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/linux-master/fs/xfs/libxfs/
H A Dxfs_trans_resv.cdiff ebd9027d Wed Aug 18 19:46:55 MDT 2021 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert xfs_sb_version_has checks to use mount features

This is a conversion of the remaining xfs_sb_version_has..(sbp)
checks to use xfs_has_..(mp) feature checks.

This was largely done with a vim replacement macro that did:

:0,$s/xfs_sb_version_has\(.*\)&\(.*\)->m_sb/xfs_has_\1\2/g<CR>

A couple of other variants were also used, and the rest touched up
by hand.

$ size -t fs/xfs/built-in.a
text data bss dec hex filename
before 1127533 311352 484 1439369 15f689 (TOTALS)
after 1125360 311352 484 1437196 15ee0c (TOTALS)

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
diff b1de6fc7 Wed Dec 11 14:19:07 MST 2019 Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com> xfs: fix log reservation overflows when allocating large rt extents

Omar Sandoval reported that a 4G fallocate on the realtime device causes
filesystem shutdowns due to a log reservation overflow that happens when
we log the rtbitmap updates. Factor rtbitmap/rtsummary updates into the
the tr_write and tr_itruncate log reservation calculation.

"The following reproducer results in a transaction log overrun warning
for me:

mkfs.xfs -f -r rtdev=/dev/vdc -d rtinherit=1 -m reflink=0 /dev/vdb
mount -o rtdev=/dev/vdc /dev/vdb /mnt
fallocate -l 4G /mnt/foo

Reported-by: Omar Sandoval <osandov@osandov.com>
Tested-by: Omar Sandoval <osandov@osandov.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Foster <bfoster@redhat.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
H A Dxfs_inode_fork.cdiff 0b3a76e9 Mon Jan 15 15:59:46 MST 2024 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: use GFP_KERNEL in pure transaction contexts

When running in a transaction context, memory allocations are scoped
to GFP_NOFS. Hence we don't need to use GFP_NOFS contexts in pure
transaction context allocations - GFP_KERNEL will automatically get
converted to GFP_NOFS as appropriate.

Go through the code and convert all the obvious GFP_NOFS allocations
in transaction context to use GFP_KERNEL. This further reduces the
explicit use of GFP_NOFS in XFS.

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: "Darrick J. Wong" <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Chandan Babu R <chandanbabu@kernel.org>
diff 45c76a2a Tue Dec 19 23:34:56 MST 2023 Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de> xfs: return if_data from xfs_idata_realloc

Many of the xfs_idata_realloc callers need to set a local pointer to the
just reallocated if_data memory. Return the pointer to simplify them a
bit and use the opportunity to re-use krealloc for freeing if_data if the
size hits 0.

Signed-off-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
Reviewed-by: "Darrick J. Wong" <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Chandan Babu R <chandanbabu@kernel.org>
diff c95356ca Tue Apr 11 23:49:10 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: _{attr,data}_map_shared should take ILOCK_EXCL until iread_extents is completely done

While fuzzing the data fork extent count on a btree-format directory
with xfs/375, I observed the following (excerpted) splat:

XFS: Assertion failed: xfs_isilocked(ip, XFS_ILOCK_EXCL), file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c, line: 1208
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 0 PID: 43192 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_iread_extents+0x1af/0x210 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_dir_walk+0xb8/0x190 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_count_parent_dentries+0x41/0x80 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_validate+0x199/0x2e0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent+0xdf/0x130 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x2b8/0x730 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrubv_metadata+0x38b/0x4d0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_ioc_scrubv_metadata+0x111/0x160 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_file_ioctl+0x367/0xf50 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

The cause of this is a race condition in xfs_ilock_data_map_shared,
which performs an unlocked access to the data fork to guess which lock
mode it needs:

Thread 0 Thread 1

xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
<load bmbt extents into iext>
<notice iext size doesn't
match nextents>
xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_SHARED)
<tear down iext tree>
xfs_iunlock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
*BOOM*

Fix this race by adding a flag to the xfs_ifork structure to indicate
that we have not yet read in the extent records and changing the
predicate to look at the flag state, not if_height. The memory barrier
ensures that the flag will not be set until the very end of the
function.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
diff c95356ca Tue Apr 11 23:49:10 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: _{attr,data}_map_shared should take ILOCK_EXCL until iread_extents is completely done

While fuzzing the data fork extent count on a btree-format directory
with xfs/375, I observed the following (excerpted) splat:

XFS: Assertion failed: xfs_isilocked(ip, XFS_ILOCK_EXCL), file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c, line: 1208
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 0 PID: 43192 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_iread_extents+0x1af/0x210 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_dir_walk+0xb8/0x190 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_count_parent_dentries+0x41/0x80 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_validate+0x199/0x2e0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent+0xdf/0x130 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x2b8/0x730 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrubv_metadata+0x38b/0x4d0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_ioc_scrubv_metadata+0x111/0x160 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_file_ioctl+0x367/0xf50 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

The cause of this is a race condition in xfs_ilock_data_map_shared,
which performs an unlocked access to the data fork to guess which lock
mode it needs:

Thread 0 Thread 1

xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
<load bmbt extents into iext>
<notice iext size doesn't
match nextents>
xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_SHARED)
<tear down iext tree>
xfs_iunlock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
*BOOM*

Fix this race by adding a flag to the xfs_ifork structure to indicate
that we have not yet read in the extent records and changing the
predicate to look at the flag state, not if_height. The memory barrier
ensures that the flag will not be set until the very end of the
function.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
diff c95356ca Tue Apr 11 23:49:10 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: _{attr,data}_map_shared should take ILOCK_EXCL until iread_extents is completely done

While fuzzing the data fork extent count on a btree-format directory
with xfs/375, I observed the following (excerpted) splat:

XFS: Assertion failed: xfs_isilocked(ip, XFS_ILOCK_EXCL), file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c, line: 1208
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 0 PID: 43192 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_iread_extents+0x1af/0x210 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_dir_walk+0xb8/0x190 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_count_parent_dentries+0x41/0x80 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_validate+0x199/0x2e0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent+0xdf/0x130 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x2b8/0x730 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrubv_metadata+0x38b/0x4d0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_ioc_scrubv_metadata+0x111/0x160 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_file_ioctl+0x367/0xf50 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

The cause of this is a race condition in xfs_ilock_data_map_shared,
which performs an unlocked access to the data fork to guess which lock
mode it needs:

Thread 0 Thread 1

xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
<load bmbt extents into iext>
<notice iext size doesn't
match nextents>
xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_SHARED)
<tear down iext tree>
xfs_iunlock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
*BOOM*

Fix this race by adding a flag to the xfs_ifork structure to indicate
that we have not yet read in the extent records and changing the
predicate to look at the flag state, not if_height. The memory barrier
ensures that the flag will not be set until the very end of the
function.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
diff c95356ca Tue Apr 11 23:49:10 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: _{attr,data}_map_shared should take ILOCK_EXCL until iread_extents is completely done

While fuzzing the data fork extent count on a btree-format directory
with xfs/375, I observed the following (excerpted) splat:

XFS: Assertion failed: xfs_isilocked(ip, XFS_ILOCK_EXCL), file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c, line: 1208
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 0 PID: 43192 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_iread_extents+0x1af/0x210 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_dir_walk+0xb8/0x190 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_count_parent_dentries+0x41/0x80 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_validate+0x199/0x2e0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent+0xdf/0x130 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x2b8/0x730 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrubv_metadata+0x38b/0x4d0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_ioc_scrubv_metadata+0x111/0x160 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_file_ioctl+0x367/0xf50 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

The cause of this is a race condition in xfs_ilock_data_map_shared,
which performs an unlocked access to the data fork to guess which lock
mode it needs:

Thread 0 Thread 1

xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
<load bmbt extents into iext>
<notice iext size doesn't
match nextents>
xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_SHARED)
<tear down iext tree>
xfs_iunlock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
*BOOM*

Fix this race by adding a flag to the xfs_ifork structure to indicate
that we have not yet read in the extent records and changing the
predicate to look at the flag state, not if_height. The memory barrier
ensures that the flag will not be set until the very end of the
function.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
diff c95356ca Tue Apr 11 23:49:10 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: _{attr,data}_map_shared should take ILOCK_EXCL until iread_extents is completely done

While fuzzing the data fork extent count on a btree-format directory
with xfs/375, I observed the following (excerpted) splat:

XFS: Assertion failed: xfs_isilocked(ip, XFS_ILOCK_EXCL), file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c, line: 1208
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 0 PID: 43192 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_iread_extents+0x1af/0x210 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_dir_walk+0xb8/0x190 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_count_parent_dentries+0x41/0x80 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_validate+0x199/0x2e0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent+0xdf/0x130 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x2b8/0x730 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrubv_metadata+0x38b/0x4d0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_ioc_scrubv_metadata+0x111/0x160 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_file_ioctl+0x367/0xf50 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

The cause of this is a race condition in xfs_ilock_data_map_shared,
which performs an unlocked access to the data fork to guess which lock
mode it needs:

Thread 0 Thread 1

xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
<load bmbt extents into iext>
<notice iext size doesn't
match nextents>
xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_SHARED)
<tear down iext tree>
xfs_iunlock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
*BOOM*

Fix this race by adding a flag to the xfs_ifork structure to indicate
that we have not yet read in the extent records and changing the
predicate to look at the flag state, not if_height. The memory barrier
ensures that the flag will not be set until the very end of the
function.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
diff c95356ca Tue Apr 11 23:49:10 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: _{attr,data}_map_shared should take ILOCK_EXCL until iread_extents is completely done

While fuzzing the data fork extent count on a btree-format directory
with xfs/375, I observed the following (excerpted) splat:

XFS: Assertion failed: xfs_isilocked(ip, XFS_ILOCK_EXCL), file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c, line: 1208
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 0 PID: 43192 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_iread_extents+0x1af/0x210 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_dir_walk+0xb8/0x190 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_count_parent_dentries+0x41/0x80 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_validate+0x199/0x2e0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent+0xdf/0x130 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x2b8/0x730 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrubv_metadata+0x38b/0x4d0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_ioc_scrubv_metadata+0x111/0x160 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_file_ioctl+0x367/0xf50 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

The cause of this is a race condition in xfs_ilock_data_map_shared,
which performs an unlocked access to the data fork to guess which lock
mode it needs:

Thread 0 Thread 1

xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
<load bmbt extents into iext>
<notice iext size doesn't
match nextents>
xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_SHARED)
<tear down iext tree>
xfs_iunlock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
*BOOM*

Fix this race by adding a flag to the xfs_ifork structure to indicate
that we have not yet read in the extent records and changing the
predicate to look at the flag state, not if_height. The memory barrier
ensures that the flag will not be set until the very end of the
function.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
diff c95356ca Tue Apr 11 23:49:10 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: _{attr,data}_map_shared should take ILOCK_EXCL until iread_extents is completely done

While fuzzing the data fork extent count on a btree-format directory
with xfs/375, I observed the following (excerpted) splat:

XFS: Assertion failed: xfs_isilocked(ip, XFS_ILOCK_EXCL), file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c, line: 1208
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 0 PID: 43192 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_iread_extents+0x1af/0x210 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_dir_walk+0xb8/0x190 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_count_parent_dentries+0x41/0x80 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_validate+0x199/0x2e0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent+0xdf/0x130 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x2b8/0x730 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrubv_metadata+0x38b/0x4d0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_ioc_scrubv_metadata+0x111/0x160 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_file_ioctl+0x367/0xf50 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

The cause of this is a race condition in xfs_ilock_data_map_shared,
which performs an unlocked access to the data fork to guess which lock
mode it needs:

Thread 0 Thread 1

xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
<load bmbt extents into iext>
<notice iext size doesn't
match nextents>
xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_SHARED)
<tear down iext tree>
xfs_iunlock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
*BOOM*

Fix this race by adding a flag to the xfs_ifork structure to indicate
that we have not yet read in the extent records and changing the
predicate to look at the flag state, not if_height. The memory barrier
ensures that the flag will not be set until the very end of the
function.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
diff c95356ca Tue Apr 11 23:49:10 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: _{attr,data}_map_shared should take ILOCK_EXCL until iread_extents is completely done

While fuzzing the data fork extent count on a btree-format directory
with xfs/375, I observed the following (excerpted) splat:

XFS: Assertion failed: xfs_isilocked(ip, XFS_ILOCK_EXCL), file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c, line: 1208
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 0 PID: 43192 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_iread_extents+0x1af/0x210 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_dir_walk+0xb8/0x190 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_count_parent_dentries+0x41/0x80 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_validate+0x199/0x2e0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent+0xdf/0x130 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x2b8/0x730 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrubv_metadata+0x38b/0x4d0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_ioc_scrubv_metadata+0x111/0x160 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_file_ioctl+0x367/0xf50 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

The cause of this is a race condition in xfs_ilock_data_map_shared,
which performs an unlocked access to the data fork to guess which lock
mode it needs:

Thread 0 Thread 1

xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
<load bmbt extents into iext>
<notice iext size doesn't
match nextents>
xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_SHARED)
<tear down iext tree>
xfs_iunlock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
*BOOM*

Fix this race by adding a flag to the xfs_ifork structure to indicate
that we have not yet read in the extent records and changing the
predicate to look at the flag state, not if_height. The memory barrier
ensures that the flag will not be set until the very end of the
function.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
diff c95356ca Tue Apr 11 23:49:10 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: _{attr,data}_map_shared should take ILOCK_EXCL until iread_extents is completely done

While fuzzing the data fork extent count on a btree-format directory
with xfs/375, I observed the following (excerpted) splat:

XFS: Assertion failed: xfs_isilocked(ip, XFS_ILOCK_EXCL), file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c, line: 1208
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 0 PID: 43192 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_iread_extents+0x1af/0x210 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_dir_walk+0xb8/0x190 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_count_parent_dentries+0x41/0x80 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_validate+0x199/0x2e0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent+0xdf/0x130 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x2b8/0x730 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrubv_metadata+0x38b/0x4d0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_ioc_scrubv_metadata+0x111/0x160 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_file_ioctl+0x367/0xf50 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

The cause of this is a race condition in xfs_ilock_data_map_shared,
which performs an unlocked access to the data fork to guess which lock
mode it needs:

Thread 0 Thread 1

xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
<load bmbt extents into iext>
<notice iext size doesn't
match nextents>
xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_SHARED)
<tear down iext tree>
xfs_iunlock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
*BOOM*

Fix this race by adding a flag to the xfs_ifork structure to indicate
that we have not yet read in the extent records and changing the
predicate to look at the flag state, not if_height. The memory barrier
ensures that the flag will not be set until the very end of the
function.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
diff c95356ca Tue Apr 11 23:49:10 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: _{attr,data}_map_shared should take ILOCK_EXCL until iread_extents is completely done

While fuzzing the data fork extent count on a btree-format directory
with xfs/375, I observed the following (excerpted) splat:

XFS: Assertion failed: xfs_isilocked(ip, XFS_ILOCK_EXCL), file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c, line: 1208
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 0 PID: 43192 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_iread_extents+0x1af/0x210 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_dir_walk+0xb8/0x190 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_count_parent_dentries+0x41/0x80 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_validate+0x199/0x2e0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent+0xdf/0x130 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x2b8/0x730 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrubv_metadata+0x38b/0x4d0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_ioc_scrubv_metadata+0x111/0x160 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_file_ioctl+0x367/0xf50 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

The cause of this is a race condition in xfs_ilock_data_map_shared,
which performs an unlocked access to the data fork to guess which lock
mode it needs:

Thread 0 Thread 1

xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
<load bmbt extents into iext>
<notice iext size doesn't
match nextents>
xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_SHARED)
<tear down iext tree>
xfs_iunlock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
*BOOM*

Fix this race by adding a flag to the xfs_ifork structure to indicate
that we have not yet read in the extent records and changing the
predicate to look at the flag state, not if_height. The memory barrier
ensures that the flag will not be set until the very end of the
function.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
diff c95356ca Tue Apr 11 23:49:10 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: _{attr,data}_map_shared should take ILOCK_EXCL until iread_extents is completely done

While fuzzing the data fork extent count on a btree-format directory
with xfs/375, I observed the following (excerpted) splat:

XFS: Assertion failed: xfs_isilocked(ip, XFS_ILOCK_EXCL), file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c, line: 1208
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 0 PID: 43192 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_iread_extents+0x1af/0x210 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_dir_walk+0xb8/0x190 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_count_parent_dentries+0x41/0x80 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_validate+0x199/0x2e0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent+0xdf/0x130 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x2b8/0x730 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrubv_metadata+0x38b/0x4d0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_ioc_scrubv_metadata+0x111/0x160 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_file_ioctl+0x367/0xf50 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

The cause of this is a race condition in xfs_ilock_data_map_shared,
which performs an unlocked access to the data fork to guess which lock
mode it needs:

Thread 0 Thread 1

xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
<load bmbt extents into iext>
<notice iext size doesn't
match nextents>
xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_SHARED)
<tear down iext tree>
xfs_iunlock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
*BOOM*

Fix this race by adding a flag to the xfs_ifork structure to indicate
that we have not yet read in the extent records and changing the
predicate to look at the flag state, not if_height. The memory barrier
ensures that the flag will not be set until the very end of the
function.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
diff c95356ca Tue Apr 11 23:49:10 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: _{attr,data}_map_shared should take ILOCK_EXCL until iread_extents is completely done

While fuzzing the data fork extent count on a btree-format directory
with xfs/375, I observed the following (excerpted) splat:

XFS: Assertion failed: xfs_isilocked(ip, XFS_ILOCK_EXCL), file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c, line: 1208
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 0 PID: 43192 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_iread_extents+0x1af/0x210 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_dir_walk+0xb8/0x190 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_count_parent_dentries+0x41/0x80 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_validate+0x199/0x2e0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent+0xdf/0x130 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x2b8/0x730 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrubv_metadata+0x38b/0x4d0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_ioc_scrubv_metadata+0x111/0x160 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_file_ioctl+0x367/0xf50 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

The cause of this is a race condition in xfs_ilock_data_map_shared,
which performs an unlocked access to the data fork to guess which lock
mode it needs:

Thread 0 Thread 1

xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
<load bmbt extents into iext>
<notice iext size doesn't
match nextents>
xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_SHARED)
<tear down iext tree>
xfs_iunlock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
*BOOM*

Fix this race by adding a flag to the xfs_ifork structure to indicate
that we have not yet read in the extent records and changing the
predicate to look at the flag state, not if_height. The memory barrier
ensures that the flag will not be set until the very end of the
function.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
diff c95356ca Tue Apr 11 23:49:10 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: _{attr,data}_map_shared should take ILOCK_EXCL until iread_extents is completely done

While fuzzing the data fork extent count on a btree-format directory
with xfs/375, I observed the following (excerpted) splat:

XFS: Assertion failed: xfs_isilocked(ip, XFS_ILOCK_EXCL), file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c, line: 1208
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 0 PID: 43192 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_iread_extents+0x1af/0x210 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_dir_walk+0xb8/0x190 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_count_parent_dentries+0x41/0x80 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_validate+0x199/0x2e0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent+0xdf/0x130 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x2b8/0x730 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrubv_metadata+0x38b/0x4d0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_ioc_scrubv_metadata+0x111/0x160 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_file_ioctl+0x367/0xf50 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

The cause of this is a race condition in xfs_ilock_data_map_shared,
which performs an unlocked access to the data fork to guess which lock
mode it needs:

Thread 0 Thread 1

xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
<load bmbt extents into iext>
<notice iext size doesn't
match nextents>
xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_SHARED)
<tear down iext tree>
xfs_iunlock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
*BOOM*

Fix this race by adding a flag to the xfs_ifork structure to indicate
that we have not yet read in the extent records and changing the
predicate to look at the flag state, not if_height. The memory barrier
ensures that the flag will not be set until the very end of the
function.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
diff c95356ca Tue Apr 11 23:49:10 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: _{attr,data}_map_shared should take ILOCK_EXCL until iread_extents is completely done

While fuzzing the data fork extent count on a btree-format directory
with xfs/375, I observed the following (excerpted) splat:

XFS: Assertion failed: xfs_isilocked(ip, XFS_ILOCK_EXCL), file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c, line: 1208
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 0 PID: 43192 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_iread_extents+0x1af/0x210 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_dir_walk+0xb8/0x190 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_count_parent_dentries+0x41/0x80 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_validate+0x199/0x2e0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent+0xdf/0x130 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x2b8/0x730 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrubv_metadata+0x38b/0x4d0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_ioc_scrubv_metadata+0x111/0x160 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_file_ioctl+0x367/0xf50 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

The cause of this is a race condition in xfs_ilock_data_map_shared,
which performs an unlocked access to the data fork to guess which lock
mode it needs:

Thread 0 Thread 1

xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
<load bmbt extents into iext>
<notice iext size doesn't
match nextents>
xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_SHARED)
<tear down iext tree>
xfs_iunlock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
*BOOM*

Fix this race by adding a flag to the xfs_ifork structure to indicate
that we have not yet read in the extent records and changing the
predicate to look at the flag state, not if_height. The memory barrier
ensures that the flag will not be set until the very end of the
function.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
diff c95356ca Tue Apr 11 23:49:10 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: _{attr,data}_map_shared should take ILOCK_EXCL until iread_extents is completely done

While fuzzing the data fork extent count on a btree-format directory
with xfs/375, I observed the following (excerpted) splat:

XFS: Assertion failed: xfs_isilocked(ip, XFS_ILOCK_EXCL), file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c, line: 1208
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 0 PID: 43192 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_iread_extents+0x1af/0x210 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_dir_walk+0xb8/0x190 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_count_parent_dentries+0x41/0x80 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_validate+0x199/0x2e0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent+0xdf/0x130 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x2b8/0x730 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrubv_metadata+0x38b/0x4d0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_ioc_scrubv_metadata+0x111/0x160 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_file_ioctl+0x367/0xf50 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

The cause of this is a race condition in xfs_ilock_data_map_shared,
which performs an unlocked access to the data fork to guess which lock
mode it needs:

Thread 0 Thread 1

xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
<load bmbt extents into iext>
<notice iext size doesn't
match nextents>
xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_SHARED)
<tear down iext tree>
xfs_iunlock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
*BOOM*

Fix this race by adding a flag to the xfs_ifork structure to indicate
that we have not yet read in the extent records and changing the
predicate to look at the flag state, not if_height. The memory barrier
ensures that the flag will not be set until the very end of the
function.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
diff c95356ca Tue Apr 11 23:49:10 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: _{attr,data}_map_shared should take ILOCK_EXCL until iread_extents is completely done

While fuzzing the data fork extent count on a btree-format directory
with xfs/375, I observed the following (excerpted) splat:

XFS: Assertion failed: xfs_isilocked(ip, XFS_ILOCK_EXCL), file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c, line: 1208
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 0 PID: 43192 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_iread_extents+0x1af/0x210 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_dir_walk+0xb8/0x190 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_count_parent_dentries+0x41/0x80 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_validate+0x199/0x2e0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent+0xdf/0x130 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x2b8/0x730 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrubv_metadata+0x38b/0x4d0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_ioc_scrubv_metadata+0x111/0x160 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_file_ioctl+0x367/0xf50 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

The cause of this is a race condition in xfs_ilock_data_map_shared,
which performs an unlocked access to the data fork to guess which lock
mode it needs:

Thread 0 Thread 1

xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
<load bmbt extents into iext>
<notice iext size doesn't
match nextents>
xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_SHARED)
<tear down iext tree>
xfs_iunlock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
*BOOM*

Fix this race by adding a flag to the xfs_ifork structure to indicate
that we have not yet read in the extent records and changing the
predicate to look at the flag state, not if_height. The memory barrier
ensures that the flag will not be set until the very end of the
function.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
diff c95356ca Tue Apr 11 23:49:10 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: _{attr,data}_map_shared should take ILOCK_EXCL until iread_extents is completely done

While fuzzing the data fork extent count on a btree-format directory
with xfs/375, I observed the following (excerpted) splat:

XFS: Assertion failed: xfs_isilocked(ip, XFS_ILOCK_EXCL), file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c, line: 1208
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 0 PID: 43192 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_iread_extents+0x1af/0x210 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_dir_walk+0xb8/0x190 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_count_parent_dentries+0x41/0x80 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_validate+0x199/0x2e0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent+0xdf/0x130 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x2b8/0x730 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrubv_metadata+0x38b/0x4d0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_ioc_scrubv_metadata+0x111/0x160 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_file_ioctl+0x367/0xf50 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

The cause of this is a race condition in xfs_ilock_data_map_shared,
which performs an unlocked access to the data fork to guess which lock
mode it needs:

Thread 0 Thread 1

xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
<load bmbt extents into iext>
<notice iext size doesn't
match nextents>
xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_SHARED)
<tear down iext tree>
xfs_iunlock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
*BOOM*

Fix this race by adding a flag to the xfs_ifork structure to indicate
that we have not yet read in the extent records and changing the
predicate to look at the flag state, not if_height. The memory barrier
ensures that the flag will not be set until the very end of the
function.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
diff c95356ca Tue Apr 11 23:49:10 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: _{attr,data}_map_shared should take ILOCK_EXCL until iread_extents is completely done

While fuzzing the data fork extent count on a btree-format directory
with xfs/375, I observed the following (excerpted) splat:

XFS: Assertion failed: xfs_isilocked(ip, XFS_ILOCK_EXCL), file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c, line: 1208
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 0 PID: 43192 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_iread_extents+0x1af/0x210 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_dir_walk+0xb8/0x190 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_count_parent_dentries+0x41/0x80 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_validate+0x199/0x2e0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent+0xdf/0x130 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x2b8/0x730 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrubv_metadata+0x38b/0x4d0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_ioc_scrubv_metadata+0x111/0x160 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_file_ioctl+0x367/0xf50 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

The cause of this is a race condition in xfs_ilock_data_map_shared,
which performs an unlocked access to the data fork to guess which lock
mode it needs:

Thread 0 Thread 1

xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
<load bmbt extents into iext>
<notice iext size doesn't
match nextents>
xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_SHARED)
<tear down iext tree>
xfs_iunlock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
*BOOM*

Fix this race by adding a flag to the xfs_ifork structure to indicate
that we have not yet read in the extent records and changing the
predicate to look at the flag state, not if_height. The memory barrier
ensures that the flag will not be set until the very end of the
function.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
diff c95356ca Tue Apr 11 23:49:10 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: _{attr,data}_map_shared should take ILOCK_EXCL until iread_extents is completely done

While fuzzing the data fork extent count on a btree-format directory
with xfs/375, I observed the following (excerpted) splat:

XFS: Assertion failed: xfs_isilocked(ip, XFS_ILOCK_EXCL), file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c, line: 1208
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 0 PID: 43192 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_iread_extents+0x1af/0x210 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_dir_walk+0xb8/0x190 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_count_parent_dentries+0x41/0x80 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_validate+0x199/0x2e0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent+0xdf/0x130 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x2b8/0x730 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrubv_metadata+0x38b/0x4d0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_ioc_scrubv_metadata+0x111/0x160 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_file_ioctl+0x367/0xf50 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

The cause of this is a race condition in xfs_ilock_data_map_shared,
which performs an unlocked access to the data fork to guess which lock
mode it needs:

Thread 0 Thread 1

xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
<load bmbt extents into iext>
<notice iext size doesn't
match nextents>
xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_SHARED)
<tear down iext tree>
xfs_iunlock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
*BOOM*

Fix this race by adding a flag to the xfs_ifork structure to indicate
that we have not yet read in the extent records and changing the
predicate to look at the flag state, not if_height. The memory barrier
ensures that the flag will not be set until the very end of the
function.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
diff c95356ca Tue Apr 11 23:49:10 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: _{attr,data}_map_shared should take ILOCK_EXCL until iread_extents is completely done

While fuzzing the data fork extent count on a btree-format directory
with xfs/375, I observed the following (excerpted) splat:

XFS: Assertion failed: xfs_isilocked(ip, XFS_ILOCK_EXCL), file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c, line: 1208
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 0 PID: 43192 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_iread_extents+0x1af/0x210 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_dir_walk+0xb8/0x190 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_count_parent_dentries+0x41/0x80 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_validate+0x199/0x2e0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent+0xdf/0x130 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x2b8/0x730 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrubv_metadata+0x38b/0x4d0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_ioc_scrubv_metadata+0x111/0x160 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_file_ioctl+0x367/0xf50 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

The cause of this is a race condition in xfs_ilock_data_map_shared,
which performs an unlocked access to the data fork to guess which lock
mode it needs:

Thread 0 Thread 1

xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
<load bmbt extents into iext>
<notice iext size doesn't
match nextents>
xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_SHARED)
<tear down iext tree>
xfs_iunlock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
*BOOM*

Fix this race by adding a flag to the xfs_ifork structure to indicate
that we have not yet read in the extent records and changing the
predicate to look at the flag state, not if_height. The memory barrier
ensures that the flag will not be set until the very end of the
function.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
diff c95356ca Tue Apr 11 23:49:10 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: _{attr,data}_map_shared should take ILOCK_EXCL until iread_extents is completely done

While fuzzing the data fork extent count on a btree-format directory
with xfs/375, I observed the following (excerpted) splat:

XFS: Assertion failed: xfs_isilocked(ip, XFS_ILOCK_EXCL), file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c, line: 1208
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 0 PID: 43192 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_iread_extents+0x1af/0x210 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_dir_walk+0xb8/0x190 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_count_parent_dentries+0x41/0x80 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_validate+0x199/0x2e0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent+0xdf/0x130 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x2b8/0x730 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrubv_metadata+0x38b/0x4d0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_ioc_scrubv_metadata+0x111/0x160 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_file_ioctl+0x367/0xf50 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

The cause of this is a race condition in xfs_ilock_data_map_shared,
which performs an unlocked access to the data fork to guess which lock
mode it needs:

