On 12/07/2015 01:31 PM, Thierry Reding wrote: > On Mon, Dec 07, 2015 at 12:46:52PM +0100, Daniel Vetter wrote: >> On Mon, Dec 07, 2015 at 11:53:01AM +0200, Jani Nikula wrote: >>> On Mon, 07 Dec 2015, Daniel Vetter <dan...@ffwll.ch> wrote: >>>> On Sun, Dec 06, 2015 at 11:16:32AM +0100, Nicolas Iooss wrote: >>>>> On 12/06/2015 10:35 AM, Daniel Vetter wrote: >>>>>>> On 11/18/2015 06:58 PM, Nicolas Iooss wrote: >>>>>>>> drm_dev_set_unique() formats its parameter using kvasprintf() but many >>>>>>>> of its callers directly pass dev_name(dev) as printf format string, >>>>>>>> without any format parameter. This can cause some issues when the >>>>>>>> device name contains '%' characters. >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> To avoid any potential issue, always use "%s" when using >>>>>>>> drm_dev_set_unique() with dev_name(). >>>>>> >>>>>> Not sure this is worth it really, normally people don't place % >>>>>> characters >>>>>> into their device names, ever. And if they do it'll blow up. There's also >>>>>> no security issue here since userspace can't set this name. >>>>>> >>>>>> If the maintainers of the affected drivers don't want this I won't merge >>>>>> this patch. >>>>> >>>>> Actually I had the same opinion before I began to add __printf >>>>> attributes and "%s" in several places in the kernel to make >>>>> -Wformat-security useful. This led me to discover some funny issues >>>>> like the one fixed by commit 3958b79266b1 ("configfs: fix kernel >>>>> infoleak through user-controlled format string", >>>>> https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=3958b79266b14729edd61daf9dfb84de45f4ec6d >>>>> ). The patch I sent is in fact a very small step towards making >>>>> -Wformat-security useful again to detect "real" issues. >>>>> >>>>> Of course, if you do not feel it is worth it and believe that dev_name >>>>> is fully controlled by trusted sources which will never introduce any % >>>>> character, I understand your will of not merging my patch. >>>> >>>> Ah, that's the context I was missing, that really should be in the commit >>>> message. If this is part of an overall effort to enable something useful >>>> it makes more sense to get it in. >>>> >>>> On the patch itself it feels rather funny to do a "%s", str); combo, maybe >>>> we should have a drm_dev_set_unique_static instead? Including kerneldoc >>>> explaining why there's too. >>> >>> No caller of drm_dev_set_unique() actually uses the formatting for >>> anything... so you'd end up with drm_dev_set_unique_static() and an >>> orphaned drm_dev_set_unique()... >> >> Ok, then I guess we can just ditch the printf stuff from set_unique. >> Nicolas, you're up for that? > > Looking at all the callsites of drm_dev_set_unique() it seems like all > of the drivers (with the exception of vgem) use dev_name() on the same > device that's already passed into drm_dev_alloc(), so perhaps another > alternative would be to have drm_dev_alloc() set the unique name by > default and keep the function for cases where it needs to be set > explicitly (like for vgem). vgem passes drm_dev_alloc() a NULL device, > so that could serve as condition.
I have written a patch which removes the printf format processing from drm_dev_set_unique(). I will test it as soon as possible and depending on the results, send it or explain what went wrong. If no one does the work before me, I'll also take a look at calling drm_dev_set_unique() in drm_dev_alloc(), and this would be an other patch. Thanks, Nicolas -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-tegra" in the body of a message to majord...@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html