bit VA -- cannot allocate by hint address, ignore it.
> > 
> > If the application cannot handle high address this might be an issue on
> > 5-level paging machine as such call would succeed *and* allocate memory by
> > the specified hint address. In this case part of the mapping would be
> > above the border line and may lead to misbehaviour.
> > 
> > I hope this makes any sense :)
> 
> I can see where you are heading to. Now the case I was looking at is:
> 
> arch_get_unmapped_area_topdown()
> 
>       addr0 = addr;
>       
>       ....
>       if (addr) {
>               if (cross_border(addr, len))
>                       goto get_unmapped_area;
>               ...
>       }
> get_unmapped_area:
>       ...
>       if (addr > DEFAULT_MAP_WINDOW && !in_compat_syscall())
> 
>          ^^^ evaluates to false because addr < DEFAULT_MAP_WINDOW
> 
>       addr - vm_unmapped_area(&info);
> 
>          ^^^ fails for whatever reason.
> 
> bottomup:
>       return arch_get_unmapped_area(.., addr0, len, ....);
> 
> 
> AFAICT arch_get_unmapped_area() can allocate a mapping which crosses the
> border, i.e. a mapping which you want to prevent for the !MAP_FIXED case.

No, it can't as long as addr0 is below DEFAULT_MAP_WINDOW:

arch_get_unmapped_area()
{
        ...
        find_start_end(addr, flags, &begin, &end);
        // end is DEFAULT_MAP_WINDOW here, since addr is below the border
        ...
        if (addr) {
                ...
                // end - len is less than addr, so the condition below is
                // false.
                if (end - len >= addr &&
                    (!vma || addr + len <= vm_start_gap(vma)))
                        return addr;
        }
        ...
        info.high_limit = end;
        ...
        return vm_unmapped_area(&info);
}

-- 
 Kirill A. Shutemov

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