Thread 0 Thread 1

xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
<load bmbt extents into iext>
<notice iext size doesn't
match nextents>
xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_SHARED)
<tear down iext tree>
xfs_iunlock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
*BOOM*

Fix this race by adding a flag to the xfs_ifork structure to indicate
that we have not yet read in the extent records and changing the
predicate to look at the flag state, not if_height. The memory barrier
ensures that the flag will not be set until the very end of the
function.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
diff c95356ca Tue Apr 11 23:49:10 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: _{attr,data}_map_shared should take ILOCK_EXCL until iread_extents is completely done

While fuzzing the data fork extent count on a btree-format directory
with xfs/375, I observed the following (excerpted) splat:

XFS: Assertion failed: xfs_isilocked(ip, XFS_ILOCK_EXCL), file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c, line: 1208
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 0 PID: 43192 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_iread_extents+0x1af/0x210 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_dir_walk+0xb8/0x190 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_count_parent_dentries+0x41/0x80 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_validate+0x199/0x2e0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent+0xdf/0x130 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x2b8/0x730 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrubv_metadata+0x38b/0x4d0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_ioc_scrubv_metadata+0x111/0x160 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_file_ioctl+0x367/0xf50 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

The cause of this is a race condition in xfs_ilock_data_map_shared,
which performs an unlocked access to the data fork to guess which lock
mode it needs:

Thread 0 Thread 1

xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
<load bmbt extents into iext>
<notice iext size doesn't
match nextents>
xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_SHARED)
<tear down iext tree>
xfs_iunlock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
*BOOM*

Fix this race by adding a flag to the xfs_ifork structure to indicate
that we have not yet read in the extent records and changing the
predicate to look at the flag state, not if_height. The memory barrier
ensures that the flag will not be set until the very end of the
function.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
diff c95356ca Tue Apr 11 23:49:10 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: _{attr,data}_map_shared should take ILOCK_EXCL until iread_extents is completely done

While fuzzing the data fork extent count on a btree-format directory
with xfs/375, I observed the following (excerpted) splat:

XFS: Assertion failed: xfs_isilocked(ip, XFS_ILOCK_EXCL), file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c, line: 1208
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 0 PID: 43192 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_iread_extents+0x1af/0x210 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_dir_walk+0xb8/0x190 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_count_parent_dentries+0x41/0x80 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_validate+0x199/0x2e0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent+0xdf/0x130 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x2b8/0x730 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrubv_metadata+0x38b/0x4d0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_ioc_scrubv_metadata+0x111/0x160 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_file_ioctl+0x367/0xf50 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

The cause of this is a race condition in xfs_ilock_data_map_shared,
which performs an unlocked access to the data fork to guess which lock
mode it needs:

Thread 0 Thread 1

xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
<load bmbt extents into iext>
<notice iext size doesn't
match nextents>
xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_SHARED)
<tear down iext tree>
xfs_iunlock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
*BOOM*

Fix this race by adding a flag to the xfs_ifork structure to indicate
that we have not yet read in the extent records and changing the
predicate to look at the flag state, not if_height. The memory barrier
ensures that the flag will not be set until the very end of the
function.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
diff c95356ca Tue Apr 11 23:49:10 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: _{attr,data}_map_shared should take ILOCK_EXCL until iread_extents is completely done

While fuzzing the data fork extent count on a btree-format directory
with xfs/375, I observed the following (excerpted) splat:

XFS: Assertion failed: xfs_isilocked(ip, XFS_ILOCK_EXCL), file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c, line: 1208
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 0 PID: 43192 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_iread_extents+0x1af/0x210 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_dir_walk+0xb8/0x190 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_count_parent_dentries+0x41/0x80 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_validate+0x199/0x2e0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent+0xdf/0x130 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x2b8/0x730 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrubv_metadata+0x38b/0x4d0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_ioc_scrubv_metadata+0x111/0x160 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_file_ioctl+0x367/0xf50 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

The cause of this is a race condition in xfs_ilock_data_map_shared,
which performs an unlocked access to the data fork to guess which lock
mode it needs:

Thread 0 Thread 1

xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
<load bmbt extents into iext>
<notice iext size doesn't
match nextents>
xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_SHARED)
<tear down iext tree>
xfs_iunlock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
*BOOM*

Fix this race by adding a flag to the xfs_ifork structure to indicate
that we have not yet read in the extent records and changing the
predicate to look at the flag state, not if_height. The memory barrier
ensures that the flag will not be set until the very end of the
function.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
diff c95356ca Tue Apr 11 23:49:10 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: _{attr,data}_map_shared should take ILOCK_EXCL until iread_extents is completely done

While fuzzing the data fork extent count on a btree-format directory
with xfs/375, I observed the following (excerpted) splat:

XFS: Assertion failed: xfs_isilocked(ip, XFS_ILOCK_EXCL), file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c, line: 1208
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 0 PID: 43192 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_iread_extents+0x1af/0x210 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_dir_walk+0xb8/0x190 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_count_parent_dentries+0x41/0x80 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_validate+0x199/0x2e0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent+0xdf/0x130 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x2b8/0x730 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrubv_metadata+0x38b/0x4d0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_ioc_scrubv_metadata+0x111/0x160 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_file_ioctl+0x367/0xf50 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

The cause of this is a race condition in xfs_ilock_data_map_shared,
which performs an unlocked access to the data fork to guess which lock
mode it needs:

Thread 0 Thread 1

xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
<load bmbt extents into iext>
<notice iext size doesn't
match nextents>
xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_SHARED)
<tear down iext tree>
xfs_iunlock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
*BOOM*

Fix this race by adding a flag to the xfs_ifork structure to indicate
that we have not yet read in the extent records and changing the
predicate to look at the flag state, not if_height. The memory barrier
ensures that the flag will not be set until the very end of the
function.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
diff c95356ca Tue Apr 11 23:49:10 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: _{attr,data}_map_shared should take ILOCK_EXCL until iread_extents is completely done

While fuzzing the data fork extent count on a btree-format directory
with xfs/375, I observed the following (excerpted) splat:

XFS: Assertion failed: xfs_isilocked(ip, XFS_ILOCK_EXCL), file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c, line: 1208
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 0 PID: 43192 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_iread_extents+0x1af/0x210 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_dir_walk+0xb8/0x190 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_count_parent_dentries+0x41/0x80 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_validate+0x199/0x2e0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent+0xdf/0x130 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x2b8/0x730 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrubv_metadata+0x38b/0x4d0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_ioc_scrubv_metadata+0x111/0x160 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_file_ioctl+0x367/0xf50 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

The cause of this is a race condition in xfs_ilock_data_map_shared,
which performs an unlocked access to the data fork to guess which lock
mode it needs:

Thread 0 Thread 1

xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
<load bmbt extents into iext>
<notice iext size doesn't
match nextents>
xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_SHARED)
<tear down iext tree>
xfs_iunlock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
*BOOM*

Fix this race by adding a flag to the xfs_ifork structure to indicate
that we have not yet read in the extent records and changing the
predicate to look at the flag state, not if_height. The memory barrier
ensures that the flag will not be set until the very end of the
function.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
diff c95356ca Tue Apr 11 23:49:10 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: _{attr,data}_map_shared should take ILOCK_EXCL until iread_extents is completely done

While fuzzing the data fork extent count on a btree-format directory
with xfs/375, I observed the following (excerpted) splat:

XFS: Assertion failed: xfs_isilocked(ip, XFS_ILOCK_EXCL), file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c, line: 1208
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 0 PID: 43192 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_iread_extents+0x1af/0x210 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_dir_walk+0xb8/0x190 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_count_parent_dentries+0x41/0x80 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_validate+0x199/0x2e0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent+0xdf/0x130 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x2b8/0x730 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrubv_metadata+0x38b/0x4d0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_ioc_scrubv_metadata+0x111/0x160 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_file_ioctl+0x367/0xf50 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

The cause of this is a race condition in xfs_ilock_data_map_shared,
which performs an unlocked access to the data fork to guess which lock
mode it needs:

Thread 0 Thread 1

xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
<load bmbt extents into iext>
<notice iext size doesn't
match nextents>
xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_SHARED)
<tear down iext tree>
xfs_iunlock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
*BOOM*

Fix this race by adding a flag to the xfs_ifork structure to indicate
that we have not yet read in the extent records and changing the
predicate to look at the flag state, not if_height. The memory barrier
ensures that the flag will not be set until the very end of the
function.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
diff c95356ca Tue Apr 11 23:49:10 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: _{attr,data}_map_shared should take ILOCK_EXCL until iread_extents is completely done

While fuzzing the data fork extent count on a btree-format directory
with xfs/375, I observed the following (excerpted) splat:

XFS: Assertion failed: xfs_isilocked(ip, XFS_ILOCK_EXCL), file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c, line: 1208
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 0 PID: 43192 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_iread_extents+0x1af/0x210 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_dir_walk+0xb8/0x190 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_count_parent_dentries+0x41/0x80 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent_validate+0x199/0x2e0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xchk_parent+0xdf/0x130 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x2b8/0x730 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_scrubv_metadata+0x38b/0x4d0 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_ioc_scrubv_metadata+0x111/0x160 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
xfs_file_ioctl+0x367/0xf50 [xfs 09f66509ece4938760fac7de64732a0cbd3e39cd]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

The cause of this is a race condition in xfs_ilock_data_map_shared,
which performs an unlocked access to the data fork to guess which lock
mode it needs:

Thread 0 Thread 1

xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
<load bmbt extents into iext>
<notice iext size doesn't
match nextents>
xfs_need_iread_extents
<observe iext tree>
xfs_ilock(..., ILOCK_SHARED)
<tear down iext tree>
xfs_iunlock(..., ILOCK_EXCL)
xfs_iread_extents
<observe no iext tree>
<check ILOCK_EXCL>
*BOOM*

Fix this race by adding a flag to the xfs_ifork structure to indicate
that we have not yet read in the extent records and changing the
predicate to look at the flag state, not if_height. The memory barrier
ensures that the flag will not be set until the very end of the
function.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
H A Dxfs_rtbitmap.cdiff 881f78f4 Mon Jan 29 21:27:23 MST 2024 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: remove conditional building of rt geometry validator functions

I mistakenly turned off CONFIG_XFS_RT in the Kconfig file for arm64
variant of the djwong-wtf git branch. Unfortunately, it took me a good
hour to figure out that RT wasn't built because this is what got printed
to dmesg:

XFS (sda2): realtime geometry sanity check failed
XFS (sda2): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_sb_read_verify+0x170/0x190 [xfs], xfs_sb block 0x0

Whereas I would have expected:

XFS (sda2): Not built with CONFIG_XFS_RT
XFS (sda2): RT mount failed

The root cause of these problems is the conditional compilation of the
new functions xfs_validate_rtextents and xfs_compute_rextslog that I
introduced in the two commits listed below. The !RT versions of these
functions return false and 0, respectively, which causes primary
superblock validation to fail, which explains the first message.

Move the two functions to other parts of libxfs that are not
conditionally defined by CONFIG_XFS_RT and remove the broken stubs so
that validation works again.

Fixes: e14293803f4e ("xfs: don't allow overly small or large realtime volumes")
Fixes: a6a38f309afc ("xfs: make rextslog computation consistent with mkfs")
Signed-off-by: "Darrick J. Wong" <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
Signed-off-by: Chandan Babu R <chandanbabu@kernel.org>
diff 881f78f4 Mon Jan 29 21:27:23 MST 2024 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: remove conditional building of rt geometry validator functions

I mistakenly turned off CONFIG_XFS_RT in the Kconfig file for arm64
variant of the djwong-wtf git branch. Unfortunately, it took me a good
hour to figure out that RT wasn't built because this is what got printed
to dmesg:

XFS (sda2): realtime geometry sanity check failed
XFS (sda2): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_sb_read_verify+0x170/0x190 [xfs], xfs_sb block 0x0

Whereas I would have expected:

XFS (sda2): Not built with CONFIG_XFS_RT
XFS (sda2): RT mount failed

The root cause of these problems is the conditional compilation of the
new functions xfs_validate_rtextents and xfs_compute_rextslog that I
introduced in the two commits listed below. The !RT versions of these
functions return false and 0, respectively, which causes primary
superblock validation to fail, which explains the first message.

Move the two functions to other parts of libxfs that are not
conditionally defined by CONFIG_XFS_RT and remove the broken stubs so
that validation works again.

Fixes: e14293803f4e ("xfs: don't allow overly small or large realtime volumes")
Fixes: a6a38f309afc ("xfs: make rextslog computation consistent with mkfs")
Signed-off-by: "Darrick J. Wong" <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
Signed-off-by: Chandan Babu R <chandanbabu@kernel.org>
diff 881f78f4 Mon Jan 29 21:27:23 MST 2024 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: remove conditional building of rt geometry validator functions

I mistakenly turned off CONFIG_XFS_RT in the Kconfig file for arm64
variant of the djwong-wtf git branch. Unfortunately, it took me a good
hour to figure out that RT wasn't built because this is what got printed
to dmesg:

XFS (sda2): realtime geometry sanity check failed
XFS (sda2): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_sb_read_verify+0x170/0x190 [xfs], xfs_sb block 0x0

Whereas I would have expected:

XFS (sda2): Not built with CONFIG_XFS_RT
XFS (sda2): RT mount failed

The root cause of these problems is the conditional compilation of the
new functions xfs_validate_rtextents and xfs_compute_rextslog that I
introduced in the two commits listed below. The !RT versions of these
functions return false and 0, respectively, which causes primary
superblock validation to fail, which explains the first message.

Move the two functions to other parts of libxfs that are not
conditionally defined by CONFIG_XFS_RT and remove the broken stubs so
that validation works again.

Fixes: e14293803f4e ("xfs: don't allow overly small or large realtime volumes")
Fixes: a6a38f309afc ("xfs: make rextslog computation consistent with mkfs")
Signed-off-by: "Darrick J. Wong" <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
Signed-off-by: Chandan Babu R <chandanbabu@kernel.org>
diff 881f78f4 Mon Jan 29 21:27:23 MST 2024 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: remove conditional building of rt geometry validator functions

I mistakenly turned off CONFIG_XFS_RT in the Kconfig file for arm64
variant of the djwong-wtf git branch. Unfortunately, it took me a good
hour to figure out that RT wasn't built because this is what got printed
to dmesg:

XFS (sda2): realtime geometry sanity check failed
XFS (sda2): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_sb_read_verify+0x170/0x190 [xfs], xfs_sb block 0x0

Whereas I would have expected:

XFS (sda2): Not built with CONFIG_XFS_RT
XFS (sda2): RT mount failed

The root cause of these problems is the conditional compilation of the
new functions xfs_validate_rtextents and xfs_compute_rextslog that I
introduced in the two commits listed below. The !RT versions of these
functions return false and 0, respectively, which causes primary
superblock validation to fail, which explains the first message.

Move the two functions to other parts of libxfs that are not
conditionally defined by CONFIG_XFS_RT and remove the broken stubs so
that validation works again.

Fixes: e14293803f4e ("xfs: don't allow overly small or large realtime volumes")
Fixes: a6a38f309afc ("xfs: make rextslog computation consistent with mkfs")
Signed-off-by: "Darrick J. Wong" <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
Signed-off-by: Chandan Babu R <chandanbabu@kernel.org>
diff a6a38f30 Fri Dec 01 10:17:40 MST 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make rextslog computation consistent with mkfs

There's a weird discrepancy in xfsprogs dating back to the creation of
the Linux port -- if there are zero rt extents, mkfs will set
sb_rextents and sb_rextslog both to zero:

sbp->sb_rextslog =
(uint8_t)(rtextents ?
libxfs_highbit32((unsigned int)rtextents) : 0);

However, that's not the check that xfs_repair uses for nonzero rtblocks:

if (sb->sb_rextslog !=
libxfs_highbit32((unsigned int)sb->sb_rextents))

The difference here is that xfs_highbit32 returns -1 if its argument is
zero. Unfortunately, this means that in the weird corner case of a
realtime volume shorter than 1 rt extent, xfs_repair will immediately
flag a freshly formatted filesystem as corrupt. Because mkfs has been
writing ondisk artifacts like this for decades, we have to accept that
as "correct". TBH, zero rextslog for zero rtextents makes more sense to
me anyway.

Regrettably, the superblock verifier checks created in commit copied
xfs_repair even though mkfs has been writing out such filesystems for
ages. Fix the superblock verifier to accept what mkfs spits out; the
userspace version of this patch will have to fix xfs_repair as well.

Note that the new helper leaves the zeroday bug where the upper 32 bits
of sb_rextents is ripped off and fed to highbit32. This leads to a
seriously undersized rt summary file, which immediately breaks mkfs:

$ hugedisk.sh foo /dev/sdc $(( 0x100000080 * 4096))B
$ /sbin/mkfs.xfs -f /dev/sda -m rmapbt=0,reflink=0 -r rtdev=/dev/mapper/foo
meta-data=/dev/sda isize=512 agcount=4, agsize=1298176 blks
= sectsz=512 attr=2, projid32bit=1
= crc=1 finobt=1, sparse=1, rmapbt=0
= reflink=0 bigtime=1 inobtcount=1 nrext64=1
data = bsize=4096 blocks=5192704, imaxpct=25
= sunit=0 swidth=0 blks
naming =version 2 bsize=4096 ascii-ci=0, ftype=1
log =internal log bsize=4096 blocks=16384, version=2
= sectsz=512 sunit=0 blks, lazy-count=1
realtime =/dev/mapper/foo extsz=4096 blocks=4294967424, rtextents=4294967424
Discarding blocks...Done.
mkfs.xfs: Error initializing the realtime space [117 - Structure needs cleaning]

The next patch will drop support for rt volumes with fewer than 1 or
more than 2^32-1 rt extents, since they've clearly been broken forever.

Fixes: f8e566c0f5e1f ("xfs: validate the realtime geometry in xfs_validate_sb_common")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
diff a6a38f30 Fri Dec 01 10:17:40 MST 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make rextslog computation consistent with mkfs

There's a weird discrepancy in xfsprogs dating back to the creation of
the Linux port -- if there are zero rt extents, mkfs will set
sb_rextents and sb_rextslog both to zero:

sbp->sb_rextslog =
(uint8_t)(rtextents ?
libxfs_highbit32((unsigned int)rtextents) : 0);

However, that's not the check that xfs_repair uses for nonzero rtblocks:

if (sb->sb_rextslog !=
libxfs_highbit32((unsigned int)sb->sb_rextents))

The difference here is that xfs_highbit32 returns -1 if its argument is
zero. Unfortunately, this means that in the weird corner case of a
realtime volume shorter than 1 rt extent, xfs_repair will immediately
flag a freshly formatted filesystem as corrupt. Because mkfs has been
writing ondisk artifacts like this for decades, we have to accept that
as "correct". TBH, zero rextslog for zero rtextents makes more sense to
me anyway.

Regrettably, the superblock verifier checks created in commit copied
xfs_repair even though mkfs has been writing out such filesystems for
ages. Fix the superblock verifier to accept what mkfs spits out; the
userspace version of this patch will have to fix xfs_repair as well.

Note that the new helper leaves the zeroday bug where the upper 32 bits
of sb_rextents is ripped off and fed to highbit32. This leads to a
seriously undersized rt summary file, which immediately breaks mkfs:

$ hugedisk.sh foo /dev/sdc $(( 0x100000080 * 4096))B
$ /sbin/mkfs.xfs -f /dev/sda -m rmapbt=0,reflink=0 -r rtdev=/dev/mapper/foo
meta-data=/dev/sda isize=512 agcount=4, agsize=1298176 blks
= sectsz=512 attr=2, projid32bit=1
= crc=1 finobt=1, sparse=1, rmapbt=0
= reflink=0 bigtime=1 inobtcount=1 nrext64=1
data = bsize=4096 blocks=5192704, imaxpct=25
= sunit=0 swidth=0 blks
naming =version 2 bsize=4096 ascii-ci=0, ftype=1
log =internal log bsize=4096 blocks=16384, version=2
= sectsz=512 sunit=0 blks, lazy-count=1
realtime =/dev/mapper/foo extsz=4096 blocks=4294967424, rtextents=4294967424
Discarding blocks...Done.
mkfs.xfs: Error initializing the realtime space [117 - Structure needs cleaning]

The next patch will drop support for rt volumes with fewer than 1 or
more than 2^32-1 rt extents, since they've clearly been broken forever.

Fixes: f8e566c0f5e1f ("xfs: validate the realtime geometry in xfs_validate_sb_common")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
diff a6a38f30 Fri Dec 01 10:17:40 MST 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make rextslog computation consistent with mkfs

There's a weird discrepancy in xfsprogs dating back to the creation of
the Linux port -- if there are zero rt extents, mkfs will set
sb_rextents and sb_rextslog both to zero:

sbp->sb_rextslog =
(uint8_t)(rtextents ?
libxfs_highbit32((unsigned int)rtextents) : 0);

However, that's not the check that xfs_repair uses for nonzero rtblocks:

if (sb->sb_rextslog !=
libxfs_highbit32((unsigned int)sb->sb_rextents))

The difference here is that xfs_highbit32 returns -1 if its argument is
zero. Unfortunately, this means that in the weird corner case of a
realtime volume shorter than 1 rt extent, xfs_repair will immediately
flag a freshly formatted filesystem as corrupt. Because mkfs has been
writing ondisk artifacts like this for decades, we have to accept that
as "correct". TBH, zero rextslog for zero rtextents makes more sense to
me anyway.

Regrettably, the superblock verifier checks created in commit copied
xfs_repair even though mkfs has been writing out such filesystems for
ages. Fix the superblock verifier to accept what mkfs spits out; the
userspace version of this patch will have to fix xfs_repair as well.

Note that the new helper leaves the zeroday bug where the upper 32 bits
of sb_rextents is ripped off and fed to highbit32. This leads to a
seriously undersized rt summary file, which immediately breaks mkfs:

$ hugedisk.sh foo /dev/sdc $(( 0x100000080 * 4096))B
$ /sbin/mkfs.xfs -f /dev/sda -m rmapbt=0,reflink=0 -r rtdev=/dev/mapper/foo
meta-data=/dev/sda isize=512 agcount=4, agsize=1298176 blks
= sectsz=512 attr=2, projid32bit=1
= crc=1 finobt=1, sparse=1, rmapbt=0
= reflink=0 bigtime=1 inobtcount=1 nrext64=1
data = bsize=4096 blocks=5192704, imaxpct=25
= sunit=0 swidth=0 blks
naming =version 2 bsize=4096 ascii-ci=0, ftype=1
log =internal log bsize=4096 blocks=16384, version=2
= sectsz=512 sunit=0 blks, lazy-count=1
realtime =/dev/mapper/foo extsz=4096 blocks=4294967424, rtextents=4294967424
Discarding blocks...Done.
mkfs.xfs: Error initializing the realtime space [117 - Structure needs cleaning]

The next patch will drop support for rt volumes with fewer than 1 or
more than 2^32-1 rt extents, since they've clearly been broken forever.

Fixes: f8e566c0f5e1f ("xfs: validate the realtime geometry in xfs_validate_sb_common")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
diff a6a38f30 Fri Dec 01 10:17:40 MST 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make rextslog computation consistent with mkfs

There's a weird discrepancy in xfsprogs dating back to the creation of
the Linux port -- if there are zero rt extents, mkfs will set
sb_rextents and sb_rextslog both to zero:

sbp->sb_rextslog =
(uint8_t)(rtextents ?
libxfs_highbit32((unsigned int)rtextents) : 0);

However, that's not the check that xfs_repair uses for nonzero rtblocks:

if (sb->sb_rextslog !=
libxfs_highbit32((unsigned int)sb->sb_rextents))

The difference here is that xfs_highbit32 returns -1 if its argument is
zero. Unfortunately, this means that in the weird corner case of a
realtime volume shorter than 1 rt extent, xfs_repair will immediately
flag a freshly formatted filesystem as corrupt. Because mkfs has been
writing ondisk artifacts like this for decades, we have to accept that
as "correct". TBH, zero rextslog for zero rtextents makes more sense to
me anyway.

Regrettably, the superblock verifier checks created in commit copied
xfs_repair even though mkfs has been writing out such filesystems for
ages. Fix the superblock verifier to accept what mkfs spits out; the
userspace version of this patch will have to fix xfs_repair as well.

Note that the new helper leaves the zeroday bug where the upper 32 bits
of sb_rextents is ripped off and fed to highbit32. This leads to a
seriously undersized rt summary file, which immediately breaks mkfs:

$ hugedisk.sh foo /dev/sdc $(( 0x100000080 * 4096))B
$ /sbin/mkfs.xfs -f /dev/sda -m rmapbt=0,reflink=0 -r rtdev=/dev/mapper/foo
meta-data=/dev/sda isize=512 agcount=4, agsize=1298176 blks
= sectsz=512 attr=2, projid32bit=1
= crc=1 finobt=1, sparse=1, rmapbt=0
= reflink=0 bigtime=1 inobtcount=1 nrext64=1
data = bsize=4096 blocks=5192704, imaxpct=25
= sunit=0 swidth=0 blks
naming =version 2 bsize=4096 ascii-ci=0, ftype=1
log =internal log bsize=4096 blocks=16384, version=2
= sectsz=512 sunit=0 blks, lazy-count=1
realtime =/dev/mapper/foo extsz=4096 blocks=4294967424, rtextents=4294967424
Discarding blocks...Done.
mkfs.xfs: Error initializing the realtime space [117 - Structure needs cleaning]

The next patch will drop support for rt volumes with fewer than 1 or
more than 2^32-1 rt extents, since they've clearly been broken forever.

Fixes: f8e566c0f5e1f ("xfs: validate the realtime geometry in xfs_validate_sb_common")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
diff a6a38f30 Fri Dec 01 10:17:40 MST 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make rextslog computation consistent with mkfs

There's a weird discrepancy in xfsprogs dating back to the creation of
the Linux port -- if there are zero rt extents, mkfs will set
sb_rextents and sb_rextslog both to zero:

sbp->sb_rextslog =
(uint8_t)(rtextents ?
libxfs_highbit32((unsigned int)rtextents) : 0);

However, that's not the check that xfs_repair uses for nonzero rtblocks:

if (sb->sb_rextslog !=
libxfs_highbit32((unsigned int)sb->sb_rextents))

The difference here is that xfs_highbit32 returns -1 if its argument is
zero. Unfortunately, this means that in the weird corner case of a
realtime volume shorter than 1 rt extent, xfs_repair will immediately
flag a freshly formatted filesystem as corrupt. Because mkfs has been
writing ondisk artifacts like this for decades, we have to accept that
as "correct". TBH, zero rextslog for zero rtextents makes more sense to
me anyway.

Regrettably, the superblock verifier checks created in commit copied
xfs_repair even though mkfs has been writing out such filesystems for
ages. Fix the superblock verifier to accept what mkfs spits out; the
userspace version of this patch will have to fix xfs_repair as well.

Note that the new helper leaves the zeroday bug where the upper 32 bits
of sb_rextents is ripped off and fed to highbit32. This leads to a
seriously undersized rt summary file, which immediately breaks mkfs:

$ hugedisk.sh foo /dev/sdc $(( 0x100000080 * 4096))B
$ /sbin/mkfs.xfs -f /dev/sda -m rmapbt=0,reflink=0 -r rtdev=/dev/mapper/foo
meta-data=/dev/sda isize=512 agcount=4, agsize=1298176 blks
= sectsz=512 attr=2, projid32bit=1
= crc=1 finobt=1, sparse=1, rmapbt=0
= reflink=0 bigtime=1 inobtcount=1 nrext64=1
data = bsize=4096 blocks=5192704, imaxpct=25
= sunit=0 swidth=0 blks
naming =version 2 bsize=4096 ascii-ci=0, ftype=1
log =internal log bsize=4096 blocks=16384, version=2
= sectsz=512 sunit=0 blks, lazy-count=1
realtime =/dev/mapper/foo extsz=4096 blocks=4294967424, rtextents=4294967424
Discarding blocks...Done.
mkfs.xfs: Error initializing the realtime space [117 - Structure needs cleaning]

The next patch will drop support for rt volumes with fewer than 1 or
more than 2^32-1 rt extents, since they've clearly been broken forever.

Fixes: f8e566c0f5e1f ("xfs: validate the realtime geometry in xfs_validate_sb_common")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
diff a6a38f30 Fri Dec 01 10:17:40 MST 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make rextslog computation consistent with mkfs

There's a weird discrepancy in xfsprogs dating back to the creation of
the Linux port -- if there are zero rt extents, mkfs will set
sb_rextents and sb_rextslog both to zero:

sbp->sb_rextslog =
(uint8_t)(rtextents ?
libxfs_highbit32((unsigned int)rtextents) : 0);

However, that's not the check that xfs_repair uses for nonzero rtblocks:

if (sb->sb_rextslog !=
libxfs_highbit32((unsigned int)sb->sb_rextents))

The difference here is that xfs_highbit32 returns -1 if its argument is
zero. Unfortunately, this means that in the weird corner case of a
realtime volume shorter than 1 rt extent, xfs_repair will immediately
flag a freshly formatted filesystem as corrupt. Because mkfs has been
writing ondisk artifacts like this for decades, we have to accept that
as "correct". TBH, zero rextslog for zero rtextents makes more sense to
me anyway.

Regrettably, the superblock verifier checks created in commit copied
xfs_repair even though mkfs has been writing out such filesystems for
ages. Fix the superblock verifier to accept what mkfs spits out; the
userspace version of this patch will have to fix xfs_repair as well.

