[PATCH] KVM: arm/arm64: check IRQ number on userland injection
Andre Przywara
andre.przywara at arm.com
Fri Apr 10 09:52:05 PDT 2015
Hi Christopher,
On 10/04/15 16:29, Christopher Covington wrote:
> Hi Andre,
>
> On 04/10/2015 11:17 AM, Andre Przywara wrote:
>> When userland injects a SPI via the KVM_IRQ_LINE ioctl we currently
>> only check it against a fixed limit, which historically is set
>> to 127. With the new dynamic IRQ allocation the effective limit may
>> actually be smaller (64).
>> So when now a malicious or buggy userland injects a SPI in that
>> range, we spill over on our VGIC bitmaps and bytemaps memory.
>> I could trigger a host kernel NULL pointer dereference with current
>> mainline by injecting some bogus IRQ number from a hacked kvmtool:
>
>> --- a/arch/arm/include/uapi/asm/kvm.h
>> +++ b/arch/arm/include/uapi/asm/kvm.h
>> @@ -195,7 +195,11 @@ struct kvm_arch_memory_slot {
>> #define KVM_ARM_IRQ_CPU_IRQ 0
>> #define KVM_ARM_IRQ_CPU_FIQ 1
>>
>> -/* Highest supported SPI, from VGIC_NR_IRQS */
>> +/*
>> + * This used to hold the highest supported SPI, but it is now obsolete
>> + * and only here to provide source code level compatibility with older
>> + * userland. The highest SPI number can be set via KVM_DEV_ARM_VGIC_GRP_NR_IRQS.
>> + */
>> #define KVM_ARM_IRQ_GIC_MAX 127
>
> If that's the case should it maybe only defined when __KERNEL__ is not defined?
Mmmh, I am not sure it's really worth the hassle. Actually it seems like
that neither kvmtool nor QEMU use this definition, so it's more or less
orphaned by now. I am confident we can avoid it sneaking in in the
kernel again.
Cheers,
Andre.
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