On Fri, Feb 05 2021, Andrew Morton wrote:

> On Fri, 05 Feb 2021 11:36:30 +1100 NeilBrown <ne...@suse.de> wrote:
>
>> A recent change to seq_file broke some users which were using seq_file
>> in a non-"standard" way ...  though the "standard" isn't documented, so
>> they can be excused.  The result is a possible leak - of memory in one
>> case, of references to a 'transport' in the other.
>> 
>> These three patches:
>>  1/ document and explain the problem
>>  2/ fix the problem user in x86
>>  3/ fix the problem user in net/sctp
>> 
>
> 1f4aace60b0e ("fs/seq_file.c: simplify seq_file iteration code and
> interface") was August 2018, so I don't think "recent" applies here?

I must be getting old :-(

>
> I didn't look closely, but it appears that the sctp procfs file is
> world-readable.  So we gave unprivileged userspace the ability to leak
> kernel memory?

Not quite that bad.  The x86 problem allows arbitrary memory to be
leaked, but that is in debugfs (as I'm sure you saw) so is root-only.
The sctp one only allows an sctp_transport to be pinned.  That is not
good and would, e.g., prevent the module from being unloaded.  But
unlike a simple memory leak it won't affect anything outside of sctp.

>
> So I'm thinking that we aim for 5.12-rc1 on all three patches with a 
> cc:stable?

Thanks for looking after these!

NeilBrown

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