Note that the new helper leaves the zeroday bug where the upper 32 bits
of sb_rextents is ripped off and fed to highbit32. This leads to a
seriously undersized rt summary file, which immediately breaks mkfs:

$ hugedisk.sh foo /dev/sdc $(( 0x100000080 * 4096))B
$ /sbin/mkfs.xfs -f /dev/sda -m rmapbt=0,reflink=0 -r rtdev=/dev/mapper/foo
meta-data=/dev/sda isize=512 agcount=4, agsize=1298176 blks
= sectsz=512 attr=2, projid32bit=1
= crc=1 finobt=1, sparse=1, rmapbt=0
= reflink=0 bigtime=1 inobtcount=1 nrext64=1
data = bsize=4096 blocks=5192704, imaxpct=25
= sunit=0 swidth=0 blks
naming =version 2 bsize=4096 ascii-ci=0, ftype=1
log =internal log bsize=4096 blocks=16384, version=2
= sectsz=512 sunit=0 blks, lazy-count=1
realtime =/dev/mapper/foo extsz=4096 blocks=4294967424, rtextents=4294967424
Discarding blocks...Done.
mkfs.xfs: Error initializing the realtime space [117 - Structure needs cleaning]

The next patch will drop support for rt volumes with fewer than 1 or
more than 2^32-1 rt extents, since they've clearly been broken forever.

Fixes: f8e566c0f5e1f ("xfs: validate the realtime geometry in xfs_validate_sb_common")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
diff a6a38f30 Fri Dec 01 10:17:40 MST 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make rextslog computation consistent with mkfs

There's a weird discrepancy in xfsprogs dating back to the creation of
the Linux port -- if there are zero rt extents, mkfs will set
sb_rextents and sb_rextslog both to zero:

sbp->sb_rextslog =
(uint8_t)(rtextents ?
libxfs_highbit32((unsigned int)rtextents) : 0);

However, that's not the check that xfs_repair uses for nonzero rtblocks:

if (sb->sb_rextslog !=
libxfs_highbit32((unsigned int)sb->sb_rextents))

The difference here is that xfs_highbit32 returns -1 if its argument is
zero. Unfortunately, this means that in the weird corner case of a
realtime volume shorter than 1 rt extent, xfs_repair will immediately
flag a freshly formatted filesystem as corrupt. Because mkfs has been
writing ondisk artifacts like this for decades, we have to accept that
as "correct". TBH, zero rextslog for zero rtextents makes more sense to
me anyway.

Regrettably, the superblock verifier checks created in commit copied
xfs_repair even though mkfs has been writing out such filesystems for
ages. Fix the superblock verifier to accept what mkfs spits out; the
userspace version of this patch will have to fix xfs_repair as well.

Note that the new helper leaves the zeroday bug where the upper 32 bits
of sb_rextents is ripped off and fed to highbit32. This leads to a
seriously undersized rt summary file, which immediately breaks mkfs:

$ hugedisk.sh foo /dev/sdc $(( 0x100000080 * 4096))B
$ /sbin/mkfs.xfs -f /dev/sda -m rmapbt=0,reflink=0 -r rtdev=/dev/mapper/foo
meta-data=/dev/sda isize=512 agcount=4, agsize=1298176 blks
= sectsz=512 attr=2, projid32bit=1
= crc=1 finobt=1, sparse=1, rmapbt=0
= reflink=0 bigtime=1 inobtcount=1 nrext64=1
data = bsize=4096 blocks=5192704, imaxpct=25
= sunit=0 swidth=0 blks
naming =version 2 bsize=4096 ascii-ci=0, ftype=1
log =internal log bsize=4096 blocks=16384, version=2
= sectsz=512 sunit=0 blks, lazy-count=1
realtime =/dev/mapper/foo extsz=4096 blocks=4294967424, rtextents=4294967424
Discarding blocks...Done.
mkfs.xfs: Error initializing the realtime space [117 - Structure needs cleaning]

The next patch will drop support for rt volumes with fewer than 1 or
more than 2^32-1 rt extents, since they've clearly been broken forever.

Fixes: f8e566c0f5e1f ("xfs: validate the realtime geometry in xfs_validate_sb_common")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
diff a6a38f30 Fri Dec 01 10:17:40 MST 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make rextslog computation consistent with mkfs

There's a weird discrepancy in xfsprogs dating back to the creation of
the Linux port -- if there are zero rt extents, mkfs will set
sb_rextents and sb_rextslog both to zero:

sbp->sb_rextslog =
(uint8_t)(rtextents ?
libxfs_highbit32((unsigned int)rtextents) : 0);

However, that's not the check that xfs_repair uses for nonzero rtblocks:

if (sb->sb_rextslog !=
libxfs_highbit32((unsigned int)sb->sb_rextents))

The difference here is that xfs_highbit32 returns -1 if its argument is
zero. Unfortunately, this means that in the weird corner case of a
realtime volume shorter than 1 rt extent, xfs_repair will immediately
flag a freshly formatted filesystem as corrupt. Because mkfs has been
writing ondisk artifacts like this for decades, we have to accept that
as "correct". TBH, zero rextslog for zero rtextents makes more sense to
me anyway.

Regrettably, the superblock verifier checks created in commit copied
xfs_repair even though mkfs has been writing out such filesystems for
ages. Fix the superblock verifier to accept what mkfs spits out; the
userspace version of this patch will have to fix xfs_repair as well.

Note that the new helper leaves the zeroday bug where the upper 32 bits
of sb_rextents is ripped off and fed to highbit32. This leads to a
seriously undersized rt summary file, which immediately breaks mkfs:

$ hugedisk.sh foo /dev/sdc $(( 0x100000080 * 4096))B
$ /sbin/mkfs.xfs -f /dev/sda -m rmapbt=0,reflink=0 -r rtdev=/dev/mapper/foo
meta-data=/dev/sda isize=512 agcount=4, agsize=1298176 blks
= sectsz=512 attr=2, projid32bit=1
= crc=1 finobt=1, sparse=1, rmapbt=0
= reflink=0 bigtime=1 inobtcount=1 nrext64=1
data = bsize=4096 blocks=5192704, imaxpct=25
= sunit=0 swidth=0 blks
naming =version 2 bsize=4096 ascii-ci=0, ftype=1
log =internal log bsize=4096 blocks=16384, version=2
= sectsz=512 sunit=0 blks, lazy-count=1
realtime =/dev/mapper/foo extsz=4096 blocks=4294967424, rtextents=4294967424
Discarding blocks...Done.
mkfs.xfs: Error initializing the realtime space [117 - Structure needs cleaning]

The next patch will drop support for rt volumes with fewer than 1 or
more than 2^32-1 rt extents, since they've clearly been broken forever.

Fixes: f8e566c0f5e1f ("xfs: validate the realtime geometry in xfs_validate_sb_common")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
diff a6a38f30 Fri Dec 01 10:17:40 MST 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make rextslog computation consistent with mkfs

There's a weird discrepancy in xfsprogs dating back to the creation of
the Linux port -- if there are zero rt extents, mkfs will set
sb_rextents and sb_rextslog both to zero:

sbp->sb_rextslog =
(uint8_t)(rtextents ?
libxfs_highbit32((unsigned int)rtextents) : 0);

However, that's not the check that xfs_repair uses for nonzero rtblocks:

if (sb->sb_rextslog !=
libxfs_highbit32((unsigned int)sb->sb_rextents))

The difference here is that xfs_highbit32 returns -1 if its argument is
zero. Unfortunately, this means that in the weird corner case of a
realtime volume shorter than 1 rt extent, xfs_repair will immediately
flag a freshly formatted filesystem as corrupt. Because mkfs has been
writing ondisk artifacts like this for decades, we have to accept that
as "correct". TBH, zero rextslog for zero rtextents makes more sense to
me anyway.

Regrettably, the superblock verifier checks created in commit copied
xfs_repair even though mkfs has been writing out such filesystems for
ages. Fix the superblock verifier to accept what mkfs spits out; the
userspace version of this patch will have to fix xfs_repair as well.

Note that the new helper leaves the zeroday bug where the upper 32 bits
of sb_rextents is ripped off and fed to highbit32. This leads to a
seriously undersized rt summary file, which immediately breaks mkfs:

$ hugedisk.sh foo /dev/sdc $(( 0x100000080 * 4096))B
$ /sbin/mkfs.xfs -f /dev/sda -m rmapbt=0,reflink=0 -r rtdev=/dev/mapper/foo
meta-data=/dev/sda isize=512 agcount=4, agsize=1298176 blks
= sectsz=512 attr=2, projid32bit=1
= crc=1 finobt=1, sparse=1, rmapbt=0
= reflink=0 bigtime=1 inobtcount=1 nrext64=1
data = bsize=4096 blocks=5192704, imaxpct=25
= sunit=0 swidth=0 blks
naming =version 2 bsize=4096 ascii-ci=0, ftype=1
log =internal log bsize=4096 blocks=16384, version=2
= sectsz=512 sunit=0 blks, lazy-count=1
realtime =/dev/mapper/foo extsz=4096 blocks=4294967424, rtextents=4294967424
Discarding blocks...Done.
mkfs.xfs: Error initializing the realtime space [117 - Structure needs cleaning]

The next patch will drop support for rt volumes with fewer than 1 or
more than 2^32-1 rt extents, since they've clearly been broken forever.

Fixes: f8e566c0f5e1f ("xfs: validate the realtime geometry in xfs_validate_sb_common")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
diff a6a38f30 Fri Dec 01 10:17:40 MST 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make rextslog computation consistent with mkfs

There's a weird discrepancy in xfsprogs dating back to the creation of
the Linux port -- if there are zero rt extents, mkfs will set
sb_rextents and sb_rextslog both to zero:

sbp->sb_rextslog =
(uint8_t)(rtextents ?
libxfs_highbit32((unsigned int)rtextents) : 0);

However, that's not the check that xfs_repair uses for nonzero rtblocks:

if (sb->sb_rextslog !=
libxfs_highbit32((unsigned int)sb->sb_rextents))

The difference here is that xfs_highbit32 returns -1 if its argument is
zero. Unfortunately, this means that in the weird corner case of a
realtime volume shorter than 1 rt extent, xfs_repair will immediately
flag a freshly formatted filesystem as corrupt. Because mkfs has been
writing ondisk artifacts like this for decades, we have to accept that
as "correct". TBH, zero rextslog for zero rtextents makes more sense to
me anyway.

Regrettably, the superblock verifier checks created in commit copied
xfs_repair even though mkfs has been writing out such filesystems for
ages. Fix the superblock verifier to accept what mkfs spits out; the
userspace version of this patch will have to fix xfs_repair as well.

Note that the new helper leaves the zeroday bug where the upper 32 bits
of sb_rextents is ripped off and fed to highbit32. This leads to a
seriously undersized rt summary file, which immediately breaks mkfs:

$ hugedisk.sh foo /dev/sdc $(( 0x100000080 * 4096))B
$ /sbin/mkfs.xfs -f /dev/sda -m rmapbt=0,reflink=0 -r rtdev=/dev/mapper/foo
meta-data=/dev/sda isize=512 agcount=4, agsize=1298176 blks
= sectsz=512 attr=2, projid32bit=1
= crc=1 finobt=1, sparse=1, rmapbt=0
= reflink=0 bigtime=1 inobtcount=1 nrext64=1
data = bsize=4096 blocks=5192704, imaxpct=25
= sunit=0 swidth=0 blks
naming =version 2 bsize=4096 ascii-ci=0, ftype=1
log =internal log bsize=4096 blocks=16384, version=2
= sectsz=512 sunit=0 blks, lazy-count=1
realtime =/dev/mapper/foo extsz=4096 blocks=4294967424, rtextents=4294967424
Discarding blocks...Done.
mkfs.xfs: Error initializing the realtime space [117 - Structure needs cleaning]

The next patch will drop support for rt volumes with fewer than 1 or
more than 2^32-1 rt extents, since they've clearly been broken forever.

Fixes: f8e566c0f5e1f ("xfs: validate the realtime geometry in xfs_validate_sb_common")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
H A Dxfs_log_format.hdiff ebd9027d Wed Aug 18 19:46:55 MDT 2021 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert xfs_sb_version_has checks to use mount features

This is a conversion of the remaining xfs_sb_version_has..(sbp)
checks to use xfs_has_..(mp) feature checks.

This was largely done with a vim replacement macro that did:

:0,$s/xfs_sb_version_has\(.*\)&\(.*\)->m_sb/xfs_has_\1\2/g<CR>

A couple of other variants were also used, and the rest touched up
by hand.

$ size -t fs/xfs/built-in.a
text data bss dec hex filename
before 1127533 311352 484 1439369 15f689 (TOTALS)
after 1125360 311352 484 1437196 15ee0c (TOTALS)

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
diff 32baa63d Tue Jul 27 17:23:49 MDT 2021 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: logging the on disk inode LSN can make it go backwards

When we log an inode, we format the "log inode" core and set an LSN
in that inode core. We do that via xfs_inode_item_format_core(),
which calls:

xfs_inode_to_log_dinode(ip, dic, ip->i_itemp->ili_item.li_lsn);

to format the log inode. It writes the LSN from the inode item into
the log inode, and if recovery decides the inode item needs to be
replayed, it recovers the log inode LSN field and writes it into the
on disk inode LSN field.

Now this might seem like a reasonable thing to do, but it is wrong
on multiple levels. Firstly, if the item is not yet in the AIL,
item->li_lsn is zero. i.e. the first time the inode it is logged and
formatted, the LSN we write into the log inode will be zero. If we
only log it once, recovery will run and can write this zero LSN into
the inode.

This means that the next time the inode is logged and log recovery
runs, it will *always* replay changes to the inode regardless of
whether the inode is newer on disk than the version in the log and
that violates the entire purpose of recording the LSN in the inode
at writeback time (i.e. to stop it going backwards in time on disk
during recovery).

Secondly, if we commit the CIL to the journal so the inode item
moves to the AIL, and then relog the inode, the LSN that gets
stamped into the log inode will be the LSN of the inode's current
location in the AIL, not it's age on disk. And it's not the LSN that
will be associated with the current change. That means when log
recovery replays this inode item, the LSN that ends up on disk is
the LSN for the previous changes in the log, not the current
changes being replayed. IOWs, after recovery the LSN on disk is not
in sync with the LSN of the modifications that were replayed into
the inode. This, again, violates the recovery ordering semantics
that on-disk writeback LSNs provide.

Hence the inode LSN in the log dinode is -always- invalid.

Thirdly, recovery actually has the LSN of the log transaction it is
replaying right at hand - it uses it to determine if it should
replay the inode by comparing it to the on-disk inode's LSN. But it
doesn't use that LSN to stamp the LSN into the inode which will be
written back when the transaction is fully replayed. It uses the one
in the log dinode, which we know is always going to be incorrect.

Looking back at the change history, the inode logging was broken by
commit 93f958f9c41f ("xfs: cull unnecessary icdinode fields") way
back in 2016 by a stupid idiot who thought he knew how this code
worked. i.e. me. That commit replaced an in memory di_lsn field that
was updated only at inode writeback time from the inode item.li_lsn
value - and hence always contained the same LSN that appeared in the
on-disk inode - with a read of the inode item LSN at inode format
time. CLearly these are not the same thing.

Before 93f958f9c41f, the log recovery behaviour was irrelevant,
because the LSN in the log inode always matched the on-disk LSN at
the time the inode was logged, hence recovery of the transaction
would never make the on-disk LSN in the inode go backwards or get
out of sync.

A symptom of the problem is this, caught from a failure of
generic/482. Before log recovery, the inode has been allocated but
never used:

xfs_db> inode 393388
xfs_db> p
core.magic = 0x494e
core.mode = 0
....
v3.crc = 0x99126961 (correct)
v3.change_count = 0
v3.lsn = 0
v3.flags2 = 0
v3.cowextsize = 0
v3.crtime.sec = Thu Jan 1 10:00:00 1970
v3.crtime.nsec = 0

After log recovery:

xfs_db> p
core.magic = 0x494e
core.mode = 020444
....
v3.crc = 0x23e68f23 (correct)
v3.change_count = 2
v3.lsn = 0
v3.flags2 = 0
v3.cowextsize = 0
v3.crtime.sec = Thu Jul 22 17:03:03 2021
v3.crtime.nsec = 751000000
...

You can see that the LSN of the on-disk inode is 0, even though it
clearly has been written to disk. I point out this inode, because
the generic/482 failure occurred because several adjacent inodes in
this specific inode cluster were not replayed correctly and still
appeared to be zero on disk when all the other metadata (inobt,
finobt, directories, etc) indicated they should be allocated and
written back.

The fix for this is two-fold. The first is that we need to either
revert the LSN changes in 93f958f9c41f or stop logging the inode LSN
altogether. If we do the former, log recovery does not need to
change but we add 8 bytes of memory per inode to store what is
largely a write-only inode field. If we do the latter, log recovery
needs to stamp the on-disk inode in the same manner that inode
writeback does.

I prefer the latter, because we shouldn't really be trying to log
and replay changes to the on disk LSN as the on-disk value is the
canonical source of the on-disk version of the inode. It also
matches the way we recover buffer items - we create a buf_log_item
that carries the current recovery transaction LSN that gets stamped
into the buffer by the write verifier when it gets written back
when the transaction is fully recovered.

However, this might break log recovery on older kernels even more,
so I'm going to simply ignore the logged value in recovery and stamp
the on-disk inode with the LSN of the transaction being recovered
that will trigger writeback on transaction recovery completion. This
will ensure that the on-disk inode LSN always reflects the LSN of
the last change that was written to disk, regardless of whether it
comes from log recovery or runtime writeback.

Fixes: 93f958f9c41f ("xfs: cull unnecessary icdinode fields")
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
diff 32baa63d Tue Jul 27 17:23:49 MDT 2021 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: logging the on disk inode LSN can make it go backwards

When we log an inode, we format the "log inode" core and set an LSN
in that inode core. We do that via xfs_inode_item_format_core(),
which calls:

xfs_inode_to_log_dinode(ip, dic, ip->i_itemp->ili_item.li_lsn);

to format the log inode. It writes the LSN from the inode item into
the log inode, and if recovery decides the inode item needs to be
replayed, it recovers the log inode LSN field and writes it into the
on disk inode LSN field.

Now this might seem like a reasonable thing to do, but it is wrong
on multiple levels. Firstly, if the item is not yet in the AIL,
item->li_lsn is zero. i.e. the first time the inode it is logged and
formatted, the LSN we write into the log inode will be zero. If we
only log it once, recovery will run and can write this zero LSN into
the inode.

This means that the next time the inode is logged and log recovery
runs, it will *always* replay changes to the inode regardless of
whether the inode is newer on disk than the version in the log and
that violates the entire purpose of recording the LSN in the inode
at writeback time (i.e. to stop it going backwards in time on disk
during recovery).

Secondly, if we commit the CIL to the journal so the inode item
moves to the AIL, and then relog the inode, the LSN that gets
stamped into the log inode will be the LSN of the inode's current
location in the AIL, not it's age on disk. And it's not the LSN that
will be associated with the current change. That means when log
recovery replays this inode item, the LSN that ends up on disk is
the LSN for the previous changes in the log, not the current
changes being replayed. IOWs, after recovery the LSN on disk is not
in sync with the LSN of the modifications that were replayed into
the inode. This, again, violates the recovery ordering semantics
that on-disk writeback LSNs provide.

Hence the inode LSN in the log dinode is -always- invalid.

Thirdly, recovery actually has the LSN of the log transaction it is
replaying right at hand - it uses it to determine if it should
replay the inode by comparing it to the on-disk inode's LSN. But it
doesn't use that LSN to stamp the LSN into the inode which will be
written back when the transaction is fully replayed. It uses the one
in the log dinode, which we know is always going to be incorrect.

Looking back at the change history, the inode logging was broken by
commit 93f958f9c41f ("xfs: cull unnecessary icdinode fields") way
back in 2016 by a stupid idiot who thought he knew how this code
worked. i.e. me. That commit replaced an in memory di_lsn field that
was updated only at inode writeback time from the inode item.li_lsn
value - and hence always contained the same LSN that appeared in the
on-disk inode - with a read of the inode item LSN at inode format
time. CLearly these are not the same thing.

Before 93f958f9c41f, the log recovery behaviour was irrelevant,
because the LSN in the log inode always matched the on-disk LSN at
the time the inode was logged, hence recovery of the transaction
would never make the on-disk LSN in the inode go backwards or get
out of sync.

A symptom of the problem is this, caught from a failure of
generic/482. Before log recovery, the inode has been allocated but
never used:

xfs_db> inode 393388
xfs_db> p
core.magic = 0x494e
core.mode = 0
....
v3.crc = 0x99126961 (correct)
v3.change_count = 0
v3.lsn = 0
v3.flags2 = 0
v3.cowextsize = 0
v3.crtime.sec = Thu Jan 1 10:00:00 1970
v3.crtime.nsec = 0

After log recovery:

xfs_db> p
core.magic = 0x494e
core.mode = 020444
....
v3.crc = 0x23e68f23 (correct)
v3.change_count = 2
v3.lsn = 0
v3.flags2 = 0
v3.cowextsize = 0
v3.crtime.sec = Thu Jul 22 17:03:03 2021
v3.crtime.nsec = 751000000
...

You can see that the LSN of the on-disk inode is 0, even though it
clearly has been written to disk. I point out this inode, because
the generic/482 failure occurred because several adjacent inodes in
this specific inode cluster were not replayed correctly and still
appeared to be zero on disk when all the other metadata (inobt,
finobt, directories, etc) indicated they should be allocated and
written back.

The fix for this is two-fold. The first is that we need to either
revert the LSN changes in 93f958f9c41f or stop logging the inode LSN
altogether. If we do the former, log recovery does not need to
change but we add 8 bytes of memory per inode to store what is
largely a write-only inode field. If we do the latter, log recovery
needs to stamp the on-disk inode in the same manner that inode
writeback does.

I prefer the latter, because we shouldn't really be trying to log
and replay changes to the on disk LSN as the on-disk value is the
canonical source of the on-disk version of the inode. It also
matches the way we recover buffer items - we create a buf_log_item
that carries the current recovery transaction LSN that gets stamped
into the buffer by the write verifier when it gets written back
when the transaction is fully recovered.

However, this might break log recovery on older kernels even more,
so I'm going to simply ignore the logged value in recovery and stamp
the on-disk inode with the LSN of the transaction being recovered
that will trigger writeback on transaction recovery completion. This
will ensure that the on-disk inode LSN always reflects the LSN of
the last change that was written to disk, regardless of whether it
comes from log recovery or runtime writeback.

Fixes: 93f958f9c41f ("xfs: cull unnecessary icdinode fields")
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
diff 32baa63d Tue Jul 27 17:23:49 MDT 2021 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: logging the on disk inode LSN can make it go backwards

When we log an inode, we format the "log inode" core and set an LSN
in that inode core. We do that via xfs_inode_item_format_core(),
which calls:

xfs_inode_to_log_dinode(ip, dic, ip->i_itemp->ili_item.li_lsn);

to format the log inode. It writes the LSN from the inode item into
the log inode, and if recovery decides the inode item needs to be
replayed, it recovers the log inode LSN field and writes it into the
on disk inode LSN field.

Now this might seem like a reasonable thing to do, but it is wrong
on multiple levels. Firstly, if the item is not yet in the AIL,
item->li_lsn is zero. i.e. the first time the inode it is logged and
formatted, the LSN we write into the log inode will be zero. If we
only log it once, recovery will run and can write this zero LSN into
the inode.

This means that the next time the inode is logged and log recovery
runs, it will *always* replay changes to the inode regardless of
whether the inode is newer on disk than the version in the log and
that violates the entire purpose of recording the LSN in the inode
at writeback time (i.e. to stop it going backwards in time on disk
during recovery).

Secondly, if we commit the CIL to the journal so the inode item
moves to the AIL, and then relog the inode, the LSN that gets
stamped into the log inode will be the LSN of the inode's current
location in the AIL, not it's age on disk. And it's not the LSN that
will be associated with the current change. That means when log
recovery replays this inode item, the LSN that ends up on disk is
the LSN for the previous changes in the log, not the current
changes being replayed. IOWs, after recovery the LSN on disk is not
in sync with the LSN of the modifications that were replayed into
the inode. This, again, violates the recovery ordering semantics
that on-disk writeback LSNs provide.

Hence the inode LSN in the log dinode is -always- invalid.

Thirdly, recovery actually has the LSN of the log transaction it is
replaying right at hand - it uses it to determine if it should
replay the inode by comparing it to the on-disk inode's LSN. But it
doesn't use that LSN to stamp the LSN into the inode which will be
written back when the transaction is fully replayed. It uses the one
in the log dinode, which we know is always going to be incorrect.

Looking back at the change history, the inode logging was broken by
commit 93f958f9c41f ("xfs: cull unnecessary icdinode fields") way
back in 2016 by a stupid idiot who thought he knew how this code
worked. i.e. me. That commit replaced an in memory di_lsn field that
was updated only at inode writeback time from the inode item.li_lsn
value - and hence always contained the same LSN that appeared in the
on-disk inode - with a read of the inode item LSN at inode format
time. CLearly these are not the same thing.

Before 93f958f9c41f, the log recovery behaviour was irrelevant,
because the LSN in the log inode always matched the on-disk LSN at
the time the inode was logged, hence recovery of the transaction
would never make the on-disk LSN in the inode go backwards or get
out of sync.

A symptom of the problem is this, caught from a failure of
generic/482. Before log recovery, the inode has been allocated but
never used:

xfs_db> inode 393388
xfs_db> p
core.magic = 0x494e
core.mode = 0
....
v3.crc = 0x99126961 (correct)
v3.change_count = 0
v3.lsn = 0
v3.flags2 = 0
v3.cowextsize = 0
v3.crtime.sec = Thu Jan 1 10:00:00 1970
v3.crtime.nsec = 0

After log recovery:

xfs_db> p
core.magic = 0x494e
core.mode = 020444
....
v3.crc = 0x23e68f23 (correct)
v3.change_count = 2
v3.lsn = 0
v3.flags2 = 0
v3.cowextsize = 0
v3.crtime.sec = Thu Jul 22 17:03:03 2021
v3.crtime.nsec = 751000000
...

You can see that the LSN of the on-disk inode is 0, even though it
clearly has been written to disk. I point out this inode, because
the generic/482 failure occurred because several adjacent inodes in
this specific inode cluster were not replayed correctly and still
appeared to be zero on disk when all the other metadata (inobt,
finobt, directories, etc) indicated they should be allocated and
written back.

The fix for this is two-fold. The first is that we need to either
revert the LSN changes in 93f958f9c41f or stop logging the inode LSN
altogether. If we do the former, log recovery does not need to
change but we add 8 bytes of memory per inode to store what is
largely a write-only inode field. If we do the latter, log recovery
needs to stamp the on-disk inode in the same manner that inode
writeback does.

I prefer the latter, because we shouldn't really be trying to log
and replay changes to the on disk LSN as the on-disk value is the
canonical source of the on-disk version of the inode. It also
matches the way we recover buffer items - we create a buf_log_item
that carries the current recovery transaction LSN that gets stamped
into the buffer by the write verifier when it gets written back
when the transaction is fully recovered.

However, this might break log recovery on older kernels even more,
so I'm going to simply ignore the logged value in recovery and stamp
the on-disk inode with the LSN of the transaction being recovered
that will trigger writeback on transaction recovery completion. This
will ensure that the on-disk inode LSN always reflects the LSN of
the last change that was written to disk, regardless of whether it
comes from log recovery or runtime writeback.

Fixes: 93f958f9c41f ("xfs: cull unnecessary icdinode fields")
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
diff 32baa63d Tue Jul 27 17:23:49 MDT 2021 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: logging the on disk inode LSN can make it go backwards

When we log an inode, we format the "log inode" core and set an LSN
in that inode core. We do that via xfs_inode_item_format_core(),
which calls:

xfs_inode_to_log_dinode(ip, dic, ip->i_itemp->ili_item.li_lsn);

to format the log inode. It writes the LSN from the inode item into
the log inode, and if recovery decides the inode item needs to be
replayed, it recovers the log inode LSN field and writes it into the
on disk inode LSN field.

Now this might seem like a reasonable thing to do, but it is wrong
on multiple levels. Firstly, if the item is not yet in the AIL,
item->li_lsn is zero. i.e. the first time the inode it is logged and
formatted, the LSN we write into the log inode will be zero. If we
only log it once, recovery will run and can write this zero LSN into
the inode.

This means that the next time the inode is logged and log recovery
runs, it will *always* replay changes to the inode regardless of
whether the inode is newer on disk than the version in the log and
that violates the entire purpose of recording the LSN in the inode
at writeback time (i.e. to stop it going backwards in time on disk
during recovery).

Secondly, if we commit the CIL to the journal so the inode item
moves to the AIL, and then relog the inode, the LSN that gets
stamped into the log inode will be the LSN of the inode's current
location in the AIL, not it's age on disk. And it's not the LSN that
will be associated with the current change. That means when log
recovery replays this inode item, the LSN that ends up on disk is
the LSN for the previous changes in the log, not the current
changes being replayed. IOWs, after recovery the LSN on disk is not
in sync with the LSN of the modifications that were replayed into
the inode. This, again, violates the recovery ordering semantics
that on-disk writeback LSNs provide.

Hence the inode LSN in the log dinode is -always- invalid.

Thirdly, recovery actually has the LSN of the log transaction it is
replaying right at hand - it uses it to determine if it should
replay the inode by comparing it to the on-disk inode's LSN. But it
doesn't use that LSN to stamp the LSN into the inode which will be
written back when the transaction is fully replayed. It uses the one
in the log dinode, which we know is always going to be incorrect.

Looking back at the change history, the inode logging was broken by
commit 93f958f9c41f ("xfs: cull unnecessary icdinode fields") way
back in 2016 by a stupid idiot who thought he knew how this code
worked. i.e. me. That commit replaced an in memory di_lsn field that
was updated only at inode writeback time from the inode item.li_lsn
value - and hence always contained the same LSN that appeared in the
on-disk inode - with a read of the inode item LSN at inode format
time. CLearly these are not the same thing.

Before 93f958f9c41f, the log recovery behaviour was irrelevant,
because the LSN in the log inode always matched the on-disk LSN at
the time the inode was logged, hence recovery of the transaction
would never make the on-disk LSN in the inode go backwards or get
out of sync.

A symptom of the problem is this, caught from a failure of
generic/482. Before log recovery, the inode has been allocated but
never used:

xfs_db> inode 393388
xfs_db> p
core.magic = 0x494e
core.mode = 0
....
v3.crc = 0x99126961 (correct)
v3.change_count = 0
v3.lsn = 0
v3.flags2 = 0
v3.cowextsize = 0
v3.crtime.sec = Thu Jan 1 10:00:00 1970
v3.crtime.nsec = 0

After log recovery:

xfs_db> p
core.magic = 0x494e
core.mode = 020444
....
v3.crc = 0x23e68f23 (correct)
v3.change_count = 2
v3.lsn = 0
v3.flags2 = 0
v3.cowextsize = 0
v3.crtime.sec = Thu Jul 22 17:03:03 2021
v3.crtime.nsec = 751000000
...

You can see that the LSN of the on-disk inode is 0, even though it
clearly has been written to disk. I point out this inode, because
the generic/482 failure occurred because several adjacent inodes in
this specific inode cluster were not replayed correctly and still
appeared to be zero on disk when all the other metadata (inobt,
finobt, directories, etc) indicated they should be allocated and
written back.

The fix for this is two-fold. The first is that we need to either
revert the LSN changes in 93f958f9c41f or stop logging the inode LSN
altogether. If we do the former, log recovery does not need to
change but we add 8 bytes of memory per inode to store what is
largely a write-only inode field. If we do the latter, log recovery
needs to stamp the on-disk inode in the same manner that inode
writeback does.

I prefer the latter, because we shouldn't really be trying to log
and replay changes to the on disk LSN as the on-disk value is the
canonical source of the on-disk version of the inode. It also
matches the way we recover buffer items - we create a buf_log_item
that carries the current recovery transaction LSN that gets stamped
into the buffer by the write verifier when it gets written back
when the transaction is fully recovered.

However, this might break log recovery on older kernels even more,
so I'm going to simply ignore the logged value in recovery and stamp
the on-disk inode with the LSN of the transaction being recovered
that will trigger writeback on transaction recovery completion. This
will ensure that the on-disk inode LSN always reflects the LSN of
the last change that was written to disk, regardless of whether it
comes from log recovery or runtime writeback.

Fixes: 93f958f9c41f ("xfs: cull unnecessary icdinode fields")
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
diff 32baa63d Tue Jul 27 17:23:49 MDT 2021 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: logging the on disk inode LSN can make it go backwards

When we log an inode, we format the "log inode" core and set an LSN
in that inode core. We do that via xfs_inode_item_format_core(),
which calls:

xfs_inode_to_log_dinode(ip, dic, ip->i_itemp->ili_item.li_lsn);

to format the log inode. It writes the LSN from the inode item into
the log inode, and if recovery decides the inode item needs to be
replayed, it recovers the log inode LSN field and writes it into the
on disk inode LSN field.

Now this might seem like a reasonable thing to do, but it is wrong
on multiple levels. Firstly, if the item is not yet in the AIL,
item->li_lsn is zero. i.e. the first time the inode it is logged and
formatted, the LSN we write into the log inode will be zero. If we
only log it once, recovery will run and can write this zero LSN into
the inode.

This means that the next time the inode is logged and log recovery
runs, it will *always* replay changes to the inode regardless of
whether the inode is newer on disk than the version in the log and
that violates the entire purpose of recording the LSN in the inode
at writeback time (i.e. to stop it going backwards in time on disk
during recovery).

Secondly, if we commit the CIL to the journal so the inode item
moves to the AIL, and then relog the inode, the LSN that gets
stamped into the log inode will be the LSN of the inode's current
location in the AIL, not it's age on disk. And it's not the LSN that
will be associated with the current change. That means when log
recovery replays this inode item, the LSN that ends up on disk is
the LSN for the previous changes in the log, not the current
changes being replayed. IOWs, after recovery the LSN on disk is not
in sync with the LSN of the modifications that were replayed into
the inode. This, again, violates the recovery ordering semantics
that on-disk writeback LSNs provide.

Hence the inode LSN in the log dinode is -always- invalid.

Thirdly, recovery actually has the LSN of the log transaction it is
replaying right at hand - it uses it to determine if it should
replay the inode by comparing it to the on-disk inode's LSN. But it
doesn't use that LSN to stamp the LSN into the inode which will be
written back when the transaction is fully replayed. It uses the one
in the log dinode, which we know is always going to be incorrect.

Looking back at the change history, the inode logging was broken by
commit 93f958f9c41f ("xfs: cull unnecessary icdinode fields") way
back in 2016 by a stupid idiot who thought he knew how this code
worked. i.e. me. That commit replaced an in memory di_lsn field that
was updated only at inode writeback time from the inode item.li_lsn
value - and hence always contained the same LSN that appeared in the
on-disk inode - with a read of the inode item LSN at inode format
time. CLearly these are not the same thing.

Before 93f958f9c41f, the log recovery behaviour was irrelevant,
because the LSN in the log inode always matched the on-disk LSN at
the time the inode was logged, hence recovery of the transaction
would never make the on-disk LSN in the inode go backwards or get
out of sync.

A symptom of the problem is this, caught from a failure of
generic/482. Before log recovery, the inode has been allocated but
never used:

xfs_db> inode 393388
xfs_db> p
core.magic = 0x494e
core.mode = 0
....
v3.crc = 0x99126961 (correct)
v3.change_count = 0
v3.lsn = 0
v3.flags2 = 0
v3.cowextsize = 0
v3.crtime.sec = Thu Jan 1 10:00:00 1970
v3.crtime.nsec = 0

After log recovery:

xfs_db> p
core.magic = 0x494e
core.mode = 020444
....
v3.crc = 0x23e68f23 (correct)
v3.change_count = 2
v3.lsn = 0
v3.flags2 = 0
v3.cowextsize = 0
v3.crtime.sec = Thu Jul 22 17:03:03 2021
v3.crtime.nsec = 751000000
...

You can see that the LSN of the on-disk inode is 0, even though it
clearly has been written to disk. I point out this inode, because
the generic/482 failure occurred because several adjacent inodes in
this specific inode cluster were not replayed correctly and still
appeared to be zero on disk when all the other metadata (inobt,
finobt, directories, etc) indicated they should be allocated and
written back.

The fix for this is two-fold. The first is that we need to either
revert the LSN changes in 93f958f9c41f or stop logging the inode LSN
altogether. If we do the former, log recovery does not need to
change but we add 8 bytes of memory per inode to store what is
largely a write-only inode field. If we do the latter, log recovery
needs to stamp the on-disk inode in the same manner that inode
writeback does.

I prefer the latter, because we shouldn't really be trying to log
and replay changes to the on disk LSN as the on-disk value is the
canonical source of the on-disk version of the inode. It also
matches the way we recover buffer items - we create a buf_log_item
that carries the current recovery transaction LSN that gets stamped
into the buffer by the write verifier when it gets written back
when the transaction is fully recovered.

However, this might break log recovery on older kernels even more,
so I'm going to simply ignore the logged value in recovery and stamp
the on-disk inode with the LSN of the transaction being recovered
that will trigger writeback on transaction recovery completion. This
will ensure that the on-disk inode LSN always reflects the LSN of
the last change that was written to disk, regardless of whether it
comes from log recovery or runtime writeback.

Fixes: 93f958f9c41f ("xfs: cull unnecessary icdinode fields")
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
diff 32baa63d Tue Jul 27 17:23:49 MDT 2021 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: logging the on disk inode LSN can make it go backwards

When we log an inode, we format the "log inode" core and set an LSN
in that inode core. We do that via xfs_inode_item_format_core(),
which calls:

xfs_inode_to_log_dinode(ip, dic, ip->i_itemp->ili_item.li_lsn);

to format the log inode. It writes the LSN from the inode item into
the log inode, and if recovery decides the inode item needs to be
replayed, it recovers the log inode LSN field and writes it into the
on disk inode LSN field.

Now this might seem like a reasonable thing to do, but it is wrong
on multiple levels. Firstly, if the item is not yet in the AIL,
item->li_lsn is zero. i.e. the first time the inode it is logged and
formatted, the LSN we write into the log inode will be zero. If we
only log it once, recovery will run and can write this zero LSN into
the inode.

This means that the next time the inode is logged and log recovery
runs, it will *always* replay changes to the inode regardless of
whether the inode is newer on disk than the version in the log and
that violates the entire purpose of recording the LSN in the inode
at writeback time (i.e. to stop it going backwards in time on disk
during recovery).

Secondly, if we commit the CIL to the journal so the inode item
moves to the AIL, and then relog the inode, the LSN that gets
stamped into the log inode will be the LSN of the inode's current
location in the AIL, not it's age on disk. And it's not the LSN that
will be associated with the current change. That means when log
recovery replays this inode item, the LSN that ends up on disk is
the LSN for the previous changes in the log, not the current
changes being replayed. IOWs, after recovery the LSN on disk is not
in sync with the LSN of the modifications that were replayed into
the inode. This, again, violates the recovery ordering semantics
that on-disk writeback LSNs provide.

Hence the inode LSN in the log dinode is -always- invalid.

Thirdly, recovery actually has the LSN of the log transaction it is
replaying right at hand - it uses it to determine if it should
replay the inode by comparing it to the on-disk inode's LSN. But it
doesn't use that LSN to stamp the LSN into the inode which will be
written back when the transaction is fully replayed. It uses the one
in the log dinode, which we know is always going to be incorrect.

Looking back at the change history, the inode logging was broken by
commit 93f958f9c41f ("xfs: cull unnecessary icdinode fields") way
back in 2016 by a stupid idiot who thought he knew how this code
worked. i.e. me. That commit replaced an in memory di_lsn field that
was updated only at inode writeback time from the inode item.li_lsn
value - and hence always contained the same LSN that appeared in the
on-disk inode - with a read of the inode item LSN at inode format
time. CLearly these are not the same thing.

Before 93f958f9c41f, the log recovery behaviour was irrelevant,
because the LSN in the log inode always matched the on-disk LSN at
the time the inode was logged, hence recovery of the transaction
would never make the on-disk LSN in the inode go backwards or get
out of sync.

A symptom of the problem is this, caught from a failure of
generic/482. Before log recovery, the inode has been allocated but
never used:

xfs_db> inode 393388
xfs_db> p
core.magic = 0x494e
core.mode = 0
....
v3.crc = 0x99126961 (correct)
v3.change_count = 0
v3.lsn = 0
v3.flags2 = 0
v3.cowextsize = 0
v3.crtime.sec = Thu Jan 1 10:00:00 1970
v3.crtime.nsec = 0

After log recovery:

xfs_db> p
core.magic = 0x494e
core.mode = 020444
....
v3.crc = 0x23e68f23 (correct)
v3.change_count = 2
v3.lsn = 0
v3.flags2 = 0
v3.cowextsize = 0
v3.crtime.sec = Thu Jul 22 17:03:03 2021
v3.crtime.nsec = 751000000
...

You can see that the LSN of the on-disk inode is 0, even though it
clearly has been written to disk. I point out this inode, because
the generic/482 failure occurred because several adjacent inodes in
this specific inode cluster were not replayed correctly and still
appeared to be zero on disk when all the other metadata (inobt,
finobt, directories, etc) indicated they should be allocated and
written back.

The fix for this is two-fold. The first is that we need to either
revert the LSN changes in 93f958f9c41f or stop logging the inode LSN
altogether. If we do the former, log recovery does not need to
change but we add 8 bytes of memory per inode to store what is
largely a write-only inode field. If we do the latter, log recovery
needs to stamp the on-disk inode in the same manner that inode
writeback does.

I prefer the latter, because we shouldn't really be trying to log
and replay changes to the on disk LSN as the on-disk value is the
canonical source of the on-disk version of the inode. It also
matches the way we recover buffer items - we create a buf_log_item
that carries the current recovery transaction LSN that gets stamped
into the buffer by the write verifier when it gets written back
when the transaction is fully recovered.

However, this might break log recovery on older kernels even more,
so I'm going to simply ignore the logged value in recovery and stamp
the on-disk inode with the LSN of the transaction being recovered
that will trigger writeback on transaction recovery completion. This
will ensure that the on-disk inode LSN always reflects the LSN of
the last change that was written to disk, regardless of whether it
comes from log recovery or runtime writeback.

Fixes: 93f958f9c41f ("xfs: cull unnecessary icdinode fields")
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
diff 32baa63d Tue Jul 27 17:23:49 MDT 2021 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: logging the on disk inode LSN can make it go backwards

When we log an inode, we format the "log inode" core and set an LSN
in that inode core. We do that via xfs_inode_item_format_core(),
which calls:

xfs_inode_to_log_dinode(ip, dic, ip->i_itemp->ili_item.li_lsn);

to format the log inode. It writes the LSN from the inode item into
the log inode, and if recovery decides the inode item needs to be
replayed, it recovers the log inode LSN field and writes it into the
on disk inode LSN field.

Now this might seem like a reasonable thing to do, but it is wrong
on multiple levels. Firstly, if the item is not yet in the AIL,
item->li_lsn is zero. i.e. the first time the inode it is logged and
formatted, the LSN we write into the log inode will be zero. If we
only log it once, recovery will run and can write this zero LSN into
the inode.

This means that the next time the inode is logged and log recovery
runs, it will *always* replay changes to the inode regardless of
whether the inode is newer on disk than the version in the log and
that violates the entire purpose of recording the LSN in the inode
at writeback time (i.e. to stop it going backwards in time on disk
during recovery).

Secondly, if we commit the CIL to the journal so the inode item
moves to the AIL, and then relog the inode, the LSN that gets
stamped into the log inode will be the LSN of the inode's current
location in the AIL, not it's age on disk. And it's not the LSN that
will be associated with the current change. That means when log
recovery replays this inode item, the LSN that ends up on disk is
the LSN for the previous changes in the log, not the current
changes being replayed. IOWs, after recovery the LSN on disk is not
in sync with the LSN of the modifications that were replayed into
the inode. This, again, violates the recovery ordering semantics
that on-disk writeback LSNs provide.

Hence the inode LSN in the log dinode is -always- invalid.

Thirdly, recovery actually has the LSN of the log transaction it is
replaying right at hand - it uses it to determine if it should
replay the inode by comparing it to the on-disk inode's LSN. But it
doesn't use that LSN to stamp the LSN into the inode which will be
written back when the transaction is fully replayed. It uses the one
in the log dinode, which we know is always going to be incorrect.

Looking back at the change history, the inode logging was broken by
commit 93f958f9c41f ("xfs: cull unnecessary icdinode fields") way
back in 2016 by a stupid idiot who thought he knew how this code
worked. i.e. me. That commit replaced an in memory di_lsn field that
was updated only at inode writeback time from the inode item.li_lsn
value - and hence always contained the same LSN that appeared in the
on-disk inode - with a read of the inode item LSN at inode format
time. CLearly these are not the same thing.

Before 93f958f9c41f, the log recovery behaviour was irrelevant,
because the LSN in the log inode always matched the on-disk LSN at
the time the inode was logged, hence recovery of the transaction
would never make the on-disk LSN in the inode go backwards or get
out of sync.

A symptom of the problem is this, caught from a failure of
generic/482. Before log recovery, the inode has been allocated but
never used:

xfs_db> inode 393388
xfs_db> p
core.magic = 0x494e
core.mode = 0
....
v3.crc = 0x99126961 (correct)
v3.change_count = 0
v3.lsn = 0
v3.flags2 = 0
v3.cowextsize = 0
v3.crtime.sec = Thu Jan 1 10:00:00 1970
v3.crtime.nsec = 0

After log recovery:

xfs_db> p
core.magic = 0x494e
core.mode = 020444
....
v3.crc = 0x23e68f23 (correct)
v3.change_count = 2
v3.lsn = 0
v3.flags2 = 0
v3.cowextsize = 0
v3.crtime.sec = Thu Jul 22 17:03:03 2021
v3.crtime.nsec = 751000000
...

You can see that the LSN of the on-disk inode is 0, even though it
clearly has been written to disk. I point out this inode, because
the generic/482 failure occurred because several adjacent inodes in
this specific inode cluster were not replayed correctly and still
appeared to be zero on disk when all the other metadata (inobt,
finobt, directories, etc) indicated they should be allocated and
written back.

The fix for this is two-fold. The first is that we need to either
revert the LSN changes in 93f958f9c41f or stop logging the inode LSN
altogether. If we do the former, log recovery does not need to
change but we add 8 bytes of memory per inode to store what is
largely a write-only inode field. If we do the latter, log recovery
needs to stamp the on-disk inode in the same manner that inode
writeback does.

I prefer the latter, because we shouldn't really be trying to log
and replay changes to the on disk LSN as the on-disk value is the
canonical source of the on-disk version of the inode. It also
matches the way we recover buffer items - we create a buf_log_item
that carries the current recovery transaction LSN that gets stamped
into the buffer by the write verifier when it gets written back
when the transaction is fully recovered.

However, this might break log recovery on older kernels even more,
so I'm going to simply ignore the logged value in recovery and stamp
the on-disk inode with the LSN of the transaction being recovered
that will trigger writeback on transaction recovery completion. This
will ensure that the on-disk inode LSN always reflects the LSN of
the last change that was written to disk, regardless of whether it
comes from log recovery or runtime writeback.

Fixes: 93f958f9c41f ("xfs: cull unnecessary icdinode fields")
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
diff 32baa63d Tue Jul 27 17:23:49 MDT 2021 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: logging the on disk inode LSN can make it go backwards

When we log an inode, we format the "log inode" core and set an LSN
in that inode core. We do that via xfs_inode_item_format_core(),
which calls:

xfs_inode_to_log_dinode(ip, dic, ip->i_itemp->ili_item.li_lsn);

to format the log inode. It writes the LSN from the inode item into
the log inode, and if recovery decides the inode item needs to be
replayed, it recovers the log inode LSN field and writes it into the
on disk inode LSN field.

Now this might seem like a reasonable thing to do, but it is wrong
on multiple levels. Firstly, if the item is not yet in the AIL,
item->li_lsn is zero. i.e. the first time the inode it is logged and
formatted, the LSN we write into the log inode will be zero. If we
only log it once, recovery will run and can write this zero LSN into
the inode.

This means that the next time the inode is logged and log recovery
runs, it will *always* replay changes to the inode regardless of
whether the inode is newer on disk than the version in the log and
that violates the entire purpose of recording the LSN in the inode
at writeback time (i.e. to stop it going backwards in time on disk
during recovery).

Secondly, if we commit the CIL to the journal so the inode item
moves to the AIL, and then relog the inode, the LSN that gets
stamped into the log inode will be the LSN of the inode's current
location in the AIL, not it's age on disk. And it's not the LSN that
will be associated with the current change. That means when log
recovery replays this inode item, the LSN that ends up on disk is
the LSN for the previous changes in the log, not the current
changes being replayed. IOWs, after recovery the LSN on disk is not
in sync with the LSN of the modifications that were replayed into
the inode. This, again, violates the recovery ordering semantics
that on-disk writeback LSNs provide.

Hence the inode LSN in the log dinode is -always- invalid.

Thirdly, recovery actually has the LSN of the log transaction it is
replaying right at hand - it uses it to determine if it should
replay the inode by comparing it to the on-disk inode's LSN. But it
doesn't use that LSN to stamp the LSN into the inode which will be
written back when the transaction is fully replayed. It uses the one
in the log dinode, which we know is always going to be incorrect.

Looking back at the change history, the inode logging was broken by
commit 93f958f9c41f ("xfs: cull unnecessary icdinode fields") way
back in 2016 by a stupid idiot who thought he knew how this code
worked. i.e. me. That commit replaced an in memory di_lsn field that
was updated only at inode writeback time from the inode item.li_lsn
value - and hence always contained the same LSN that appeared in the
on-disk inode - with a read of the inode item LSN at inode format
time. CLearly these are not the same thing.

Before 93f958f9c41f, the log recovery behaviour was irrelevant,
because the LSN in the log inode always matched the on-disk LSN at
the time the inode was logged, hence recovery of the transaction
would never make the on-disk LSN in the inode go backwards or get
out of sync.

A symptom of the problem is this, caught from a failure of
generic/482. Before log recovery, the inode has been allocated but
never used:

xfs_db> inode 393388
xfs_db> p
core.magic = 0x494e
core.mode = 0
....
v3.crc = 0x99126961 (correct)
v3.change_count = 0
v3.lsn = 0
v3.flags2 = 0
v3.cowextsize = 0
v3.crtime.sec = Thu Jan 1 10:00:00 1970
v3.crtime.nsec = 0

After log recovery:

xfs_db> p
core.magic = 0x494e
core.mode = 020444
....
v3.crc = 0x23e68f23 (correct)
v3.change_count = 2
v3.lsn = 0
v3.flags2 = 0
v3.cowextsize = 0
v3.crtime.sec = Thu Jul 22 17:03:03 2021
v3.crtime.nsec = 751000000
...

You can see that the LSN of the on-disk inode is 0, even though it
clearly has been written to disk. I point out this inode, because
the generic/482 failure occurred because several adjacent inodes in
this specific inode cluster were not replayed correctly and still
appeared to be zero on disk when all the other metadata (inobt,
finobt, directories, etc) indicated they should be allocated and
written back.

The fix for this is two-fold. The first is that we need to either
revert the LSN changes in 93f958f9c41f or stop logging the inode LSN
altogether. If we do the former, log recovery does not need to
change but we add 8 bytes of memory per inode to store what is
largely a write-only inode field. If we do the latter, log recovery
needs to stamp the on-disk inode in the same manner that inode
writeback does.

I prefer the latter, because we shouldn't really be trying to log
and replay changes to the on disk LSN as the on-disk value is the
canonical source of the on-disk version of the inode. It also
matches the way we recover buffer items - we create a buf_log_item
that carries the current recovery transaction LSN that gets stamped
into the buffer by the write verifier when it gets written back
when the transaction is fully recovered.

However, this might break log recovery on older kernels even more,
so I'm going to simply ignore the logged value in recovery and stamp
the on-disk inode with the LSN of the transaction being recovered
that will trigger writeback on transaction recovery completion. This
will ensure that the on-disk inode LSN always reflects the LSN of
the last change that was written to disk, regardless of whether it
comes from log recovery or runtime writeback.

Fixes: 93f958f9c41f ("xfs: cull unnecessary icdinode fields")
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
diff 32baa63d Tue Jul 27 17:23:49 MDT 2021 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: logging the on disk inode LSN can make it go backwards

When we log an inode, we format the "log inode" core and set an LSN
in that inode core. We do that via xfs_inode_item_format_core(),
which calls:

xfs_inode_to_log_dinode(ip, dic, ip->i_itemp->ili_item.li_lsn);

to format the log inode. It writes the LSN from the inode item into
the log inode, and if recovery decides the inode item needs to be
replayed, it recovers the log inode LSN field and writes it into the
on disk inode LSN field.

Now this might seem like a reasonable thing to do, but it is wrong
on multiple levels. Firstly, if the item is not yet in the AIL,
item->li_lsn is zero. i.e. the first time the inode it is logged and
formatted, the LSN we write into the log inode will be zero. If we
only log it once, recovery will run and can write this zero LSN into
the inode.

This means that the next time the inode is logged and log recovery
runs, it will *always* replay changes to the inode regardless of
whether the inode is newer on disk than the version in the log and
that violates the entire purpose of recording the LSN in the inode
at writeback time (i.e. to stop it going backwards in time on disk
during recovery).

Secondly, if we commit the CIL to the journal so the inode item
moves to the AIL, and then relog the inode, the LSN that gets
stamped into the log inode will be the LSN of the inode's current
location in the AIL, not it's age on disk. And it's not the LSN that
will be associated with the current change. That means when log
recovery replays this inode item, the LSN that ends up on disk is
the LSN for the previous changes in the log, not the current
changes being replayed. IOWs, after recovery the LSN on disk is not
in sync with the LSN of the modifications that were replayed into
the inode. This, again, violates the recovery ordering semantics
that on-disk writeback LSNs provide.

Hence the inode LSN in the log dinode is -always- invalid.

Thirdly, recovery actually has the LSN of the log transaction it is
replaying right at hand - it uses it to determine if it should
replay the inode by comparing it to the on-disk inode's LSN. But it
doesn't use that LSN to stamp the LSN into the inode which will be
written back when the transaction is fully replayed. It uses the one
in the log dinode, which we know is always going to be incorrect.

Looking back at the change history, the inode logging was broken by
commit 93f958f9c41f ("xfs: cull unnecessary icdinode fields") way
back in 2016 by a stupid idiot who thought he knew how this code
worked. i.e. me. That commit replaced an in memory di_lsn field that
was updated only at inode writeback time from the inode item.li_lsn
value - and hence always contained the same LSN that appeared in the
on-disk inode - with a read of the inode item LSN at inode format
time. CLearly these are not the same thing.

Before 93f958f9c41f, the log recovery behaviour was irrelevant,
because the LSN in the log inode always matched the on-disk LSN at
the time the inode was logged, hence recovery of the transaction
would never make the on-disk LSN in the inode go backwards or get
out of sync.

A symptom of the problem is this, caught from a failure of
generic/482. Before log recovery, the inode has been allocated but
never used:

xfs_db> inode 393388
xfs_db> p
core.magic = 0x494e
core.mode = 0
....
v3.crc = 0x99126961 (correct)
v3.change_count = 0
v3.lsn = 0
v3.flags2 = 0
v3.cowextsize = 0
v3.crtime.sec = Thu Jan 1 10:00:00 1970
v3.crtime.nsec = 0

After log recovery:

xfs_db> p
core.magic = 0x494e
core.mode = 020444
....
v3.crc = 0x23e68f23 (correct)
v3.change_count = 2
v3.lsn = 0
v3.flags2 = 0
v3.cowextsize = 0
v3.crtime.sec = Thu Jul 22 17:03:03 2021
v3.crtime.nsec = 751000000
...

You can see that the LSN of the on-disk inode is 0, even though it
clearly has been written to disk. I point out this inode, because
the generic/482 failure occurred because several adjacent inodes in
this specific inode cluster were not replayed correctly and still
appeared to be zero on disk when all the other metadata (inobt,
finobt, directories, etc) indicated they should be allocated and
written back.

The fix for this is two-fold. The first is that we need to either
revert the LSN changes in 93f958f9c41f or stop logging the inode LSN
altogether. If we do the former, log recovery does not need to
change but we add 8 bytes of memory per inode to store what is
largely a write-only inode field. If we do the latter, log recovery
needs to stamp the on-disk inode in the same manner that inode
writeback does.

I prefer the latter, because we shouldn't really be trying to log
and replay changes to the on disk LSN as the on-disk value is the
canonical source of the on-disk version of the inode. It also
matches the way we recover buffer items - we create a buf_log_item
that carries the current recovery transaction LSN that gets stamped
into the buffer by the write verifier when it gets written back
when the transaction is fully recovered.

However, this might break log recovery on older kernels even more,
so I'm going to simply ignore the logged value in recovery and stamp
the on-disk inode with the LSN of the transaction being recovered
that will trigger writeback on transaction recovery completion. This
will ensure that the on-disk inode LSN always reflects the LSN of
the last change that was written to disk, regardless of whether it
comes from log recovery or runtime writeback.

Fixes: 93f958f9c41f ("xfs: cull unnecessary icdinode fields")
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
diff 32baa63d Tue Jul 27 17:23:49 MDT 2021 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: logging the on disk inode LSN can make it go backwards

When we log an inode, we format the "log inode" core and set an LSN
in that inode core. We do that via xfs_inode_item_format_core(),
which calls:

xfs_inode_to_log_dinode(ip, dic, ip->i_itemp->ili_item.li_lsn);

to format the log inode. It writes the LSN from the inode item into
the log inode, and if recovery decides the inode item needs to be
replayed, it recovers the log inode LSN field and writes it into the
on disk inode LSN field.

Now this might seem like a reasonable thing to do, but it is wrong
on multiple levels. Firstly, if the item is not yet in the AIL,
item->li_lsn is zero. i.e. the first time the inode it is logged and
formatted, the LSN we write into the log inode will be zero. If we
only log it once, recovery will run and can write this zero LSN into
the inode.

This means that the next time the inode is logged and log recovery
runs, it will *always* replay changes to the inode regardless of
whether the inode is newer on disk than the version in the log and
that violates the entire purpose of recording the LSN in the inode
at writeback time (i.e. to stop it going backwards in time on disk
during recovery).

Secondly, if we commit the CIL to the journal so the inode item
moves to the AIL, and then relog the inode, the LSN that gets
stamped into the log inode will be the LSN of the inode's current
location in the AIL, not it's age on disk. And it's not the LSN that
will be associated with the current change. That means when log
recovery replays this inode item, the LSN that ends up on disk is
the LSN for the previous changes in the log, not the current
changes being replayed. IOWs, after recovery the LSN on disk is not
in sync with the LSN of the modifications that were replayed into
the inode. This, again, violates the recovery ordering semantics
that on-disk writeback LSNs provide.

Hence the inode LSN in the log dinode is -always- invalid.

Thirdly, recovery actually has the LSN of the log transaction it is
replaying right at hand - it uses it to determine if it should
replay the inode by comparing it to the on-disk inode's LSN. But it
doesn't use that LSN to stamp the LSN into the inode which will be
written back when the transaction is fully replayed. It uses the one
in the log dinode, which we know is always going to be incorrect.

Looking back at the change history, the inode logging was broken by
commit 93f958f9c41f ("xfs: cull unnecessary icdinode fields") way
back in 2016 by a stupid idiot who thought he knew how this code
worked. i.e. me. That commit replaced an in memory di_lsn field that
was updated only at inode writeback time from the inode item.li_lsn
value - and hence always contained the same LSN that appeared in the
on-disk inode - with a read of the inode item LSN at inode format
time. CLearly these are not the same thing.

Before 93f958f9c41f, the log recovery behaviour was irrelevant,
because the LSN in the log inode always matched the on-disk LSN at
the time the inode was logged, hence recovery of the transaction
would never make the on-disk LSN in the inode go backwards or get
out of sync.

A symptom of the problem is this, caught from a failure of
generic/482. Before log recovery, the inode has been allocated but
never used:

xfs_db> inode 393388
xfs_db> p
core.magic = 0x494e
core.mode = 0
....
v3.crc = 0x99126961 (correct)
v3.change_count = 0
v3.lsn = 0
v3.flags2 = 0
v3.cowextsize = 0
v3.crtime.sec = Thu Jan 1 10:00:00 1970
v3.crtime.nsec = 0

After log recovery:

xfs_db> p
core.magic = 0x494e
core.mode = 020444
....
v3.crc = 0x23e68f23 (correct)
v3.change_count = 2
v3.lsn = 0
v3.flags2 = 0
v3.cowextsize = 0
v3.crtime.sec = Thu Jul 22 17:03:03 2021
v3.crtime.nsec = 751000000
...

You can see that the LSN of the on-disk inode is 0, even though it
clearly has been written to disk. I point out this inode, because
the generic/482 failure occurred because several adjacent inodes in
this specific inode cluster were not replayed correctly and still
appeared to be zero on disk when all the other metadata (inobt,
finobt, directories, etc) indicated they should be allocated and
written back.

The fix for this is two-fold. The first is that we need to either
revert the LSN changes in 93f958f9c41f or stop logging the inode LSN
altogether. If we do the former, log recovery does not need to
change but we add 8 bytes of memory per inode to store what is
largely a write-only inode field. If we do the latter, log recovery
needs to stamp the on-disk inode in the same manner that inode
writeback does.

I prefer the latter, because we shouldn't really be trying to log
and replay changes to the on disk LSN as the on-disk value is the
canonical source of the on-disk version of the inode. It also
matches the way we recover buffer items - we create a buf_log_item
that carries the current recovery transaction LSN that gets stamped
into the buffer by the write verifier when it gets written back
when the transaction is fully recovered.

However, this might break log recovery on older kernels even more,
so I'm going to simply ignore the logged value in recovery and stamp
the on-disk inode with the LSN of the transaction being recovered
that will trigger writeback on transaction recovery completion. This
will ensure that the on-disk inode LSN always reflects the LSN of
the last change that was written to disk, regardless of whether it
comes from log recovery or runtime writeback.

Fixes: 93f958f9c41f ("xfs: cull unnecessary icdinode fields")
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
diff 32baa63d Tue Jul 27 17:23:49 MDT 2021 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: logging the on disk inode LSN can make it go backwards

When we log an inode, we format the "log inode" core and set an LSN
in that inode core. We do that via xfs_inode_item_format_core(),
which calls:

xfs_inode_to_log_dinode(ip, dic, ip->i_itemp->ili_item.li_lsn);

to format the log inode. It writes the LSN from the inode item into
the log inode, and if recovery decides the inode item needs to be
replayed, it recovers the log inode LSN field and writes it into the
on disk inode LSN field.

Now this might seem like a reasonable thing to do, but it is wrong
on multiple levels. Firstly, if the item is not yet in the AIL,
item->li_lsn is zero. i.e. the first time the inode it is logged and
formatted, the LSN we write into the log inode will be zero. If we
only log it once, recovery will run and can write this zero LSN into
the inode.

This means that the next time the inode is logged and log recovery
runs, it will *always* replay changes to the inode regardless of
whether the inode is newer on disk than the version in the log and
that violates the entire purpose of recording the LSN in the inode
at writeback time (i.e. to stop it going backwards in time on disk
during recovery).

Secondly, if we commit the CIL to the journal so the inode item
moves to the AIL, and then relog the inode, the LSN that gets
stamped into the log inode will be the LSN of the inode's current
location in the AIL, not it's age on disk. And it's not the LSN that
will be associated with the current change. That means when log
recovery replays this inode item, the LSN that ends up on disk is
the LSN for the previous changes in the log, not the current
changes being replayed. IOWs, after recovery the LSN on disk is not
in sync with the LSN of the modifications that were replayed into
the inode. This, again, violates the recovery ordering semantics
that on-disk writeback LSNs provide.

Hence the inode LSN in the log dinode is -always- invalid.

Thirdly, recovery actually has the LSN of the log transaction it is
replaying right at hand - it uses it to determine if it should
replay the inode by comparing it to the on-disk inode's LSN. But it
doesn't use that LSN to stamp the LSN into the inode which will be
written back when the transaction is fully replayed. It uses the one
in the log dinode, which we know is always going to be incorrect.

Looking back at the change history, the inode logging was broken by
commit 93f958f9c41f ("xfs: cull unnecessary icdinode fields") way
back in 2016 by a stupid idiot who thought he knew how this code
worked. i.e. me. That commit replaced an in memory di_lsn field that
was updated only at inode writeback time from the inode item.li_lsn
value - and hence always contained the same LSN that appeared in the
on-disk inode - with a read of the inode item LSN at inode format
time. CLearly these are not the same thing.

Before 93f958f9c41f, the log recovery behaviour was irrelevant,
because the LSN in the log inode always matched the on-disk LSN at
the time the inode was logged, hence recovery of the transaction
would never make the on-disk LSN in the inode go backwards or get
out of sync.

A symptom of the problem is this, caught from a failure of
generic/482. Before log recovery, the inode has been allocated but
never used:

xfs_db> inode 393388
xfs_db> p
core.magic = 0x494e
core.mode = 0
....
v3.crc = 0x99126961 (correct)
v3.change_count = 0
v3.lsn = 0
v3.flags2 = 0
v3.cowextsize = 0
v3.crtime.sec = Thu Jan 1 10:00:00 1970
v3.crtime.nsec = 0

After log recovery:

xfs_db> p
core.magic = 0x494e
core.mode = 020444
....
v3.crc = 0x23e68f23 (correct)
v3.change_count = 2
v3.lsn = 0
v3.flags2 = 0
v3.cowextsize = 0
v3.crtime.sec = Thu Jul 22 17:03:03 2021
v3.crtime.nsec = 751000000
...

You can see that the LSN of the on-disk inode is 0, even though it
clearly has been written to disk. I point out this inode, because
the generic/482 failure occurred because several adjacent inodes in
this specific inode cluster were not replayed correctly and still
appeared to be zero on disk when all the other metadata (inobt,
finobt, directories, etc) indicated they should be allocated and
written back.

The fix for this is two-fold. The first is that we need to either
revert the LSN changes in 93f958f9c41f or stop logging the inode LSN
altogether. If we do the former, log recovery does not need to
change but we add 8 bytes of memory per inode to store what is
largely a write-only inode field. If we do the latter, log recovery
needs to stamp the on-disk inode in the same manner that inode
writeback does.

I prefer the latter, because we shouldn't really be trying to log
and replay changes to the on disk LSN as the on-disk value is the
canonical source of the on-disk version of the inode. It also
matches the way we recover buffer items - we create a buf_log_item
that carries the current recovery transaction LSN that gets stamped
into the buffer by the write verifier when it gets written back
when the transaction is fully recovered.

However, this might break log recovery on older kernels even more,
so I'm going to simply ignore the logged value in recovery and stamp
the on-disk inode with the LSN of the transaction being recovered
that will trigger writeback on transaction recovery completion. This
will ensure that the on-disk inode LSN always reflects the LSN of
the last change that was written to disk, regardless of whether it
comes from log recovery or runtime writeback.

Fixes: 93f958f9c41f ("xfs: cull unnecessary icdinode fields")
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
diff 32baa63d Tue Jul 27 17:23:49 MDT 2021 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: logging the on disk inode LSN can make it go backwards

When we log an inode, we format the "log inode" core and set an LSN
in that inode core. We do that via xfs_inode_item_format_core(),
which calls:

xfs_inode_to_log_dinode(ip, dic, ip->i_itemp->ili_item.li_lsn);

to format the log inode. It writes the LSN from the inode item into
the log inode, and if recovery decides the inode item needs to be
replayed, it recovers the log inode LSN field and writes it into the
on disk inode LSN field.

Now this might seem like a reasonable thing to do, but it is wrong
on multiple levels. Firstly, if the item is not yet in the AIL,
item->li_lsn is zero. i.e. the first time the inode it is logged and
formatted, the LSN we write into the log inode will be zero. If we
only log it once, recovery will run and can write this zero LSN into
the inode.

This means that the next time the inode is logged and log recovery
runs, it will *always* replay changes to the inode regardless of
whether the inode is newer on disk than the version in the log and
that violates the entire purpose of recording the LSN in the inode
at writeback time (i.e. to stop it going backwards in time on disk
during recovery).

Secondly, if we commit the CIL to the journal so the inode item
moves to the AIL, and then relog the inode, the LSN that gets
stamped into the log inode will be the LSN of the inode's current
location in the AIL, not it's age on disk. And it's not the LSN that
will be associated with the current change. That means when log
recovery replays this inode item, the LSN that ends up on disk is
the LSN for the previous changes in the log, not the current
changes being replayed. IOWs, after recovery the LSN on disk is not
in sync with the LSN of the modifications that were replayed into
the inode. This, again, violates the recovery ordering semantics
that on-disk writeback LSNs provide.

Hence the inode LSN in the log dinode is -always- invalid.

Thirdly, recovery actually has the LSN of the log transaction it is
replaying right at hand - it uses it to determine if it should
replay the inode by comparing it to the on-disk inode's LSN. But it
doesn't use that LSN to stamp the LSN into the inode which will be
written back when the transaction is fully replayed. It uses the one
in the log dinode, which we know is always going to be incorrect.

Looking back at the change history, the inode logging was broken by
commit 93f958f9c41f ("xfs: cull unnecessary icdinode fields") way
back in 2016 by a stupid idiot who thought he knew how this code
worked. i.e. me. That commit replaced an in memory di_lsn field that
was updated only at inode writeback time from the inode item.li_lsn
value - and hence always contained the same LSN that appeared in the
on-disk inode - with a read of the inode item LSN at inode format
time. CLearly these are not the same thing.

Before 93f958f9c41f, the log recovery behaviour was irrelevant,
because the LSN in the log inode always matched the on-disk LSN at
the time the inode was logged, hence recovery of the transaction
would never make the on-disk LSN in the inode go backwards or get
out of sync.

A symptom of the problem is this, caught from a failure of
generic/482. Before log recovery, the inode has been allocated but
never used:

xfs_db> inode 393388
xfs_db> p
core.magic = 0x494e
core.mode = 0
....
v3.crc = 0x99126961 (correct)
v3.change_count = 0
v3.lsn = 0
v3.flags2 = 0
v3.cowextsize = 0
v3.crtime.sec = Thu Jan 1 10:00:00 1970
v3.crtime.nsec = 0

After log recovery:

xfs_db> p
core.magic = 0x494e
core.mode = 020444
....
v3.crc = 0x23e68f23 (correct)
v3.change_count = 2
v3.lsn = 0
v3.flags2 = 0
v3.cowextsize = 0
v3.crtime.sec = Thu Jul 22 17:03:03 2021
v3.crtime.nsec = 751000000
...

You can see that the LSN of the on-disk inode is 0, even though it
clearly has been written to disk. I point out this inode, because
the generic/482 failure occurred because several adjacent inodes in
this specific inode cluster were not replayed correctly and still
appeared to be zero on disk when all the other metadata (inobt,
finobt, directories, etc) indicated they should be allocated and
written back.

The fix for this is two-fold. The first is that we need to either
revert the LSN changes in 93f958f9c41f or stop logging the inode LSN
altogether. If we do the former, log recovery does not need to
change but we add 8 bytes of memory per inode to store what is
largely a write-only inode field. If we do the latter, log recovery
needs to stamp the on-disk inode in the same manner that inode
writeback does.

I prefer the latter, because we shouldn't really be trying to log
and replay changes to the on disk LSN as the on-disk value is the
canonical source of the on-disk version of the inode. It also
matches the way we recover buffer items - we create a buf_log_item
that carries the current recovery transaction LSN that gets stamped
into the buffer by the write verifier when it gets written back
when the transaction is fully recovered.

However, this might break log recovery on older kernels even more,
so I'm going to simply ignore the logged value in recovery and stamp
the on-disk inode with the LSN of the transaction being recovered
that will trigger writeback on transaction recovery completion. This
will ensure that the on-disk inode LSN always reflects the LSN of
the last change that was written to disk, regardless of whether it
comes from log recovery or runtime writeback.

Fixes: 93f958f9c41f ("xfs: cull unnecessary icdinode fields")
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
diff 32baa63d Tue Jul 27 17:23:49 MDT 2021 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: logging the on disk inode LSN can make it go backwards

When we log an inode, we format the "log inode" core and set an LSN
in that inode core. We do that via xfs_inode_item_format_core(),
which calls:

xfs_inode_to_log_dinode(ip, dic, ip->i_itemp->ili_item.li_lsn);

to format the log inode. It writes the LSN from the inode item into
the log inode, and if recovery decides the inode item needs to be
replayed, it recovers the log inode LSN field and writes it into the
on disk inode LSN field.

Now this might seem like a reasonable thing to do, but it is wrong
on multiple levels. Firstly, if the item is not yet in the AIL,
item->li_lsn is zero. i.e. the first time the inode it is logged and
formatted, the LSN we write into the log inode will be zero. If we
only log it once, recovery will run and can write this zero LSN into
the inode.

This means that the next time the inode is logged and log recovery
runs, it will *always* replay changes to the inode regardless of
whether the inode is newer on disk than the version in the log and
that violates the entire purpose of recording the LSN in the inode
at writeback time (i.e. to stop it going backwards in time on disk
during recovery).

Secondly, if we commit the CIL to the journal so the inode item
moves to the AIL, and then relog the inode, the LSN that gets
stamped into the log inode will be the LSN of the inode's current
location in the AIL, not it's age on disk. And it's not the LSN that
will be associated with the current change. That means when log
recovery replays this inode item, the LSN that ends up on disk is
the LSN for the previous changes in the log, not the current
changes being replayed. IOWs, after recovery the LSN on disk is not
in sync with the LSN of the modifications that were replayed into
the inode. This, again, violates the recovery ordering semantics
that on-disk writeback LSNs provide.

Hence the inode LSN in the log dinode is -always- invalid.

Thirdly, recovery actually has the LSN of the log transaction it is
replaying right at hand - it uses it to determine if it should
replay the inode by comparing it to the on-disk inode's LSN. But it
doesn't use that LSN to stamp the LSN into the inode which will be
written back when the transaction is fully replayed. It uses the one
in the log dinode, which we know is always going to be incorrect.

Looking back at the change history, the inode logging was broken by
commit 93f958f9c41f ("xfs: cull unnecessary icdinode fields") way
back in 2016 by a stupid idiot who thought he knew how this code
worked. i.e. me. That commit replaced an in memory di_lsn field that
was updated only at inode writeback time from the inode item.li_lsn
value - and hence always contained the same LSN that appeared in the
on-disk inode - with a read of the inode item LSN at inode format
time. CLearly these are not the same thing.

Before 93f958f9c41f, the log recovery behaviour was irrelevant,
because the LSN in the log inode always matched the on-disk LSN at
the time the inode was logged, hence recovery of the transaction
would never make the on-disk LSN in the inode go backwards or get
out of sync.

A symptom of the problem is this, caught from a failure of
generic/482. Before log recovery, the inode has been allocated but
never used:

xfs_db> inode 393388
xfs_db> p
core.magic = 0x494e
core.mode = 0
....
v3.crc = 0x99126961 (correct)
v3.change_count = 0
v3.lsn = 0
v3.flags2 = 0
v3.cowextsize = 0
v3.crtime.sec = Thu Jan 1 10:00:00 1970
v3.crtime.nsec = 0

After log recovery:

xfs_db> p
core.magic = 0x494e
core.mode = 020444
....
v3.crc = 0x23e68f23 (correct)
v3.change_count = 2
v3.lsn = 0
v3.flags2 = 0
v3.cowextsize = 0
v3.crtime.sec = Thu Jul 22 17:03:03 2021
v3.crtime.nsec = 751000000
...

You can see that the LSN of the on-disk inode is 0, even though it
clearly has been written to disk. I point out this inode, because
the generic/482 failure occurred because several adjacent inodes in
this specific inode cluster were not replayed correctly and still
appeared to be zero on disk when all the other metadata (inobt,
finobt, directories, etc) indicated they should be allocated and
written back.

The fix for this is two-fold. The first is that we need to either
revert the LSN changes in 93f958f9c41f or stop logging the inode LSN
altogether. If we do the former, log recovery does not need to
change but we add 8 bytes of memory per inode to store what is
largely a write-only inode field. If we do the latter, log recovery
needs to stamp the on-disk inode in the same manner that inode
writeback does.

I prefer the latter, because we shouldn't really be trying to log
and replay changes to the on disk LSN as the on-disk value is the
canonical source of the on-disk version of the inode. It also
matches the way we recover buffer items - we create a buf_log_item
that carries the current recovery transaction LSN that gets stamped
into the buffer by the write verifier when it gets written back
when the transaction is fully recovered.

However, this might break log recovery on older kernels even more,
so I'm going to simply ignore the logged value in recovery and stamp
the on-disk inode with the LSN of the transaction being recovered
that will trigger writeback on transaction recovery completion. This
will ensure that the on-disk inode LSN always reflects the LSN of
the last change that was written to disk, regardless of whether it
comes from log recovery or runtime writeback.

Fixes: 93f958f9c41f ("xfs: cull unnecessary icdinode fields")
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
diff 32baa63d Tue Jul 27 17:23:49 MDT 2021 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: logging the on disk inode LSN can make it go backwards

When we log an inode, we format the "log inode" core and set an LSN
in that inode core. We do that via xfs_inode_item_format_core(),
which calls:

xfs_inode_to_log_dinode(ip, dic, ip->i_itemp->ili_item.li_lsn);

to format the log inode. It writes the LSN from the inode item into
the log inode, and if recovery decides the inode item needs to be
replayed, it recovers the log inode LSN field and writes it into the
on disk inode LSN field.

Now this might seem like a reasonable thing to do, but it is wrong
on multiple levels. Firstly, if the item is not yet in the AIL,
item->li_lsn is zero. i.e. the first time the inode it is logged and
formatted, the LSN we write into the log inode will be zero. If we
only log it once, recovery will run and can write this zero LSN into
the inode.

This means that the next time the inode is logged and log recovery
runs, it will *always* replay changes to the inode regardless of
whether the inode is newer on disk than the version in the log and
that violates the entire purpose of recording the LSN in the inode
at writeback time (i.e. to stop it going backwards in time on disk
during recovery).

Secondly, if we commit the CIL to the journal so the inode item
moves to the AIL, and then relog the inode, the LSN that gets
stamped into the log inode will be the LSN of the inode's current
location in the AIL, not it's age on disk. And it's not the LSN that
will be associated with the current change. That means when log
recovery replays this inode item, the LSN that ends up on disk is
the LSN for the previous changes in the log, not the current
changes being replayed. IOWs, after recovery the LSN on disk is not
in sync with the LSN of the modifications that were replayed into
the inode. This, again, violates the recovery ordering semantics
that on-disk writeback LSNs provide.

Hence the inode LSN in the log dinode is -always- invalid.

Thirdly, recovery actually has the LSN of the log transaction it is
replaying right at hand - it uses it to determine if it should
replay the inode by comparing it to the on-disk inode's LSN. But it
doesn't use that LSN to stamp the LSN into the inode which will be
written back when the transaction is fully replayed. It uses the one
in the log dinode, which we know is always going to be incorrect.

Looking back at the change history, the inode logging was broken by
commit 93f958f9c41f ("xfs: cull unnecessary icdinode fields") way
back in 2016 by a stupid idiot who thought he knew how this code
worked. i.e. me. That commit replaced an in memory di_lsn field that
was updated only at inode writeback time from the inode item.li_lsn
value - and hence always contained the same LSN that appeared in the
on-disk inode - with a read of the inode item LSN at inode format
time. CLearly these are not the same thing.

Before 93f958f9c41f, the log recovery behaviour was irrelevant,
because the LSN in the log inode always matched the on-disk LSN at
the time the inode was logged, hence recovery of the transaction
would never make the on-disk LSN in the inode go backwards or get
out of sync.

A symptom of the problem is this, caught from a failure of
generic/482. Before log recovery, the inode has been allocated but
never used:

xfs_db> inode 393388
xfs_db> p
core.magic = 0x494e
core.mode = 0
....
v3.crc = 0x99126961 (correct)
v3.change_count = 0
v3.lsn = 0
v3.flags2 = 0
v3.cowextsize = 0
v3.crtime.sec = Thu Jan 1 10:00:00 1970
v3.crtime.nsec = 0

After log recovery:

xfs_db> p
core.magic = 0x494e
core.mode = 020444
....
v3.crc = 0x23e68f23 (correct)
v3.change_count = 2
v3.lsn = 0
v3.flags2 = 0
v3.cowextsize = 0
v3.crtime.sec = Thu Jul 22 17:03:03 2021
v3.crtime.nsec = 751000000
...

You can see that the LSN of the on-disk inode is 0, even though it
clearly has been written to disk. I point out this inode, because
the generic/482 failure occurred because several adjacent inodes in
this specific inode cluster were not replayed correctly and still
appeared to be zero on disk when all the other metadata (inobt,
finobt, directories, etc) indicated they should be allocated and
written back.

The fix for this is two-fold. The first is that we need to either
revert the LSN changes in 93f958f9c41f or stop logging the inode LSN
altogether. If we do the former, log recovery does not need to
change but we add 8 bytes of memory per inode to store what is
largely a write-only inode field. If we do the latter, log recovery
needs to stamp the on-disk inode in the same manner that inode
writeback does.

I prefer the latter, because we shouldn't really be trying to log
and replay changes to the on disk LSN as the on-disk value is the
canonical source of the on-disk version of the inode. It also
matches the way we recover buffer items - we create a buf_log_item
that carries the current recovery transaction LSN that gets stamped
into the buffer by the write verifier when it gets written back
when the transaction is fully recovered.

However, this might break log recovery on older kernels even more,
so I'm going to simply ignore the logged value in recovery and stamp
the on-disk inode with the LSN of the transaction being recovered
that will trigger writeback on transaction recovery completion. This
will ensure that the on-disk inode LSN always reflects the LSN of
the last change that was written to disk, regardless of whether it
comes from log recovery or runtime writeback.

Fixes: 93f958f9c41f ("xfs: cull unnecessary icdinode fields")
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
H A Dxfs_da_btree.cdiff 5759aa4f Mon Dec 04 22:58:59 MST 2023 Zhang Tianci <zhangtianci.1997@bytedance.com> xfs: update dir3 leaf block metadata after swap

xfs_da3_swap_lastblock() copy the last block content to the dead block,
but do not update the metadata in it. We need update some metadata
for some kinds of type block, such as dir3 leafn block records its
blkno, we shall update it to the dead block blkno. Otherwise,
before write the xfs_buf to disk, the verify_write() will fail in
blk_hdr->blkno != xfs_buf->b_bn, then xfs will be shutdown.

We will get this warning:

XFS (dm-0): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_dir3_leaf_verify+0xa8/0xe0 [xfs], xfs_dir3_leafn block 0x178
XFS (dm-0): Unmount and run xfs_repair
XFS (dm-0): First 128 bytes of corrupted metadata buffer:
00000000e80f1917: 00 80 00 0b 00 80 00 07 3d ff 00 00 00 00 00 00 ........=.......
000000009604c005: 00 00 00 00 00 00 01 a0 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
000000006b6fb2bf: e4 44 e3 97 b5 64 44 41 8b 84 60 0e 50 43 d9 bf .D...dDA..`.PC..
00000000678978a2: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 83 01 73 00 93 00 00 00 00 .........s......
00000000b28b247c: 99 29 1d 38 00 00 00 00 99 29 1d 40 00 00 00 00 .).8.....).@....
000000002b2a662c: 99 29 1d 48 00 00 00 00 99 49 11 00 00 00 00 00 .).H.....I......
00000000ea2ffbb8: 99 49 11 08 00 00 45 25 99 49 11 10 00 00 48 fe .I....E%.I....H.
0000000069e86440: 99 49 11 18 00 00 4c 6b 99 49 11 20 00 00 4d 97 .I....Lk.I. ..M.
XFS (dm-0): xfs_do_force_shutdown(0x8) called from line 1423 of file fs/xfs/xfs_buf.c. Return address = 00000000c0ff63c1
XFS (dm-0): Corruption of in-memory data detected. Shutting down filesystem
XFS (dm-0): Please umount the filesystem and rectify the problem(s)

>From the log above, we know xfs_buf->b_no is 0x178, but the block's hdr record
its blkno is 0x1a0.

Fixes: 24df33b45ecf ("xfs: add CRC checking to dir2 leaf blocks")
Signed-off-by: Zhang Tianci <zhangtianci.1997@bytedance.com>
Suggested-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
Reviewed-by: "Darrick J. Wong" <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Chandan Babu R <chandanbabu@kernel.org>
diff 5759aa4f Mon Dec 04 22:58:59 MST 2023 Zhang Tianci <zhangtianci.1997@bytedance.com> xfs: update dir3 leaf block metadata after swap

xfs_da3_swap_lastblock() copy the last block content to the dead block,
but do not update the metadata in it. We need update some metadata
for some kinds of type block, such as dir3 leafn block records its
blkno, we shall update it to the dead block blkno. Otherwise,
before write the xfs_buf to disk, the verify_write() will fail in
blk_hdr->blkno != xfs_buf->b_bn, then xfs will be shutdown.

We will get this warning:

XFS (dm-0): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_dir3_leaf_verify+0xa8/0xe0 [xfs], xfs_dir3_leafn block 0x178
XFS (dm-0): Unmount and run xfs_repair
XFS (dm-0): First 128 bytes of corrupted metadata buffer:
00000000e80f1917: 00 80 00 0b 00 80 00 07 3d ff 00 00 00 00 00 00 ........=.......
000000009604c005: 00 00 00 00 00 00 01 a0 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
000000006b6fb2bf: e4 44 e3 97 b5 64 44 41 8b 84 60 0e 50 43 d9 bf .D...dDA..`.PC..
00000000678978a2: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 83 01 73 00 93 00 00 00 00 .........s......
00000000b28b247c: 99 29 1d 38 00 00 00 00 99 29 1d 40 00 00 00 00 .).8.....).@....
000000002b2a662c: 99 29 1d 48 00 00 00 00 99 49 11 00 00 00 00 00 .).H.....I......
00000000ea2ffbb8: 99 49 11 08 00 00 45 25 99 49 11 10 00 00 48 fe .I....E%.I....H.
0000000069e86440: 99 49 11 18 00 00 4c 6b 99 49 11 20 00 00 4d 97 .I....Lk.I. ..M.
XFS (dm-0): xfs_do_force_shutdown(0x8) called from line 1423 of file fs/xfs/xfs_buf.c. Return address = 00000000c0ff63c1
XFS (dm-0): Corruption of in-memory data detected. Shutting down filesystem
XFS (dm-0): Please umount the filesystem and rectify the problem(s)

>From the log above, we know xfs_buf->b_no is 0x178, but the block's hdr record
its blkno is 0x1a0.

Fixes: 24df33b45ecf ("xfs: add CRC checking to dir2 leaf blocks")
Signed-off-by: Zhang Tianci <zhangtianci.1997@bytedance.com>
Suggested-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
Reviewed-by: "Darrick J. Wong" <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Chandan Babu R <chandanbabu@kernel.org>
diff 5759aa4f Mon Dec 04 22:58:59 MST 2023 Zhang Tianci <zhangtianci.1997@bytedance.com> xfs: update dir3 leaf block metadata after swap

xfs_da3_swap_lastblock() copy the last block content to the dead block,
but do not update the metadata in it. We need update some metadata
for some kinds of type block, such as dir3 leafn block records its
blkno, we shall update it to the dead block blkno. Otherwise,
before write the xfs_buf to disk, the verify_write() will fail in
blk_hdr->blkno != xfs_buf->b_bn, then xfs will be shutdown.

We will get this warning:

XFS (dm-0): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_dir3_leaf_verify+0xa8/0xe0 [xfs], xfs_dir3_leafn block 0x178
XFS (dm-0): Unmount and run xfs_repair
XFS (dm-0): First 128 bytes of corrupted metadata buffer:
00000000e80f1917: 00 80 00 0b 00 80 00 07 3d ff 00 00 00 00 00 00 ........=.......
000000009604c005: 00 00 00 00 00 00 01 a0 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
000000006b6fb2bf: e4 44 e3 97 b5 64 44 41 8b 84 60 0e 50 43 d9 bf .D...dDA..`.PC..
00000000678978a2: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 83 01 73 00 93 00 00 00 00 .........s......
00000000b28b247c: 99 29 1d 38 00 00 00 00 99 29 1d 40 00 00 00 00 .).8.....).@....
000000002b2a662c: 99 29 1d 48 00 00 00 00 99 49 11 00 00 00 00 00 .).H.....I......
00000000ea2ffbb8: 99 49 11 08 00 00 45 25 99 49 11 10 00 00 48 fe .I....E%.I....H.
0000000069e86440: 99 49 11 18 00 00 4c 6b 99 49 11 20 00 00 4d 97 .I....Lk.I. ..M.
XFS (dm-0): xfs_do_force_shutdown(0x8) called from line 1423 of file fs/xfs/xfs_buf.c. Return address = 00000000c0ff63c1
XFS (dm-0): Corruption of in-memory data detected. Shutting down filesystem
XFS (dm-0): Please umount the filesystem and rectify the problem(s)

>From the log above, we know xfs_buf->b_no is 0x178, but the block's hdr record
its blkno is 0x1a0.

Fixes: 24df33b45ecf ("xfs: add CRC checking to dir2 leaf blocks")
Signed-off-by: Zhang Tianci <zhangtianci.1997@bytedance.com>
Suggested-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
Reviewed-by: "Darrick J. Wong" <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Chandan Babu R <chandanbabu@kernel.org>
diff 5759aa4f Mon Dec 04 22:58:59 MST 2023 Zhang Tianci <zhangtianci.1997@bytedance.com> xfs: update dir3 leaf block metadata after swap

xfs_da3_swap_lastblock() copy the last block content to the dead block,
but do not update the metadata in it. We need update some metadata
for some kinds of type block, such as dir3 leafn block records its
blkno, we shall update it to the dead block blkno. Otherwise,
before write the xfs_buf to disk, the verify_write() will fail in
blk_hdr->blkno != xfs_buf->b_bn, then xfs will be shutdown.

We will get this warning:

XFS (dm-0): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_dir3_leaf_verify+0xa8/0xe0 [xfs], xfs_dir3_leafn block 0x178
XFS (dm-0): Unmount and run xfs_repair
XFS (dm-0): First 128 bytes of corrupted metadata buffer:
00000000e80f1917: 00 80 00 0b 00 80 00 07 3d ff 00 00 00 00 00 00 ........=.......
000000009604c005: 00 00 00 00 00 00 01 a0 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
000000006b6fb2bf: e4 44 e3 97 b5 64 44 41 8b 84 60 0e 50 43 d9 bf .D...dDA..`.PC..
00000000678978a2: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 83 01 73 00 93 00 00 00 00 .........s......
00000000b28b247c: 99 29 1d 38 00 00 00 00 99 29 1d 40 00 00 00 00 .).8.....).@....
000000002b2a662c: 99 29 1d 48 00 00 00 00 99 49 11 00 00 00 00 00 .).H.....I......
00000000ea2ffbb8: 99 49 11 08 00 00 45 25 99 49 11 10 00 00 48 fe .I....E%.I....H.
0000000069e86440: 99 49 11 18 00 00 4c 6b 99 49 11 20 00 00 4d 97 .I....Lk.I. ..M.
XFS (dm-0): xfs_do_force_shutdown(0x8) called from line 1423 of file fs/xfs/xfs_buf.c. Return address = 00000000c0ff63c1
XFS (dm-0): Corruption of in-memory data detected. Shutting down filesystem
XFS (dm-0): Please umount the filesystem and rectify the problem(s)

>From the log above, we know xfs_buf->b_no is 0x178, but the block's hdr record
its blkno is 0x1a0.

Fixes: 24df33b45ecf ("xfs: add CRC checking to dir2 leaf blocks")
Signed-off-by: Zhang Tianci <zhangtianci.1997@bytedance.com>
Suggested-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
Reviewed-by: "Darrick J. Wong" <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Chandan Babu R <chandanbabu@kernel.org>
diff 5759aa4f Mon Dec 04 22:58:59 MST 2023 Zhang Tianci <zhangtianci.1997@bytedance.com> xfs: update dir3 leaf block metadata after swap

xfs_da3_swap_lastblock() copy the last block content to the dead block,
but do not update the metadata in it. We need update some metadata
for some kinds of type block, such as dir3 leafn block records its
blkno, we shall update it to the dead block blkno. Otherwise,
before write the xfs_buf to disk, the verify_write() will fail in
blk_hdr->blkno != xfs_buf->b_bn, then xfs will be shutdown.

We will get this warning:

XFS (dm-0): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_dir3_leaf_verify+0xa8/0xe0 [xfs], xfs_dir3_leafn block 0x178
XFS (dm-0): Unmount and run xfs_repair
XFS (dm-0): First 128 bytes of corrupted metadata buffer:
00000000e80f1917: 00 80 00 0b 00 80 00 07 3d ff 00 00 00 00 00 00 ........=.......
000000009604c005: 00 00 00 00 00 00 01 a0 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
000000006b6fb2bf: e4 44 e3 97 b5 64 44 41 8b 84 60 0e 50 43 d9 bf .D...dDA..`.PC..
00000000678978a2: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 83 01 73 00 93 00 00 00 00 .........s......
00000000b28b247c: 99 29 1d 38 00 00 00 00 99 29 1d 40 00 00 00 00 .).8.....).@....
000000002b2a662c: 99 29 1d 48 00 00 00 00 99 49 11 00 00 00 00 00 .).H.....I......
00000000ea2ffbb8: 99 49 11 08 00 00 45 25 99 49 11 10 00 00 48 fe .I....E%.I....H.
0000000069e86440: 99 49 11 18 00 00 4c 6b 99 49 11 20 00 00 4d 97 .I....Lk.I. ..M.
XFS (dm-0): xfs_do_force_shutdown(0x8) called from line 1423 of file fs/xfs/xfs_buf.c. Return address = 00000000c0ff63c1
XFS (dm-0): Corruption of in-memory data detected. Shutting down filesystem
XFS (dm-0): Please umount the filesystem and rectify the problem(s)

>From the log above, we know xfs_buf->b_no is 0x178, but the block's hdr record
its blkno is 0x1a0.

Fixes: 24df33b45ecf ("xfs: add CRC checking to dir2 leaf blocks")
Signed-off-by: Zhang Tianci <zhangtianci.1997@bytedance.com>
Suggested-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
Reviewed-by: "Darrick J. Wong" <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Chandan Babu R <chandanbabu@kernel.org>
diff 5759aa4f Mon Dec 04 22:58:59 MST 2023 Zhang Tianci <zhangtianci.1997@bytedance.com> xfs: update dir3 leaf block metadata after swap

xfs_da3_swap_lastblock() copy the last block content to the dead block,
but do not update the metadata in it. We need update some metadata
for some kinds of type block, such as dir3 leafn block records its
blkno, we shall update it to the dead block blkno. Otherwise,
before write the xfs_buf to disk, the verify_write() will fail in
blk_hdr->blkno != xfs_buf->b_bn, then xfs will be shutdown.

We will get this warning:

XFS (dm-0): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_dir3_leaf_verify+0xa8/0xe0 [xfs], xfs_dir3_leafn block 0x178
XFS (dm-0): Unmount and run xfs_repair
XFS (dm-0): First 128 bytes of corrupted metadata buffer:
00000000e80f1917: 00 80 00 0b 00 80 00 07 3d ff 00 00 00 00 00 00 ........=.......
000000009604c005: 00 00 00 00 00 00 01 a0 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
000000006b6fb2bf: e4 44 e3 97 b5 64 44 41 8b 84 60 0e 50 43 d9 bf .D...dDA..`.PC..
00000000678978a2: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 83 01 73 00 93 00 00 00 00 .........s......
00000000b28b247c: 99 29 1d 38 00 00 00 00 99 29 1d 40 00 00 00 00 .).8.....).@....
000000002b2a662c: 99 29 1d 48 00 00 00 00 99 49 11 00 00 00 00 00 .).H.....I......
00000000ea2ffbb8: 99 49 11 08 00 00 45 25 99 49 11 10 00 00 48 fe .I....E%.I....H.
0000000069e86440: 99 49 11 18 00 00 4c 6b 99 49 11 20 00 00 4d 97 .I....Lk.I. ..M.
XFS (dm-0): xfs_do_force_shutdown(0x8) called from line 1423 of file fs/xfs/xfs_buf.c. Return address = 00000000c0ff63c1
XFS (dm-0): Corruption of in-memory data detected. Shutting down filesystem
XFS (dm-0): Please umount the filesystem and rectify the problem(s)

>From the log above, we know xfs_buf->b_no is 0x178, but the block's hdr record
its blkno is 0x1a0.

Fixes: 24df33b45ecf ("xfs: add CRC checking to dir2 leaf blocks")
Signed-off-by: Zhang Tianci <zhangtianci.1997@bytedance.com>
Suggested-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
Reviewed-by: "Darrick J. Wong" <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Chandan Babu R <chandanbabu@kernel.org>
diff 5759aa4f Mon Dec 04 22:58:59 MST 2023 Zhang Tianci <zhangtianci.1997@bytedance.com> xfs: update dir3 leaf block metadata after swap

xfs_da3_swap_lastblock() copy the last block content to the dead block,
but do not update the metadata in it. We need update some metadata
for some kinds of type block, such as dir3 leafn block records its
blkno, we shall update it to the dead block blkno. Otherwise,
before write the xfs_buf to disk, the verify_write() will fail in
blk_hdr->blkno != xfs_buf->b_bn, then xfs will be shutdown.

We will get this warning:

XFS (dm-0): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_dir3_leaf_verify+0xa8/0xe0 [xfs], xfs_dir3_leafn block 0x178
XFS (dm-0): Unmount and run xfs_repair
XFS (dm-0): First 128 bytes of corrupted metadata buffer:
00000000e80f1917: 00 80 00 0b 00 80 00 07 3d ff 00 00 00 00 00 00 ........=.......
000000009604c005: 00 00 00 00 00 00 01 a0 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
000000006b6fb2bf: e4 44 e3 97 b5 64 44 41 8b 84 60 0e 50 43 d9 bf .D...dDA..`.PC..
00000000678978a2: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 83 01 73 00 93 00 00 00 00 .........s......
00000000b28b247c: 99 29 1d 38 00 00 00 00 99 29 1d 40 00 00 00 00 .).8.....).@....
000000002b2a662c: 99 29 1d 48 00 00 00 00 99 49 11 00 00 00 00 00 .).H.....I......
00000000ea2ffbb8: 99 49 11 08 00 00 45 25 99 49 11 10 00 00 48 fe .I....E%.I....H.
0000000069e86440: 99 49 11 18 00 00 4c 6b 99 49 11 20 00 00 4d 97 .I....Lk.I. ..M.
XFS (dm-0): xfs_do_force_shutdown(0x8) called from line 1423 of file fs/xfs/xfs_buf.c. Return address = 00000000c0ff63c1
XFS (dm-0): Corruption of in-memory data detected. Shutting down filesystem
XFS (dm-0): Please umount the filesystem and rectify the problem(s)

>From the log above, we know xfs_buf->b_no is 0x178, but the block's hdr record
its blkno is 0x1a0.

Fixes: 24df33b45ecf ("xfs: add CRC checking to dir2 leaf blocks")
Signed-off-by: Zhang Tianci <zhangtianci.1997@bytedance.com>
Suggested-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
Reviewed-by: "Darrick J. Wong" <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Chandan Babu R <chandanbabu@kernel.org>
diff 5759aa4f Mon Dec 04 22:58:59 MST 2023 Zhang Tianci <zhangtianci.1997@bytedance.com> xfs: update dir3 leaf block metadata after swap

xfs_da3_swap_lastblock() copy the last block content to the dead block,
but do not update the metadata in it. We need update some metadata
for some kinds of type block, such as dir3 leafn block records its
blkno, we shall update it to the dead block blkno. Otherwise,
before write the xfs_buf to disk, the verify_write() will fail in
blk_hdr->blkno != xfs_buf->b_bn, then xfs will be shutdown.

We will get this warning:

XFS (dm-0): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_dir3_leaf_verify+0xa8/0xe0 [xfs], xfs_dir3_leafn block 0x178
XFS (dm-0): Unmount and run xfs_repair
XFS (dm-0): First 128 bytes of corrupted metadata buffer:
00000000e80f1917: 00 80 00 0b 00 80 00 07 3d ff 00 00 00 00 00 00 ........=.......
000000009604c005: 00 00 00 00 00 00 01 a0 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
000000006b6fb2bf: e4 44 e3 97 b5 64 44 41 8b 84 60 0e 50 43 d9 bf .D...dDA..`.PC..
00000000678978a2: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 83 01 73 00 93 00 00 00 00 .........s......
00000000b28b247c: 99 29 1d 38 00 00 00 00 99 29 1d 40 00 00 00 00 .).8.....).@....
000000002b2a662c: 99 29 1d 48 00 00 00 00 99 49 11 00 00 00 00 00 .).H.....I......
00000000ea2ffbb8: 99 49 11 08 00 00 45 25 99 49 11 10 00 00 48 fe .I....E%.I....H.
0000000069e86440: 99 49 11 18 00 00 4c 6b 99 49 11 20 00 00 4d 97 .I....Lk.I. ..M.
XFS (dm-0): xfs_do_force_shutdown(0x8) called from line 1423 of file fs/xfs/xfs_buf.c. Return address = 00000000c0ff63c1
XFS (dm-0): Corruption of in-memory data detected. Shutting down filesystem
XFS (dm-0): Please umount the filesystem and rectify the problem(s)

>From the log above, we know xfs_buf->b_no is 0x178, but the block's hdr record
its blkno is 0x1a0.

Fixes: 24df33b45ecf ("xfs: add CRC checking to dir2 leaf blocks")
Signed-off-by: Zhang Tianci <zhangtianci.1997@bytedance.com>
Suggested-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
Reviewed-by: "Darrick J. Wong" <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Chandan Babu R <chandanbabu@kernel.org>
diff 5759aa4f Mon Dec 04 22:58:59 MST 2023 Zhang Tianci <zhangtianci.1997@bytedance.com> xfs: update dir3 leaf block metadata after swap

xfs_da3_swap_lastblock() copy the last block content to the dead block,
but do not update the metadata in it. We need update some metadata
for some kinds of type block, such as dir3 leafn block records its
blkno, we shall update it to the dead block blkno. Otherwise,
before write the xfs_buf to disk, the verify_write() will fail in
blk_hdr->blkno != xfs_buf->b_bn, then xfs will be shutdown.

We will get this warning:

XFS (dm-0): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_dir3_leaf_verify+0xa8/0xe0 [xfs], xfs_dir3_leafn block 0x178
XFS (dm-0): Unmount and run xfs_repair
XFS (dm-0): First 128 bytes of corrupted metadata buffer:
00000000e80f1917: 00 80 00 0b 00 80 00 07 3d ff 00 00 00 00 00 00 ........=.......
000000009604c005: 00 00 00 00 00 00 01 a0 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
000000006b6fb2bf: e4 44 e3 97 b5 64 44 41 8b 84 60 0e 50 43 d9 bf .D...dDA..`.PC..
00000000678978a2: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 83 01 73 00 93 00 00 00 00 .........s......
00000000b28b247c: 99 29 1d 38 00 00 00 00 99 29 1d 40 00 00 00 00 .).8.....).@....
000000002b2a662c: 99 29 1d 48 00 00 00 00 99 49 11 00 00 00 00 00 .).H.....I......
00000000ea2ffbb8: 99 49 11 08 00 00 45 25 99 49 11 10 00 00 48 fe .I....E%.I....H.
0000000069e86440: 99 49 11 18 00 00 4c 6b 99 49 11 20 00 00 4d 97 .I....Lk.I. ..M.
XFS (dm-0): xfs_do_force_shutdown(0x8) called from line 1423 of file fs/xfs/xfs_buf.c. Return address = 00000000c0ff63c1
XFS (dm-0): Corruption of in-memory data detected. Shutting down filesystem
XFS (dm-0): Please umount the filesystem and rectify the problem(s)

>From the log above, we know xfs_buf->b_no is 0x178, but the block's hdr record
its blkno is 0x1a0.

Fixes: 24df33b45ecf ("xfs: add CRC checking to dir2 leaf blocks")
Signed-off-by: Zhang Tianci <zhangtianci.1997@bytedance.com>
Suggested-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
Reviewed-by: "Darrick J. Wong" <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Chandan Babu R <chandanbabu@kernel.org>
diff 5759aa4f Mon Dec 04 22:58:59 MST 2023 Zhang Tianci <zhangtianci.1997@bytedance.com> xfs: update dir3 leaf block metadata after swap

xfs_da3_swap_lastblock() copy the last block content to the dead block,
but do not update the metadata in it. We need update some metadata
for some kinds of type block, such as dir3 leafn block records its
blkno, we shall update it to the dead block blkno. Otherwise,
before write the xfs_buf to disk, the verify_write() will fail in
blk_hdr->blkno != xfs_buf->b_bn, then xfs will be shutdown.

We will get this warning:

XFS (dm-0): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_dir3_leaf_verify+0xa8/0xe0 [xfs], xfs_dir3_leafn block 0x178
XFS (dm-0): Unmount and run xfs_repair
XFS (dm-0): First 128 bytes of corrupted metadata buffer:
00000000e80f1917: 00 80 00 0b 00 80 00 07 3d ff 00 00 00 00 00 00 ........=.......
000000009604c005: 00 00 00 00 00 00 01 a0 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
000000006b6fb2bf: e4 44 e3 97 b5 64 44 41 8b 84 60 0e 50 43 d9 bf .D...dDA..`.PC..
00000000678978a2: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 83 01 73 00 93 00 00 00 00 .........s......
00000000b28b247c: 99 29 1d 38 00 00 00 00 99 29 1d 40 00 00 00 00 .).8.....).@....
000000002b2a662c: 99 29 1d 48 00 00 00 00 99 49 11 00 00 00 00 00 .).H.....I......
00000000ea2ffbb8: 99 49 11 08 00 00 45 25 99 49 11 10 00 00 48 fe .I....E%.I....H.
0000000069e86440: 99 49 11 18 00 00 4c 6b 99 49 11 20 00 00 4d 97 .I....Lk.I. ..M.
XFS (dm-0): xfs_do_force_shutdown(0x8) called from line 1423 of file fs/xfs/xfs_buf.c. Return address = 00000000c0ff63c1
XFS (dm-0): Corruption of in-memory data detected. Shutting down filesystem
XFS (dm-0): Please umount the filesystem and rectify the problem(s)

>From the log above, we know xfs_buf->b_no is 0x178, but the block's hdr record
its blkno is 0x1a0.

Fixes: 24df33b45ecf ("xfs: add CRC checking to dir2 leaf blocks")
Signed-off-by: Zhang Tianci <zhangtianci.1997@bytedance.com>
Suggested-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
Reviewed-by: "Darrick J. Wong" <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Chandan Babu R <chandanbabu@kernel.org>
diff 5759aa4f Mon Dec 04 22:58:59 MST 2023 Zhang Tianci <zhangtianci.1997@bytedance.com> xfs: update dir3 leaf block metadata after swap

xfs_da3_swap_lastblock() copy the last block content to the dead block,
but do not update the metadata in it. We need update some metadata
for some kinds of type block, such as dir3 leafn block records its
blkno, we shall update it to the dead block blkno. Otherwise,
before write the xfs_buf to disk, the verify_write() will fail in
blk_hdr->blkno != xfs_buf->b_bn, then xfs will be shutdown.

We will get this warning:

XFS (dm-0): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_dir3_leaf_verify+0xa8/0xe0 [xfs], xfs_dir3_leafn block 0x178
XFS (dm-0): Unmount and run xfs_repair
XFS (dm-0): First 128 bytes of corrupted metadata buffer:
00000000e80f1917: 00 80 00 0b 00 80 00 07 3d ff 00 00 00 00 00 00 ........=.......
000000009604c005: 00 00 00 00 00 00 01 a0 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
000000006b6fb2bf: e4 44 e3 97 b5 64 44 41 8b 84 60 0e 50 43 d9 bf .D...dDA..`.PC..
00000000678978a2: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 83 01 73 00 93 00 00 00 00 .........s......
00000000b28b247c: 99 29 1d 38 00 00 00 00 99 29 1d 40 00 00 00 00 .).8.....).@....
000000002b2a662c: 99 29 1d 48 00 00 00 00 99 49 11 00 00 00 00 00 .).H.....I......
00000000ea2ffbb8: 99 49 11 08 00 00 45 25 99 49 11 10 00 00 48 fe .I....E%.I....H.
0000000069e86440: 99 49 11 18 00 00 4c 6b 99 49 11 20 00 00 4d 97 .I....Lk.I. ..M.
XFS (dm-0): xfs_do_force_shutdown(0x8) called from line 1423 of file fs/xfs/xfs_buf.c. Return address = 00000000c0ff63c1
XFS (dm-0): Corruption of in-memory data detected. Shutting down filesystem
XFS (dm-0): Please umount the filesystem and rectify the problem(s)

>From the log above, we know xfs_buf->b_no is 0x178, but the block's hdr record
its blkno is 0x1a0.

Fixes: 24df33b45ecf ("xfs: add CRC checking to dir2 leaf blocks")
Signed-off-by: Zhang Tianci <zhangtianci.1997@bytedance.com>
Suggested-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
Reviewed-by: "Darrick J. Wong" <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Chandan Babu R <chandanbabu@kernel.org>
diff 5759aa4f Mon Dec 04 22:58:59 MST 2023 Zhang Tianci <zhangtianci.1997@bytedance.com> xfs: update dir3 leaf block metadata after swap

xfs_da3_swap_lastblock() copy the last block content to the dead block,
but do not update the metadata in it. We need update some metadata
for some kinds of type block, such as dir3 leafn block records its
blkno, we shall update it to the dead block blkno. Otherwise,
before write the xfs_buf to disk, the verify_write() will fail in
blk_hdr->blkno != xfs_buf->b_bn, then xfs will be shutdown.

We will get this warning:

XFS (dm-0): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_dir3_leaf_verify+0xa8/0xe0 [xfs], xfs_dir3_leafn block 0x178
XFS (dm-0): Unmount and run xfs_repair
XFS (dm-0): First 128 bytes of corrupted metadata buffer:
00000000e80f1917: 00 80 00 0b 00 80 00 07 3d ff 00 00 00 00 00 00 ........=.......
000000009604c005: 00 00 00 00 00 00 01 a0 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
000000006b6fb2bf: e4 44 e3 97 b5 64 44 41 8b 84 60 0e 50 43 d9 bf .D...dDA..`.PC..
00000000678978a2: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 83 01 73 00 93 00 00 00 00 .........s......
00000000b28b247c: 99 29 1d 38 00 00 00 00 99 29 1d 40 00 00 00 00 .).8.....).@....
000000002b2a662c: 99 29 1d 48 00 00 00 00 99 49 11 00 00 00 00 00 .).H.....I......
00000000ea2ffbb8: 99 49 11 08 00 00 45 25 99 49 11 10 00 00 48 fe .I....E%.I....H.
0000000069e86440: 99 49 11 18 00 00 4c 6b 99 49 11 20 00 00 4d 97 .I....Lk.I. ..M.
XFS (dm-0): xfs_do_force_shutdown(0x8) called from line 1423 of file fs/xfs/xfs_buf.c. Return address = 00000000c0ff63c1
XFS (dm-0): Corruption of in-memory data detected. Shutting down filesystem
XFS (dm-0): Please umount the filesystem and rectify the problem(s)

>From the log above, we know xfs_buf->b_no is 0x178, but the block's hdr record
its blkno is 0x1a0.

Fixes: 24df33b45ecf ("xfs: add CRC checking to dir2 leaf blocks")
Signed-off-by: Zhang Tianci <zhangtianci.1997@bytedance.com>
Suggested-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
Reviewed-by: "Darrick J. Wong" <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Chandan Babu R <chandanbabu@kernel.org>
diff 5759aa4f Mon Dec 04 22:58:59 MST 2023 Zhang Tianci <zhangtianci.1997@bytedance.com> xfs: update dir3 leaf block metadata after swap

xfs_da3_swap_lastblock() copy the last block content to the dead block,
but do not update the metadata in it. We need update some metadata
for some kinds of type block, such as dir3 leafn block records its
blkno, we shall update it to the dead block blkno. Otherwise,
before write the xfs_buf to disk, the verify_write() will fail in
blk_hdr->blkno != xfs_buf->b_bn, then xfs will be shutdown.

We will get this warning:

XFS (dm-0): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_dir3_leaf_verify+0xa8/0xe0 [xfs], xfs_dir3_leafn block 0x178
XFS (dm-0): Unmount and run xfs_repair
XFS (dm-0): First 128 bytes of corrupted metadata buffer:
00000000e80f1917: 00 80 00 0b 00 80 00 07 3d ff 00 00 00 00 00 00 ........=.......
000000009604c005: 00 00 00 00 00 00 01 a0 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
000000006b6fb2bf: e4 44 e3 97 b5 64 44 41 8b 84 60 0e 50 43 d9 bf .D...dDA..`.PC..
00000000678978a2: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 83 01 73 00 93 00 00 00 00 .........s......
00000000b28b247c: 99 29 1d 38 00 00 00 00 99 29 1d 40 00 00 00 00 .).8.....).@....
000000002b2a662c: 99 29 1d 48 00 00 00 00 99 49 11 00 00 00 00 00 .).H.....I......
00000000ea2ffbb8: 99 49 11 08 00 00 45 25 99 49 11 10 00 00 48 fe .I....E%.I....H.
0000000069e86440: 99 49 11 18 00 00 4c 6b 99 49 11 20 00 00 4d 97 .I....Lk.I. ..M.
XFS (dm-0): xfs_do_force_shutdown(0x8) called from line 1423 of file fs/xfs/xfs_buf.c. Return address = 00000000c0ff63c1
XFS (dm-0): Corruption of in-memory data detected. Shutting down filesystem
XFS (dm-0): Please umount the filesystem and rectify the problem(s)

>From the log above, we know xfs_buf->b_no is 0x178, but the block's hdr record
its blkno is 0x1a0.

Fixes: 24df33b45ecf ("xfs: add CRC checking to dir2 leaf blocks")
Signed-off-by: Zhang Tianci <zhangtianci.1997@bytedance.com>
Suggested-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
Reviewed-by: "Darrick J. Wong" <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Chandan Babu R <chandanbabu@kernel.org>
diff 5759aa4f Mon Dec 04 22:58:59 MST 2023 Zhang Tianci <zhangtianci.1997@bytedance.com> xfs: update dir3 leaf block metadata after swap

xfs_da3_swap_lastblock() copy the last block content to the dead block,
but do not update the metadata in it. We need update some metadata
for some kinds of type block, such as dir3 leafn block records its
blkno, we shall update it to the dead block blkno. Otherwise,
before write the xfs_buf to disk, the verify_write() will fail in
blk_hdr->blkno != xfs_buf->b_bn, then xfs will be shutdown.

We will get this warning:

XFS (dm-0): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_dir3_leaf_verify+0xa8/0xe0 [xfs], xfs_dir3_leafn block 0x178
XFS (dm-0): Unmount and run xfs_repair
XFS (dm-0): First 128 bytes of corrupted metadata buffer:
00000000e80f1917: 00 80 00 0b 00 80 00 07 3d ff 00 00 00 00 00 00 ........=.......
000000009604c005: 00 00 00 00 00 00 01 a0 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
000000006b6fb2bf: e4 44 e3 97 b5 64 44 41 8b 84 60 0e 50 43 d9 bf .D...dDA..`.PC..
00000000678978a2: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 83 01 73 00 93 00 00 00 00 .........s......
00000000b28b247c: 99 29 1d 38 00 00 00 00 99 29 1d 40 00 00 00 00 .).8.....).@....
000000002b2a662c: 99 29 1d 48 00 00 00 00 99 49 11 00 00 00 00 00 .).H.....I......
00000000ea2ffbb8: 99 49 11 08 00 00 45 25 99 49 11 10 00 00 48 fe .I....E%.I....H.
0000000069e86440: 99 49 11 18 00 00 4c 6b 99 49 11 20 00 00 4d 97 .I....Lk.I. ..M.
XFS (dm-0): xfs_do_force_shutdown(0x8) called from line 1423 of file fs/xfs/xfs_buf.c. Return address = 00000000c0ff63c1
XFS (dm-0): Corruption of in-memory data detected. Shutting down filesystem
XFS (dm-0): Please umount the filesystem and rectify the problem(s)

>From the log above, we know xfs_buf->b_no is 0x178, but the block's hdr record
its blkno is 0x1a0.

Fixes: 24df33b45ecf ("xfs: add CRC checking to dir2 leaf blocks")
Signed-off-by: Zhang Tianci <zhangtianci.1997@bytedance.com>
Suggested-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
Reviewed-by: "Darrick J. Wong" <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Chandan Babu R <chandanbabu@kernel.org>
H A Dxfs_attr_leaf.cdiff 45c76a2a Tue Dec 19 23:34:56 MST 2023 Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de> xfs: return if_data from xfs_idata_realloc

Many of the xfs_idata_realloc callers need to set a local pointer to the
just reallocated if_data memory. Return the pointer to simplify them a
bit and use the opportunity to re-use krealloc for freeing if_data if the
size hits 0.

Signed-off-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
Reviewed-by: "Darrick J. Wong" <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Chandan Babu R <chandanbabu@kernel.org>
diff c78c2d09 Tue Jul 19 10:14:55 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: don't leak memory when attr fork loading fails

I observed the following evidence of a memory leak while running xfs/399
from the xfs fsck test suite (edited for brevity):

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_attr_shortform_verify_struct.part.0+0x7b/0xb0 [xfs], inode 0x1172 attr fork
XFS: Assertion failed: ip->i_af.if_u1.if_data == NULL, file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c, line: 315
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 2 PID: 91635 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
CPU: 2 PID: 91635 Comm: xfs_scrub Tainted: G W 5.19.0-rc7-xfsx #rc7 6e6475eb29fd9dda3181f81b7ca7ff961d277a40
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.15.0-1 04/01/2014
RIP: 0010:assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_ifork_zap_attr+0x7c/0xb0
xfs_iformat_attr_fork+0x86/0x110
xfs_inode_from_disk+0x41d/0x480
xfs_iget+0x389/0xd70
xfs_bulkstat_one_int+0x5b/0x540
xfs_bulkstat_iwalk+0x1e/0x30
xfs_iwalk_ag_recs+0xd1/0x160
xfs_iwalk_run_callbacks+0xb9/0x180
xfs_iwalk_ag+0x1d8/0x2e0
xfs_iwalk+0x141/0x220
xfs_bulkstat+0x105/0x180
xfs_ioc_bulkstat.constprop.0.isra.0+0xc5/0x130
xfs_file_ioctl+0xa5f/0xef0
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

This newly-added assertion checks that there aren't any incore data
structures hanging off the incore fork when we're trying to reset its
contents. From the call trace, it is evident that iget was trying to
construct an incore inode from the ondisk inode, but the attr fork
verifier failed and we were trying to undo all the memory allocations
that we had done earlier.

The three assertions in xfs_ifork_zap_attr check that the caller has
already called xfs_idestroy_fork, which clearly has not been done here.
As the zap function then zeroes the pointers, we've effectively leaked
the memory.

The shortest change would have been to insert an extra call to
xfs_idestroy_fork, but it makes more sense to bundle the _idestroy_fork
call into _zap_attr, since all other callsites call _idestroy_fork
immediately prior to calling _zap_attr. IOWs, it eliminates one way to
fail.

Note: This change only applies cleanly to 2ed5b09b3e8f, since we just
reworked the attr fork lifetime. However, I think this memory leak has
existed since 0f45a1b20cd8, since the chain xfs_iformat_attr_fork ->
xfs_iformat_local -> xfs_init_local_fork will allocate
ifp->if_u1.if_data, but if xfs_ifork_verify_local_attr fails,
xfs_iformat_attr_fork will free i_afp without freeing any of the stuff
hanging off i_afp. The solution for older kernels I think is to add the
missing call to xfs_idestroy_fork just prior to calling kmem_cache_free.

Found by fuzzing a.sfattr.hdr.totsize = lastbit in xfs/399.

Fixes: 2ed5b09b3e8f ("xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode")
Probably-Fixes: 0f45a1b20cd8 ("xfs: improve local fork verification")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff c78c2d09 Tue Jul 19 10:14:55 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: don't leak memory when attr fork loading fails

I observed the following evidence of a memory leak while running xfs/399
from the xfs fsck test suite (edited for brevity):

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_attr_shortform_verify_struct.part.0+0x7b/0xb0 [xfs], inode 0x1172 attr fork
XFS: Assertion failed: ip->i_af.if_u1.if_data == NULL, file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c, line: 315
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 2 PID: 91635 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
CPU: 2 PID: 91635 Comm: xfs_scrub Tainted: G W 5.19.0-rc7-xfsx #rc7 6e6475eb29fd9dda3181f81b7ca7ff961d277a40
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.15.0-1 04/01/2014
RIP: 0010:assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_ifork_zap_attr+0x7c/0xb0
xfs_iformat_attr_fork+0x86/0x110
xfs_inode_from_disk+0x41d/0x480
xfs_iget+0x389/0xd70
xfs_bulkstat_one_int+0x5b/0x540
xfs_bulkstat_iwalk+0x1e/0x30
xfs_iwalk_ag_recs+0xd1/0x160
xfs_iwalk_run_callbacks+0xb9/0x180
xfs_iwalk_ag+0x1d8/0x2e0
xfs_iwalk+0x141/0x220
xfs_bulkstat+0x105/0x180
xfs_ioc_bulkstat.constprop.0.isra.0+0xc5/0x130
xfs_file_ioctl+0xa5f/0xef0
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

This newly-added assertion checks that there aren't any incore data
structures hanging off the incore fork when we're trying to reset its
contents. From the call trace, it is evident that iget was trying to
construct an incore inode from the ondisk inode, but the attr fork
verifier failed and we were trying to undo all the memory allocations
that we had done earlier.

The three assertions in xfs_ifork_zap_attr check that the caller has
already called xfs_idestroy_fork, which clearly has not been done here.
As the zap function then zeroes the pointers, we've effectively leaked
the memory.

The shortest change would have been to insert an extra call to
xfs_idestroy_fork, but it makes more sense to bundle the _idestroy_fork
call into _zap_attr, since all other callsites call _idestroy_fork
immediately prior to calling _zap_attr. IOWs, it eliminates one way to
fail.

Note: This change only applies cleanly to 2ed5b09b3e8f, since we just
reworked the attr fork lifetime. However, I think this memory leak has
existed since 0f45a1b20cd8, since the chain xfs_iformat_attr_fork ->
xfs_iformat_local -> xfs_init_local_fork will allocate
ifp->if_u1.if_data, but if xfs_ifork_verify_local_attr fails,
xfs_iformat_attr_fork will free i_afp without freeing any of the stuff
hanging off i_afp. The solution for older kernels I think is to add the
missing call to xfs_idestroy_fork just prior to calling kmem_cache_free.

Found by fuzzing a.sfattr.hdr.totsize = lastbit in xfs/399.

Fixes: 2ed5b09b3e8f ("xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode")
Probably-Fixes: 0f45a1b20cd8 ("xfs: improve local fork verification")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff c78c2d09 Tue Jul 19 10:14:55 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: don't leak memory when attr fork loading fails

I observed the following evidence of a memory leak while running xfs/399
from the xfs fsck test suite (edited for brevity):

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_attr_shortform_verify_struct.part.0+0x7b/0xb0 [xfs], inode 0x1172 attr fork
XFS: Assertion failed: ip->i_af.if_u1.if_data == NULL, file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c, line: 315
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 2 PID: 91635 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
CPU: 2 PID: 91635 Comm: xfs_scrub Tainted: G W 5.19.0-rc7-xfsx #rc7 6e6475eb29fd9dda3181f81b7ca7ff961d277a40
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.15.0-1 04/01/2014
RIP: 0010:assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_ifork_zap_attr+0x7c/0xb0
xfs_iformat_attr_fork+0x86/0x110
xfs_inode_from_disk+0x41d/0x480
xfs_iget+0x389/0xd70
xfs_bulkstat_one_int+0x5b/0x540
xfs_bulkstat_iwalk+0x1e/0x30
xfs_iwalk_ag_recs+0xd1/0x160
xfs_iwalk_run_callbacks+0xb9/0x180
xfs_iwalk_ag+0x1d8/0x2e0
xfs_iwalk+0x141/0x220
xfs_bulkstat+0x105/0x180
xfs_ioc_bulkstat.constprop.0.isra.0+0xc5/0x130
xfs_file_ioctl+0xa5f/0xef0
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

This newly-added assertion checks that there aren't any incore data
structures hanging off the incore fork when we're trying to reset its
contents. From the call trace, it is evident that iget was trying to
construct an incore inode from the ondisk inode, but the attr fork
verifier failed and we were trying to undo all the memory allocations
that we had done earlier.

The three assertions in xfs_ifork_zap_attr check that the caller has
already called xfs_idestroy_fork, which clearly has not been done here.
As the zap function then zeroes the pointers, we've effectively leaked
the memory.

The shortest change would have been to insert an extra call to
xfs_idestroy_fork, but it makes more sense to bundle the _idestroy_fork
call into _zap_attr, since all other callsites call _idestroy_fork
immediately prior to calling _zap_attr. IOWs, it eliminates one way to
fail.

Note: This change only applies cleanly to 2ed5b09b3e8f, since we just
reworked the attr fork lifetime. However, I think this memory leak has
existed since 0f45a1b20cd8, since the chain xfs_iformat_attr_fork ->
xfs_iformat_local -> xfs_init_local_fork will allocate
ifp->if_u1.if_data, but if xfs_ifork_verify_local_attr fails,
xfs_iformat_attr_fork will free i_afp without freeing any of the stuff
hanging off i_afp. The solution for older kernels I think is to add the
missing call to xfs_idestroy_fork just prior to calling kmem_cache_free.

Found by fuzzing a.sfattr.hdr.totsize = lastbit in xfs/399.

Fixes: 2ed5b09b3e8f ("xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode")
Probably-Fixes: 0f45a1b20cd8 ("xfs: improve local fork verification")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff c78c2d09 Tue Jul 19 10:14:55 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: don't leak memory when attr fork loading fails

I observed the following evidence of a memory leak while running xfs/399
from the xfs fsck test suite (edited for brevity):

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_attr_shortform_verify_struct.part.0+0x7b/0xb0 [xfs], inode 0x1172 attr fork
XFS: Assertion failed: ip->i_af.if_u1.if_data == NULL, file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c, line: 315
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 2 PID: 91635 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
CPU: 2 PID: 91635 Comm: xfs_scrub Tainted: G W 5.19.0-rc7-xfsx #rc7 6e6475eb29fd9dda3181f81b7ca7ff961d277a40
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.15.0-1 04/01/2014
RIP: 0010:assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_ifork_zap_attr+0x7c/0xb0
xfs_iformat_attr_fork+0x86/0x110
xfs_inode_from_disk+0x41d/0x480
xfs_iget+0x389/0xd70
xfs_bulkstat_one_int+0x5b/0x540
xfs_bulkstat_iwalk+0x1e/0x30
xfs_iwalk_ag_recs+0xd1/0x160
xfs_iwalk_run_callbacks+0xb9/0x180
xfs_iwalk_ag+0x1d8/0x2e0
xfs_iwalk+0x141/0x220
xfs_bulkstat+0x105/0x180
xfs_ioc_bulkstat.constprop.0.isra.0+0xc5/0x130
xfs_file_ioctl+0xa5f/0xef0
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

This newly-added assertion checks that there aren't any incore data
structures hanging off the incore fork when we're trying to reset its
contents. From the call trace, it is evident that iget was trying to
construct an incore inode from the ondisk inode, but the attr fork
verifier failed and we were trying to undo all the memory allocations
that we had done earlier.

The three assertions in xfs_ifork_zap_attr check that the caller has
already called xfs_idestroy_fork, which clearly has not been done here.
As the zap function then zeroes the pointers, we've effectively leaked
the memory.

The shortest change would have been to insert an extra call to
xfs_idestroy_fork, but it makes more sense to bundle the _idestroy_fork
call into _zap_attr, since all other callsites call _idestroy_fork
immediately prior to calling _zap_attr. IOWs, it eliminates one way to
fail.

Note: This change only applies cleanly to 2ed5b09b3e8f, since we just
reworked the attr fork lifetime. However, I think this memory leak has
existed since 0f45a1b20cd8, since the chain xfs_iformat_attr_fork ->
xfs_iformat_local -> xfs_init_local_fork will allocate
ifp->if_u1.if_data, but if xfs_ifork_verify_local_attr fails,
xfs_iformat_attr_fork will free i_afp without freeing any of the stuff
hanging off i_afp. The solution for older kernels I think is to add the
missing call to xfs_idestroy_fork just prior to calling kmem_cache_free.

Found by fuzzing a.sfattr.hdr.totsize = lastbit in xfs/399.

Fixes: 2ed5b09b3e8f ("xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode")
Probably-Fixes: 0f45a1b20cd8 ("xfs: improve local fork verification")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff c78c2d09 Tue Jul 19 10:14:55 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: don't leak memory when attr fork loading fails

I observed the following evidence of a memory leak while running xfs/399
from the xfs fsck test suite (edited for brevity):

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_attr_shortform_verify_struct.part.0+0x7b/0xb0 [xfs], inode 0x1172 attr fork
XFS: Assertion failed: ip->i_af.if_u1.if_data == NULL, file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c, line: 315
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 2 PID: 91635 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
CPU: 2 PID: 91635 Comm: xfs_scrub Tainted: G W 5.19.0-rc7-xfsx #rc7 6e6475eb29fd9dda3181f81b7ca7ff961d277a40
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.15.0-1 04/01/2014
RIP: 0010:assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_ifork_zap_attr+0x7c/0xb0
xfs_iformat_attr_fork+0x86/0x110
xfs_inode_from_disk+0x41d/0x480
xfs_iget+0x389/0xd70
xfs_bulkstat_one_int+0x5b/0x540
xfs_bulkstat_iwalk+0x1e/0x30
xfs_iwalk_ag_recs+0xd1/0x160
xfs_iwalk_run_callbacks+0xb9/0x180
xfs_iwalk_ag+0x1d8/0x2e0
xfs_iwalk+0x141/0x220
xfs_bulkstat+0x105/0x180
xfs_ioc_bulkstat.constprop.0.isra.0+0xc5/0x130
xfs_file_ioctl+0xa5f/0xef0
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

This newly-added assertion checks that there aren't any incore data
structures hanging off the incore fork when we're trying to reset its
contents. From the call trace, it is evident that iget was trying to
construct an incore inode from the ondisk inode, but the attr fork
verifier failed and we were trying to undo all the memory allocations
that we had done earlier.

The three assertions in xfs_ifork_zap_attr check that the caller has
already called xfs_idestroy_fork, which clearly has not been done here.
As the zap function then zeroes the pointers, we've effectively leaked
the memory.

The shortest change would have been to insert an extra call to
xfs_idestroy_fork, but it makes more sense to bundle the _idestroy_fork
call into _zap_attr, since all other callsites call _idestroy_fork
immediately prior to calling _zap_attr. IOWs, it eliminates one way to
fail.

Note: This change only applies cleanly to 2ed5b09b3e8f, since we just
reworked the attr fork lifetime. However, I think this memory leak has
existed since 0f45a1b20cd8, since the chain xfs_iformat_attr_fork ->
xfs_iformat_local -> xfs_init_local_fork will allocate
ifp->if_u1.if_data, but if xfs_ifork_verify_local_attr fails,
xfs_iformat_attr_fork will free i_afp without freeing any of the stuff
hanging off i_afp. The solution for older kernels I think is to add the
missing call to xfs_idestroy_fork just prior to calling kmem_cache_free.

Found by fuzzing a.sfattr.hdr.totsize = lastbit in xfs/399.

Fixes: 2ed5b09b3e8f ("xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode")
Probably-Fixes: 0f45a1b20cd8 ("xfs: improve local fork verification")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff c78c2d09 Tue Jul 19 10:14:55 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: don't leak memory when attr fork loading fails

I observed the following evidence of a memory leak while running xfs/399
from the xfs fsck test suite (edited for brevity):

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_attr_shortform_verify_struct.part.0+0x7b/0xb0 [xfs], inode 0x1172 attr fork
XFS: Assertion failed: ip->i_af.if_u1.if_data == NULL, file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c, line: 315
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 2 PID: 91635 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
CPU: 2 PID: 91635 Comm: xfs_scrub Tainted: G W 5.19.0-rc7-xfsx #rc7 6e6475eb29fd9dda3181f81b7ca7ff961d277a40
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.15.0-1 04/01/2014
RIP: 0010:assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_ifork_zap_attr+0x7c/0xb0
xfs_iformat_attr_fork+0x86/0x110
xfs_inode_from_disk+0x41d/0x480
xfs_iget+0x389/0xd70
xfs_bulkstat_one_int+0x5b/0x540
xfs_bulkstat_iwalk+0x1e/0x30
xfs_iwalk_ag_recs+0xd1/0x160
xfs_iwalk_run_callbacks+0xb9/0x180
xfs_iwalk_ag+0x1d8/0x2e0
xfs_iwalk+0x141/0x220
xfs_bulkstat+0x105/0x180
xfs_ioc_bulkstat.constprop.0.isra.0+0xc5/0x130
xfs_file_ioctl+0xa5f/0xef0
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

This newly-added assertion checks that there aren't any incore data
structures hanging off the incore fork when we're trying to reset its
contents. From the call trace, it is evident that iget was trying to
construct an incore inode from the ondisk inode, but the attr fork
verifier failed and we were trying to undo all the memory allocations
that we had done earlier.

The three assertions in xfs_ifork_zap_attr check that the caller has
already called xfs_idestroy_fork, which clearly has not been done here.
As the zap function then zeroes the pointers, we've effectively leaked
the memory.

The shortest change would have been to insert an extra call to
xfs_idestroy_fork, but it makes more sense to bundle the _idestroy_fork
call into _zap_attr, since all other callsites call _idestroy_fork
immediately prior to calling _zap_attr. IOWs, it eliminates one way to
fail.

Note: This change only applies cleanly to 2ed5b09b3e8f, since we just
reworked the attr fork lifetime. However, I think this memory leak has
existed since 0f45a1b20cd8, since the chain xfs_iformat_attr_fork ->
xfs_iformat_local -> xfs_init_local_fork will allocate
ifp->if_u1.if_data, but if xfs_ifork_verify_local_attr fails,
xfs_iformat_attr_fork will free i_afp without freeing any of the stuff
hanging off i_afp. The solution for older kernels I think is to add the
missing call to xfs_idestroy_fork just prior to calling kmem_cache_free.

Found by fuzzing a.sfattr.hdr.totsize = lastbit in xfs/399.

Fixes: 2ed5b09b3e8f ("xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode")
Probably-Fixes: 0f45a1b20cd8 ("xfs: improve local fork verification")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff c78c2d09 Tue Jul 19 10:14:55 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: don't leak memory when attr fork loading fails

I observed the following evidence of a memory leak while running xfs/399
from the xfs fsck test suite (edited for brevity):

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_attr_shortform_verify_struct.part.0+0x7b/0xb0 [xfs], inode 0x1172 attr fork
XFS: Assertion failed: ip->i_af.if_u1.if_data == NULL, file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c, line: 315
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 2 PID: 91635 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
CPU: 2 PID: 91635 Comm: xfs_scrub Tainted: G W 5.19.0-rc7-xfsx #rc7 6e6475eb29fd9dda3181f81b7ca7ff961d277a40
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.15.0-1 04/01/2014
RIP: 0010:assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_ifork_zap_attr+0x7c/0xb0
xfs_iformat_attr_fork+0x86/0x110
xfs_inode_from_disk+0x41d/0x480
xfs_iget+0x389/0xd70
xfs_bulkstat_one_int+0x5b/0x540
xfs_bulkstat_iwalk+0x1e/0x30
xfs_iwalk_ag_recs+0xd1/0x160
xfs_iwalk_run_callbacks+0xb9/0x180
xfs_iwalk_ag+0x1d8/0x2e0
xfs_iwalk+0x141/0x220
xfs_bulkstat+0x105/0x180
xfs_ioc_bulkstat.constprop.0.isra.0+0xc5/0x130
xfs_file_ioctl+0xa5f/0xef0
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

This newly-added assertion checks that there aren't any incore data
structures hanging off the incore fork when we're trying to reset its
contents. From the call trace, it is evident that iget was trying to
construct an incore inode from the ondisk inode, but the attr fork
verifier failed and we were trying to undo all the memory allocations
that we had done earlier.

The three assertions in xfs_ifork_zap_attr check that the caller has
already called xfs_idestroy_fork, which clearly has not been done here.
As the zap function then zeroes the pointers, we've effectively leaked
the memory.

The shortest change would have been to insert an extra call to
xfs_idestroy_fork, but it makes more sense to bundle the _idestroy_fork
call into _zap_attr, since all other callsites call _idestroy_fork
immediately prior to calling _zap_attr. IOWs, it eliminates one way to
fail.

Note: This change only applies cleanly to 2ed5b09b3e8f, since we just
reworked the attr fork lifetime. However, I think this memory leak has
existed since 0f45a1b20cd8, since the chain xfs_iformat_attr_fork ->
xfs_iformat_local -> xfs_init_local_fork will allocate
ifp->if_u1.if_data, but if xfs_ifork_verify_local_attr fails,
xfs_iformat_attr_fork will free i_afp without freeing any of the stuff
hanging off i_afp. The solution for older kernels I think is to add the
missing call to xfs_idestroy_fork just prior to calling kmem_cache_free.

Found by fuzzing a.sfattr.hdr.totsize = lastbit in xfs/399.

Fixes: 2ed5b09b3e8f ("xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode")
Probably-Fixes: 0f45a1b20cd8 ("xfs: improve local fork verification")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff c78c2d09 Tue Jul 19 10:14:55 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: don't leak memory when attr fork loading fails

I observed the following evidence of a memory leak while running xfs/399
from the xfs fsck test suite (edited for brevity):

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_attr_shortform_verify_struct.part.0+0x7b/0xb0 [xfs], inode 0x1172 attr fork
XFS: Assertion failed: ip->i_af.if_u1.if_data == NULL, file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c, line: 315
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 2 PID: 91635 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
CPU: 2 PID: 91635 Comm: xfs_scrub Tainted: G W 5.19.0-rc7-xfsx #rc7 6e6475eb29fd9dda3181f81b7ca7ff961d277a40
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.15.0-1 04/01/2014
RIP: 0010:assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_ifork_zap_attr+0x7c/0xb0
xfs_iformat_attr_fork+0x86/0x110
xfs_inode_from_disk+0x41d/0x480
xfs_iget+0x389/0xd70
xfs_bulkstat_one_int+0x5b/0x540
xfs_bulkstat_iwalk+0x1e/0x30
xfs_iwalk_ag_recs+0xd1/0x160
xfs_iwalk_run_callbacks+0xb9/0x180
xfs_iwalk_ag+0x1d8/0x2e0
xfs_iwalk+0x141/0x220
xfs_bulkstat+0x105/0x180
xfs_ioc_bulkstat.constprop.0.isra.0+0xc5/0x130
xfs_file_ioctl+0xa5f/0xef0
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

This newly-added assertion checks that there aren't any incore data
structures hanging off the incore fork when we're trying to reset its
contents. From the call trace, it is evident that iget was trying to
construct an incore inode from the ondisk inode, but the attr fork
verifier failed and we were trying to undo all the memory allocations
that we had done earlier.

The three assertions in xfs_ifork_zap_attr check that the caller has
already called xfs_idestroy_fork, which clearly has not been done here.
As the zap function then zeroes the pointers, we've effectively leaked
the memory.

The shortest change would have been to insert an extra call to
xfs_idestroy_fork, but it makes more sense to bundle the _idestroy_fork
call into _zap_attr, since all other callsites call _idestroy_fork
immediately prior to calling _zap_attr. IOWs, it eliminates one way to
fail.

Note: This change only applies cleanly to 2ed5b09b3e8f, since we just
reworked the attr fork lifetime. However, I think this memory leak has
existed since 0f45a1b20cd8, since the chain xfs_iformat_attr_fork ->
xfs_iformat_local -> xfs_init_local_fork will allocate
ifp->if_u1.if_data, but if xfs_ifork_verify_local_attr fails,
xfs_iformat_attr_fork will free i_afp without freeing any of the stuff
hanging off i_afp. The solution for older kernels I think is to add the
missing call to xfs_idestroy_fork just prior to calling kmem_cache_free.

Found by fuzzing a.sfattr.hdr.totsize = lastbit in xfs/399.

Fixes: 2ed5b09b3e8f ("xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode")
Probably-Fixes: 0f45a1b20cd8 ("xfs: improve local fork verification")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff c78c2d09 Tue Jul 19 10:14:55 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: don't leak memory when attr fork loading fails

I observed the following evidence of a memory leak while running xfs/399
from the xfs fsck test suite (edited for brevity):

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_attr_shortform_verify_struct.part.0+0x7b/0xb0 [xfs], inode 0x1172 attr fork
XFS: Assertion failed: ip->i_af.if_u1.if_data == NULL, file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c, line: 315
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 2 PID: 91635 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
CPU: 2 PID: 91635 Comm: xfs_scrub Tainted: G W 5.19.0-rc7-xfsx #rc7 6e6475eb29fd9dda3181f81b7ca7ff961d277a40
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.15.0-1 04/01/2014
RIP: 0010:assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_ifork_zap_attr+0x7c/0xb0
xfs_iformat_attr_fork+0x86/0x110
xfs_inode_from_disk+0x41d/0x480
xfs_iget+0x389/0xd70
xfs_bulkstat_one_int+0x5b/0x540
xfs_bulkstat_iwalk+0x1e/0x30
xfs_iwalk_ag_recs+0xd1/0x160
xfs_iwalk_run_callbacks+0xb9/0x180
xfs_iwalk_ag+0x1d8/0x2e0
xfs_iwalk+0x141/0x220
xfs_bulkstat+0x105/0x180
xfs_ioc_bulkstat.constprop.0.isra.0+0xc5/0x130
xfs_file_ioctl+0xa5f/0xef0
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

This newly-added assertion checks that there aren't any incore data
structures hanging off the incore fork when we're trying to reset its
contents. From the call trace, it is evident that iget was trying to
construct an incore inode from the ondisk inode, but the attr fork
verifier failed and we were trying to undo all the memory allocations
that we had done earlier.

The three assertions in xfs_ifork_zap_attr check that the caller has
already called xfs_idestroy_fork, which clearly has not been done here.
As the zap function then zeroes the pointers, we've effectively leaked
the memory.

The shortest change would have been to insert an extra call to
xfs_idestroy_fork, but it makes more sense to bundle the _idestroy_fork
call into _zap_attr, since all other callsites call _idestroy_fork
immediately prior to calling _zap_attr. IOWs, it eliminates one way to
fail.

Note: This change only applies cleanly to 2ed5b09b3e8f, since we just
reworked the attr fork lifetime. However, I think this memory leak has
existed since 0f45a1b20cd8, since the chain xfs_iformat_attr_fork ->
xfs_iformat_local -> xfs_init_local_fork will allocate
ifp->if_u1.if_data, but if xfs_ifork_verify_local_attr fails,
xfs_iformat_attr_fork will free i_afp without freeing any of the stuff
hanging off i_afp. The solution for older kernels I think is to add the
missing call to xfs_idestroy_fork just prior to calling kmem_cache_free.

Found by fuzzing a.sfattr.hdr.totsize = lastbit in xfs/399.

Fixes: 2ed5b09b3e8f ("xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode")
Probably-Fixes: 0f45a1b20cd8 ("xfs: improve local fork verification")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff c78c2d09 Tue Jul 19 10:14:55 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: don't leak memory when attr fork loading fails

I observed the following evidence of a memory leak while running xfs/399
from the xfs fsck test suite (edited for brevity):

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_attr_shortform_verify_struct.part.0+0x7b/0xb0 [xfs], inode 0x1172 attr fork
XFS: Assertion failed: ip->i_af.if_u1.if_data == NULL, file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c, line: 315
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 2 PID: 91635 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
CPU: 2 PID: 91635 Comm: xfs_scrub Tainted: G W 5.19.0-rc7-xfsx #rc7 6e6475eb29fd9dda3181f81b7ca7ff961d277a40
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.15.0-1 04/01/2014
RIP: 0010:assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_ifork_zap_attr+0x7c/0xb0
xfs_iformat_attr_fork+0x86/0x110
xfs_inode_from_disk+0x41d/0x480
xfs_iget+0x389/0xd70
xfs_bulkstat_one_int+0x5b/0x540
xfs_bulkstat_iwalk+0x1e/0x30
xfs_iwalk_ag_recs+0xd1/0x160
xfs_iwalk_run_callbacks+0xb9/0x180
xfs_iwalk_ag+0x1d8/0x2e0
xfs_iwalk+0x141/0x220
xfs_bulkstat+0x105/0x180
xfs_ioc_bulkstat.constprop.0.isra.0+0xc5/0x130
xfs_file_ioctl+0xa5f/0xef0
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

This newly-added assertion checks that there aren't any incore data
structures hanging off the incore fork when we're trying to reset its
contents. From the call trace, it is evident that iget was trying to
construct an incore inode from the ondisk inode, but the attr fork
verifier failed and we were trying to undo all the memory allocations
that we had done earlier.

The three assertions in xfs_ifork_zap_attr check that the caller has
already called xfs_idestroy_fork, which clearly has not been done here.
As the zap function then zeroes the pointers, we've effectively leaked
the memory.

The shortest change would have been to insert an extra call to
xfs_idestroy_fork, but it makes more sense to bundle the _idestroy_fork
call into _zap_attr, since all other callsites call _idestroy_fork
immediately prior to calling _zap_attr. IOWs, it eliminates one way to
fail.

Note: This change only applies cleanly to 2ed5b09b3e8f, since we just
reworked the attr fork lifetime. However, I think this memory leak has
existed since 0f45a1b20cd8, since the chain xfs_iformat_attr_fork ->
xfs_iformat_local -> xfs_init_local_fork will allocate
ifp->if_u1.if_data, but if xfs_ifork_verify_local_attr fails,
xfs_iformat_attr_fork will free i_afp without freeing any of the stuff
hanging off i_afp. The solution for older kernels I think is to add the
missing call to xfs_idestroy_fork just prior to calling kmem_cache_free.

Found by fuzzing a.sfattr.hdr.totsize = lastbit in xfs/399.

Fixes: 2ed5b09b3e8f ("xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode")
Probably-Fixes: 0f45a1b20cd8 ("xfs: improve local fork verification")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff c78c2d09 Tue Jul 19 10:14:55 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: don't leak memory when attr fork loading fails

I observed the following evidence of a memory leak while running xfs/399
from the xfs fsck test suite (edited for brevity):

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_attr_shortform_verify_struct.part.0+0x7b/0xb0 [xfs], inode 0x1172 attr fork
XFS: Assertion failed: ip->i_af.if_u1.if_data == NULL, file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c, line: 315
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 2 PID: 91635 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
CPU: 2 PID: 91635 Comm: xfs_scrub Tainted: G W 5.19.0-rc7-xfsx #rc7 6e6475eb29fd9dda3181f81b7ca7ff961d277a40
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.15.0-1 04/01/2014
RIP: 0010:assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_ifork_zap_attr+0x7c/0xb0
xfs_iformat_attr_fork+0x86/0x110
xfs_inode_from_disk+0x41d/0x480
xfs_iget+0x389/0xd70
xfs_bulkstat_one_int+0x5b/0x540
xfs_bulkstat_iwalk+0x1e/0x30
xfs_iwalk_ag_recs+0xd1/0x160
xfs_iwalk_run_callbacks+0xb9/0x180
xfs_iwalk_ag+0x1d8/0x2e0
xfs_iwalk+0x141/0x220
xfs_bulkstat+0x105/0x180
xfs_ioc_bulkstat.constprop.0.isra.0+0xc5/0x130
xfs_file_ioctl+0xa5f/0xef0
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

This newly-added assertion checks that there aren't any incore data
structures hanging off the incore fork when we're trying to reset its
contents. From the call trace, it is evident that iget was trying to
construct an incore inode from the ondisk inode, but the attr fork
verifier failed and we were trying to undo all the memory allocations
that we had done earlier.

The three assertions in xfs_ifork_zap_attr check that the caller has
already called xfs_idestroy_fork, which clearly has not been done here.
As the zap function then zeroes the pointers, we've effectively leaked
the memory.

The shortest change would have been to insert an extra call to
xfs_idestroy_fork, but it makes more sense to bundle the _idestroy_fork
call into _zap_attr, since all other callsites call _idestroy_fork
immediately prior to calling _zap_attr. IOWs, it eliminates one way to
fail.

Note: This change only applies cleanly to 2ed5b09b3e8f, since we just
reworked the attr fork lifetime. However, I think this memory leak has
existed since 0f45a1b20cd8, since the chain xfs_iformat_attr_fork ->
xfs_iformat_local -> xfs_init_local_fork will allocate
ifp->if_u1.if_data, but if xfs_ifork_verify_local_attr fails,
xfs_iformat_attr_fork will free i_afp without freeing any of the stuff
hanging off i_afp. The solution for older kernels I think is to add the
missing call to xfs_idestroy_fork just prior to calling kmem_cache_free.

Found by fuzzing a.sfattr.hdr.totsize = lastbit in xfs/399.

Fixes: 2ed5b09b3e8f ("xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode")
Probably-Fixes: 0f45a1b20cd8 ("xfs: improve local fork verification")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff c78c2d09 Tue Jul 19 10:14:55 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: don't leak memory when attr fork loading fails

I observed the following evidence of a memory leak while running xfs/399
from the xfs fsck test suite (edited for brevity):

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_attr_shortform_verify_struct.part.0+0x7b/0xb0 [xfs], inode 0x1172 attr fork
XFS: Assertion failed: ip->i_af.if_u1.if_data == NULL, file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c, line: 315
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 2 PID: 91635 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
CPU: 2 PID: 91635 Comm: xfs_scrub Tainted: G W 5.19.0-rc7-xfsx #rc7 6e6475eb29fd9dda3181f81b7ca7ff961d277a40
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.15.0-1 04/01/2014
RIP: 0010:assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_ifork_zap_attr+0x7c/0xb0
xfs_iformat_attr_fork+0x86/0x110
xfs_inode_from_disk+0x41d/0x480
xfs_iget+0x389/0xd70
xfs_bulkstat_one_int+0x5b/0x540
xfs_bulkstat_iwalk+0x1e/0x30
xfs_iwalk_ag_recs+0xd1/0x160
xfs_iwalk_run_callbacks+0xb9/0x180
xfs_iwalk_ag+0x1d8/0x2e0
xfs_iwalk+0x141/0x220
xfs_bulkstat+0x105/0x180
xfs_ioc_bulkstat.constprop.0.isra.0+0xc5/0x130
xfs_file_ioctl+0xa5f/0xef0
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

This newly-added assertion checks that there aren't any incore data
structures hanging off the incore fork when we're trying to reset its
contents. From the call trace, it is evident that iget was trying to
construct an incore inode from the ondisk inode, but the attr fork
verifier failed and we were trying to undo all the memory allocations
that we had done earlier.

The three assertions in xfs_ifork_zap_attr check that the caller has
already called xfs_idestroy_fork, which clearly has not been done here.
As the zap function then zeroes the pointers, we've effectively leaked
the memory.

The shortest change would have been to insert an extra call to
xfs_idestroy_fork, but it makes more sense to bundle the _idestroy_fork
call into _zap_attr, since all other callsites call _idestroy_fork
immediately prior to calling _zap_attr. IOWs, it eliminates one way to
fail.

Note: This change only applies cleanly to 2ed5b09b3e8f, since we just
reworked the attr fork lifetime. However, I think this memory leak has
existed since 0f45a1b20cd8, since the chain xfs_iformat_attr_fork ->
xfs_iformat_local -> xfs_init_local_fork will allocate
ifp->if_u1.if_data, but if xfs_ifork_verify_local_attr fails,
xfs_iformat_attr_fork will free i_afp without freeing any of the stuff
hanging off i_afp. The solution for older kernels I think is to add the
missing call to xfs_idestroy_fork just prior to calling kmem_cache_free.

Found by fuzzing a.sfattr.hdr.totsize = lastbit in xfs/399.

Fixes: 2ed5b09b3e8f ("xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode")
Probably-Fixes: 0f45a1b20cd8 ("xfs: improve local fork verification")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff c78c2d09 Tue Jul 19 10:14:55 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: don't leak memory when attr fork loading fails

I observed the following evidence of a memory leak while running xfs/399
from the xfs fsck test suite (edited for brevity):

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_attr_shortform_verify_struct.part.0+0x7b/0xb0 [xfs], inode 0x1172 attr fork
XFS: Assertion failed: ip->i_af.if_u1.if_data == NULL, file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c, line: 315
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 2 PID: 91635 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
CPU: 2 PID: 91635 Comm: xfs_scrub Tainted: G W 5.19.0-rc7-xfsx #rc7 6e6475eb29fd9dda3181f81b7ca7ff961d277a40
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.15.0-1 04/01/2014
RIP: 0010:assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_ifork_zap_attr+0x7c/0xb0
xfs_iformat_attr_fork+0x86/0x110
xfs_inode_from_disk+0x41d/0x480
xfs_iget+0x389/0xd70
xfs_bulkstat_one_int+0x5b/0x540
xfs_bulkstat_iwalk+0x1e/0x30
xfs_iwalk_ag_recs+0xd1/0x160
xfs_iwalk_run_callbacks+0xb9/0x180
xfs_iwalk_ag+0x1d8/0x2e0
xfs_iwalk+0x141/0x220
xfs_bulkstat+0x105/0x180
xfs_ioc_bulkstat.constprop.0.isra.0+0xc5/0x130
xfs_file_ioctl+0xa5f/0xef0
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

This newly-added assertion checks that there aren't any incore data
structures hanging off the incore fork when we're trying to reset its
contents. From the call trace, it is evident that iget was trying to
construct an incore inode from the ondisk inode, but the attr fork
verifier failed and we were trying to undo all the memory allocations
that we had done earlier.

The three assertions in xfs_ifork_zap_attr check that the caller has
already called xfs_idestroy_fork, which clearly has not been done here.
As the zap function then zeroes the pointers, we've effectively leaked
the memory.

The shortest change would have been to insert an extra call to
xfs_idestroy_fork, but it makes more sense to bundle the _idestroy_fork
call into _zap_attr, since all other callsites call _idestroy_fork
immediately prior to calling _zap_attr. IOWs, it eliminates one way to
fail.

Note: This change only applies cleanly to 2ed5b09b3e8f, since we just
reworked the attr fork lifetime. However, I think this memory leak has
existed since 0f45a1b20cd8, since the chain xfs_iformat_attr_fork ->
xfs_iformat_local -> xfs_init_local_fork will allocate
ifp->if_u1.if_data, but if xfs_ifork_verify_local_attr fails,
xfs_iformat_attr_fork will free i_afp without freeing any of the stuff
hanging off i_afp. The solution for older kernels I think is to add the
missing call to xfs_idestroy_fork just prior to calling kmem_cache_free.

Found by fuzzing a.sfattr.hdr.totsize = lastbit in xfs/399.

Fixes: 2ed5b09b3e8f ("xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode")
Probably-Fixes: 0f45a1b20cd8 ("xfs: improve local fork verification")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff c78c2d09 Tue Jul 19 10:14:55 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: don't leak memory when attr fork loading fails

I observed the following evidence of a memory leak while running xfs/399
from the xfs fsck test suite (edited for brevity):

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_attr_shortform_verify_struct.part.0+0x7b/0xb0 [xfs], inode 0x1172 attr fork
XFS: Assertion failed: ip->i_af.if_u1.if_data == NULL, file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c, line: 315
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 2 PID: 91635 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
CPU: 2 PID: 91635 Comm: xfs_scrub Tainted: G W 5.19.0-rc7-xfsx #rc7 6e6475eb29fd9dda3181f81b7ca7ff961d277a40
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.15.0-1 04/01/2014
RIP: 0010:assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_ifork_zap_attr+0x7c/0xb0
xfs_iformat_attr_fork+0x86/0x110
xfs_inode_from_disk+0x41d/0x480
xfs_iget+0x389/0xd70
xfs_bulkstat_one_int+0x5b/0x540
xfs_bulkstat_iwalk+0x1e/0x30
xfs_iwalk_ag_recs+0xd1/0x160
xfs_iwalk_run_callbacks+0xb9/0x180
xfs_iwalk_ag+0x1d8/0x2e0
xfs_iwalk+0x141/0x220
xfs_bulkstat+0x105/0x180
xfs_ioc_bulkstat.constprop.0.isra.0+0xc5/0x130
xfs_file_ioctl+0xa5f/0xef0
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

This newly-added assertion checks that there aren't any incore data
structures hanging off the incore fork when we're trying to reset its
contents. From the call trace, it is evident that iget was trying to
construct an incore inode from the ondisk inode, but the attr fork
verifier failed and we were trying to undo all the memory allocations
that we had done earlier.

The three assertions in xfs_ifork_zap_attr check that the caller has
already called xfs_idestroy_fork, which clearly has not been done here.
As the zap function then zeroes the pointers, we've effectively leaked
the memory.

The shortest change would have been to insert an extra call to
xfs_idestroy_fork, but it makes more sense to bundle the _idestroy_fork
call into _zap_attr, since all other callsites call _idestroy_fork
immediately prior to calling _zap_attr. IOWs, it eliminates one way to
fail.

Note: This change only applies cleanly to 2ed5b09b3e8f, since we just
reworked the attr fork lifetime. However, I think this memory leak has
existed since 0f45a1b20cd8, since the chain xfs_iformat_attr_fork ->
xfs_iformat_local -> xfs_init_local_fork will allocate
ifp->if_u1.if_data, but if xfs_ifork_verify_local_attr fails,
xfs_iformat_attr_fork will free i_afp without freeing any of the stuff
hanging off i_afp. The solution for older kernels I think is to add the
missing call to xfs_idestroy_fork just prior to calling kmem_cache_free.

Found by fuzzing a.sfattr.hdr.totsize = lastbit in xfs/399.

Fixes: 2ed5b09b3e8f ("xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode")
Probably-Fixes: 0f45a1b20cd8 ("xfs: improve local fork verification")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff c78c2d09 Tue Jul 19 10:14:55 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: don't leak memory when attr fork loading fails

I observed the following evidence of a memory leak while running xfs/399
from the xfs fsck test suite (edited for brevity):

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_attr_shortform_verify_struct.part.0+0x7b/0xb0 [xfs], inode 0x1172 attr fork
XFS: Assertion failed: ip->i_af.if_u1.if_data == NULL, file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c, line: 315
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 2 PID: 91635 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
CPU: 2 PID: 91635 Comm: xfs_scrub Tainted: G W 5.19.0-rc7-xfsx #rc7 6e6475eb29fd9dda3181f81b7ca7ff961d277a40
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.15.0-1 04/01/2014
RIP: 0010:assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_ifork_zap_attr+0x7c/0xb0
xfs_iformat_attr_fork+0x86/0x110
xfs_inode_from_disk+0x41d/0x480
xfs_iget+0x389/0xd70
xfs_bulkstat_one_int+0x5b/0x540
xfs_bulkstat_iwalk+0x1e/0x30
xfs_iwalk_ag_recs+0xd1/0x160
xfs_iwalk_run_callbacks+0xb9/0x180
xfs_iwalk_ag+0x1d8/0x2e0
xfs_iwalk+0x141/0x220
xfs_bulkstat+0x105/0x180
xfs_ioc_bulkstat.constprop.0.isra.0+0xc5/0x130
xfs_file_ioctl+0xa5f/0xef0
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

This newly-added assertion checks that there aren't any incore data
structures hanging off the incore fork when we're trying to reset its
contents. From the call trace, it is evident that iget was trying to
construct an incore inode from the ondisk inode, but the attr fork
verifier failed and we were trying to undo all the memory allocations
that we had done earlier.

The three assertions in xfs_ifork_zap_attr check that the caller has
already called xfs_idestroy_fork, which clearly has not been done here.
As the zap function then zeroes the pointers, we've effectively leaked
the memory.

The shortest change would have been to insert an extra call to
xfs_idestroy_fork, but it makes more sense to bundle the _idestroy_fork
call into _zap_attr, since all other callsites call _idestroy_fork
immediately prior to calling _zap_attr. IOWs, it eliminates one way to
fail.

Note: This change only applies cleanly to 2ed5b09b3e8f, since we just
reworked the attr fork lifetime. However, I think this memory leak has
existed since 0f45a1b20cd8, since the chain xfs_iformat_attr_fork ->
xfs_iformat_local -> xfs_init_local_fork will allocate
ifp->if_u1.if_data, but if xfs_ifork_verify_local_attr fails,
xfs_iformat_attr_fork will free i_afp without freeing any of the stuff
hanging off i_afp. The solution for older kernels I think is to add the
missing call to xfs_idestroy_fork just prior to calling kmem_cache_free.

Found by fuzzing a.sfattr.hdr.totsize = lastbit in xfs/399.

Fixes: 2ed5b09b3e8f ("xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode")
Probably-Fixes: 0f45a1b20cd8 ("xfs: improve local fork verification")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff c78c2d09 Tue Jul 19 10:14:55 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: don't leak memory when attr fork loading fails

I observed the following evidence of a memory leak while running xfs/399
from the xfs fsck test suite (edited for brevity):

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_attr_shortform_verify_struct.part.0+0x7b/0xb0 [xfs], inode 0x1172 attr fork
XFS: Assertion failed: ip->i_af.if_u1.if_data == NULL, file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c, line: 315
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 2 PID: 91635 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
CPU: 2 PID: 91635 Comm: xfs_scrub Tainted: G W 5.19.0-rc7-xfsx #rc7 6e6475eb29fd9dda3181f81b7ca7ff961d277a40
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.15.0-1 04/01/2014
RIP: 0010:assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_ifork_zap_attr+0x7c/0xb0
xfs_iformat_attr_fork+0x86/0x110
xfs_inode_from_disk+0x41d/0x480
xfs_iget+0x389/0xd70
xfs_bulkstat_one_int+0x5b/0x540
xfs_bulkstat_iwalk+0x1e/0x30
xfs_iwalk_ag_recs+0xd1/0x160
xfs_iwalk_run_callbacks+0xb9/0x180
xfs_iwalk_ag+0x1d8/0x2e0
xfs_iwalk+0x141/0x220
xfs_bulkstat+0x105/0x180
xfs_ioc_bulkstat.constprop.0.isra.0+0xc5/0x130
xfs_file_ioctl+0xa5f/0xef0
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

This newly-added assertion checks that there aren't any incore data
structures hanging off the incore fork when we're trying to reset its
contents. From the call trace, it is evident that iget was trying to
construct an incore inode from the ondisk inode, but the attr fork
verifier failed and we were trying to undo all the memory allocations
that we had done earlier.

The three assertions in xfs_ifork_zap_attr check that the caller has
already called xfs_idestroy_fork, which clearly has not been done here.
As the zap function then zeroes the pointers, we've effectively leaked
the memory.

The shortest change would have been to insert an extra call to
xfs_idestroy_fork, but it makes more sense to bundle the _idestroy_fork
call into _zap_attr, since all other callsites call _idestroy_fork
immediately prior to calling _zap_attr. IOWs, it eliminates one way to
fail.

Note: This change only applies cleanly to 2ed5b09b3e8f, since we just
reworked the attr fork lifetime. However, I think this memory leak has
existed since 0f45a1b20cd8, since the chain xfs_iformat_attr_fork ->
xfs_iformat_local -> xfs_init_local_fork will allocate
ifp->if_u1.if_data, but if xfs_ifork_verify_local_attr fails,
xfs_iformat_attr_fork will free i_afp without freeing any of the stuff
hanging off i_afp. The solution for older kernels I think is to add the
missing call to xfs_idestroy_fork just prior to calling kmem_cache_free.

Found by fuzzing a.sfattr.hdr.totsize = lastbit in xfs/399.

Fixes: 2ed5b09b3e8f ("xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode")
Probably-Fixes: 0f45a1b20cd8 ("xfs: improve local fork verification")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff c78c2d09 Tue Jul 19 10:14:55 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: don't leak memory when attr fork loading fails

I observed the following evidence of a memory leak while running xfs/399
from the xfs fsck test suite (edited for brevity):

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_attr_shortform_verify_struct.part.0+0x7b/0xb0 [xfs], inode 0x1172 attr fork
XFS: Assertion failed: ip->i_af.if_u1.if_data == NULL, file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c, line: 315
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 2 PID: 91635 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
CPU: 2 PID: 91635 Comm: xfs_scrub Tainted: G W 5.19.0-rc7-xfsx #rc7 6e6475eb29fd9dda3181f81b7ca7ff961d277a40
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.15.0-1 04/01/2014
RIP: 0010:assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_ifork_zap_attr+0x7c/0xb0
xfs_iformat_attr_fork+0x86/0x110
xfs_inode_from_disk+0x41d/0x480
xfs_iget+0x389/0xd70
xfs_bulkstat_one_int+0x5b/0x540
xfs_bulkstat_iwalk+0x1e/0x30
xfs_iwalk_ag_recs+0xd1/0x160
xfs_iwalk_run_callbacks+0xb9/0x180
xfs_iwalk_ag+0x1d8/0x2e0
xfs_iwalk+0x141/0x220
xfs_bulkstat+0x105/0x180
xfs_ioc_bulkstat.constprop.0.isra.0+0xc5/0x130
xfs_file_ioctl+0xa5f/0xef0
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

This newly-added assertion checks that there aren't any incore data
structures hanging off the incore fork when we're trying to reset its
contents. From the call trace, it is evident that iget was trying to
construct an incore inode from the ondisk inode, but the attr fork
verifier failed and we were trying to undo all the memory allocations
that we had done earlier.

The three assertions in xfs_ifork_zap_attr check that the caller has
already called xfs_idestroy_fork, which clearly has not been done here.
As the zap function then zeroes the pointers, we've effectively leaked
the memory.

The shortest change would have been to insert an extra call to
xfs_idestroy_fork, but it makes more sense to bundle the _idestroy_fork
call into _zap_attr, since all other callsites call _idestroy_fork
immediately prior to calling _zap_attr. IOWs, it eliminates one way to
fail.

Note: This change only applies cleanly to 2ed5b09b3e8f, since we just
reworked the attr fork lifetime. However, I think this memory leak has
existed since 0f45a1b20cd8, since the chain xfs_iformat_attr_fork ->
xfs_iformat_local -> xfs_init_local_fork will allocate
ifp->if_u1.if_data, but if xfs_ifork_verify_local_attr fails,
xfs_iformat_attr_fork will free i_afp without freeing any of the stuff
hanging off i_afp. The solution for older kernels I think is to add the
missing call to xfs_idestroy_fork just prior to calling kmem_cache_free.

Found by fuzzing a.sfattr.hdr.totsize = lastbit in xfs/399.

Fixes: 2ed5b09b3e8f ("xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode")
Probably-Fixes: 0f45a1b20cd8 ("xfs: improve local fork verification")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff c78c2d09 Tue Jul 19 10:14:55 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: don't leak memory when attr fork loading fails

I observed the following evidence of a memory leak while running xfs/399
from the xfs fsck test suite (edited for brevity):

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_attr_shortform_verify_struct.part.0+0x7b/0xb0 [xfs], inode 0x1172 attr fork
XFS: Assertion failed: ip->i_af.if_u1.if_data == NULL, file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c, line: 315
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 2 PID: 91635 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
CPU: 2 PID: 91635 Comm: xfs_scrub Tainted: G W 5.19.0-rc7-xfsx #rc7 6e6475eb29fd9dda3181f81b7ca7ff961d277a40
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.15.0-1 04/01/2014
RIP: 0010:assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_ifork_zap_attr+0x7c/0xb0
xfs_iformat_attr_fork+0x86/0x110
xfs_inode_from_disk+0x41d/0x480
xfs_iget+0x389/0xd70
xfs_bulkstat_one_int+0x5b/0x540
xfs_bulkstat_iwalk+0x1e/0x30
xfs_iwalk_ag_recs+0xd1/0x160
xfs_iwalk_run_callbacks+0xb9/0x180
xfs_iwalk_ag+0x1d8/0x2e0
xfs_iwalk+0x141/0x220
xfs_bulkstat+0x105/0x180
xfs_ioc_bulkstat.constprop.0.isra.0+0xc5/0x130
xfs_file_ioctl+0xa5f/0xef0
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

This newly-added assertion checks that there aren't any incore data
structures hanging off the incore fork when we're trying to reset its
contents. From the call trace, it is evident that iget was trying to
construct an incore inode from the ondisk inode, but the attr fork
verifier failed and we were trying to undo all the memory allocations
that we had done earlier.

The three assertions in xfs_ifork_zap_attr check that the caller has
already called xfs_idestroy_fork, which clearly has not been done here.
As the zap function then zeroes the pointers, we've effectively leaked
the memory.

The shortest change would have been to insert an extra call to
xfs_idestroy_fork, but it makes more sense to bundle the _idestroy_fork
call into _zap_attr, since all other callsites call _idestroy_fork
immediately prior to calling _zap_attr. IOWs, it eliminates one way to
fail.

Note: This change only applies cleanly to 2ed5b09b3e8f, since we just
reworked the attr fork lifetime. However, I think this memory leak has
existed since 0f45a1b20cd8, since the chain xfs_iformat_attr_fork ->
xfs_iformat_local -> xfs_init_local_fork will allocate
ifp->if_u1.if_data, but if xfs_ifork_verify_local_attr fails,
xfs_iformat_attr_fork will free i_afp without freeing any of the stuff
hanging off i_afp. The solution for older kernels I think is to add the
missing call to xfs_idestroy_fork just prior to calling kmem_cache_free.

Found by fuzzing a.sfattr.hdr.totsize = lastbit in xfs/399.

Fixes: 2ed5b09b3e8f ("xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode")
Probably-Fixes: 0f45a1b20cd8 ("xfs: improve local fork verification")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff c78c2d09 Tue Jul 19 10:14:55 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: don't leak memory when attr fork loading fails

I observed the following evidence of a memory leak while running xfs/399
from the xfs fsck test suite (edited for brevity):

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_attr_shortform_verify_struct.part.0+0x7b/0xb0 [xfs], inode 0x1172 attr fork
XFS: Assertion failed: ip->i_af.if_u1.if_data == NULL, file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c, line: 315
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 2 PID: 91635 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
CPU: 2 PID: 91635 Comm: xfs_scrub Tainted: G W 5.19.0-rc7-xfsx #rc7 6e6475eb29fd9dda3181f81b7ca7ff961d277a40
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.15.0-1 04/01/2014
RIP: 0010:assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_ifork_zap_attr+0x7c/0xb0
xfs_iformat_attr_fork+0x86/0x110
xfs_inode_from_disk+0x41d/0x480
xfs_iget+0x389/0xd70
xfs_bulkstat_one_int+0x5b/0x540
xfs_bulkstat_iwalk+0x1e/0x30
xfs_iwalk_ag_recs+0xd1/0x160
xfs_iwalk_run_callbacks+0xb9/0x180
xfs_iwalk_ag+0x1d8/0x2e0
xfs_iwalk+0x141/0x220
xfs_bulkstat+0x105/0x180
xfs_ioc_bulkstat.constprop.0.isra.0+0xc5/0x130
xfs_file_ioctl+0xa5f/0xef0
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

This newly-added assertion checks that there aren't any incore data
structures hanging off the incore fork when we're trying to reset its
contents. From the call trace, it is evident that iget was trying to
construct an incore inode from the ondisk inode, but the attr fork
verifier failed and we were trying to undo all the memory allocations
that we had done earlier.

The three assertions in xfs_ifork_zap_attr check that the caller has
already called xfs_idestroy_fork, which clearly has not been done here.
As the zap function then zeroes the pointers, we've effectively leaked
the memory.

The shortest change would have been to insert an extra call to
xfs_idestroy_fork, but it makes more sense to bundle the _idestroy_fork
call into _zap_attr, since all other callsites call _idestroy_fork
immediately prior to calling _zap_attr. IOWs, it eliminates one way to
fail.

Note: This change only applies cleanly to 2ed5b09b3e8f, since we just
reworked the attr fork lifetime. However, I think this memory leak has
existed since 0f45a1b20cd8, since the chain xfs_iformat_attr_fork ->
xfs_iformat_local -> xfs_init_local_fork will allocate
ifp->if_u1.if_data, but if xfs_ifork_verify_local_attr fails,
xfs_iformat_attr_fork will free i_afp without freeing any of the stuff
hanging off i_afp. The solution for older kernels I think is to add the
missing call to xfs_idestroy_fork just prior to calling kmem_cache_free.

Found by fuzzing a.sfattr.hdr.totsize = lastbit in xfs/399.

Fixes: 2ed5b09b3e8f ("xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode")
Probably-Fixes: 0f45a1b20cd8 ("xfs: improve local fork verification")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff c78c2d09 Tue Jul 19 10:14:55 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: don't leak memory when attr fork loading fails

I observed the following evidence of a memory leak while running xfs/399
from the xfs fsck test suite (edited for brevity):

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_attr_shortform_verify_struct.part.0+0x7b/0xb0 [xfs], inode 0x1172 attr fork
XFS: Assertion failed: ip->i_af.if_u1.if_data == NULL, file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c, line: 315
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 2 PID: 91635 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
CPU: 2 PID: 91635 Comm: xfs_scrub Tainted: G W 5.19.0-rc7-xfsx #rc7 6e6475eb29fd9dda3181f81b7ca7ff961d277a40
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.15.0-1 04/01/2014
RIP: 0010:assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_ifork_zap_attr+0x7c/0xb0
xfs_iformat_attr_fork+0x86/0x110
xfs_inode_from_disk+0x41d/0x480
xfs_iget+0x389/0xd70
xfs_bulkstat_one_int+0x5b/0x540
xfs_bulkstat_iwalk+0x1e/0x30
xfs_iwalk_ag_recs+0xd1/0x160
xfs_iwalk_run_callbacks+0xb9/0x180
xfs_iwalk_ag+0x1d8/0x2e0
xfs_iwalk+0x141/0x220
xfs_bulkstat+0x105/0x180
xfs_ioc_bulkstat.constprop.0.isra.0+0xc5/0x130
xfs_file_ioctl+0xa5f/0xef0
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

This newly-added assertion checks that there aren't any incore data
structures hanging off the incore fork when we're trying to reset its
contents. From the call trace, it is evident that iget was trying to
construct an incore inode from the ondisk inode, but the attr fork
verifier failed and we were trying to undo all the memory allocations
that we had done earlier.

The three assertions in xfs_ifork_zap_attr check that the caller has
already called xfs_idestroy_fork, which clearly has not been done here.
As the zap function then zeroes the pointers, we've effectively leaked
the memory.

The shortest change would have been to insert an extra call to
xfs_idestroy_fork, but it makes more sense to bundle the _idestroy_fork
call into _zap_attr, since all other callsites call _idestroy_fork
immediately prior to calling _zap_attr. IOWs, it eliminates one way to
fail.

Note: This change only applies cleanly to 2ed5b09b3e8f, since we just
reworked the attr fork lifetime. However, I think this memory leak has
existed since 0f45a1b20cd8, since the chain xfs_iformat_attr_fork ->
xfs_iformat_local -> xfs_init_local_fork will allocate
ifp->if_u1.if_data, but if xfs_ifork_verify_local_attr fails,
xfs_iformat_attr_fork will free i_afp without freeing any of the stuff
hanging off i_afp. The solution for older kernels I think is to add the
missing call to xfs_idestroy_fork just prior to calling kmem_cache_free.

Found by fuzzing a.sfattr.hdr.totsize = lastbit in xfs/399.

Fixes: 2ed5b09b3e8f ("xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode")
Probably-Fixes: 0f45a1b20cd8 ("xfs: improve local fork verification")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff c78c2d09 Tue Jul 19 10:14:55 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: don't leak memory when attr fork loading fails

I observed the following evidence of a memory leak while running xfs/399
from the xfs fsck test suite (edited for brevity):

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_attr_shortform_verify_struct.part.0+0x7b/0xb0 [xfs], inode 0x1172 attr fork
XFS: Assertion failed: ip->i_af.if_u1.if_data == NULL, file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c, line: 315
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 2 PID: 91635 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
CPU: 2 PID: 91635 Comm: xfs_scrub Tainted: G W 5.19.0-rc7-xfsx #rc7 6e6475eb29fd9dda3181f81b7ca7ff961d277a40
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.15.0-1 04/01/2014
RIP: 0010:assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_ifork_zap_attr+0x7c/0xb0
xfs_iformat_attr_fork+0x86/0x110
xfs_inode_from_disk+0x41d/0x480
xfs_iget+0x389/0xd70
xfs_bulkstat_one_int+0x5b/0x540
xfs_bulkstat_iwalk+0x1e/0x30
xfs_iwalk_ag_recs+0xd1/0x160
xfs_iwalk_run_callbacks+0xb9/0x180
xfs_iwalk_ag+0x1d8/0x2e0
xfs_iwalk+0x141/0x220
xfs_bulkstat+0x105/0x180
xfs_ioc_bulkstat.constprop.0.isra.0+0xc5/0x130
xfs_file_ioctl+0xa5f/0xef0
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

This newly-added assertion checks that there aren't any incore data
structures hanging off the incore fork when we're trying to reset its
contents. From the call trace, it is evident that iget was trying to
construct an incore inode from the ondisk inode, but the attr fork
verifier failed and we were trying to undo all the memory allocations
that we had done earlier.

The three assertions in xfs_ifork_zap_attr check that the caller has
already called xfs_idestroy_fork, which clearly has not been done here.
As the zap function then zeroes the pointers, we've effectively leaked
the memory.

The shortest change would have been to insert an extra call to
xfs_idestroy_fork, but it makes more sense to bundle the _idestroy_fork
call into _zap_attr, since all other callsites call _idestroy_fork
immediately prior to calling _zap_attr. IOWs, it eliminates one way to
fail.

Note: This change only applies cleanly to 2ed5b09b3e8f, since we just
reworked the attr fork lifetime. However, I think this memory leak has
existed since 0f45a1b20cd8, since the chain xfs_iformat_attr_fork ->
xfs_iformat_local -> xfs_init_local_fork will allocate
ifp->if_u1.if_data, but if xfs_ifork_verify_local_attr fails,
xfs_iformat_attr_fork will free i_afp without freeing any of the stuff
hanging off i_afp. The solution for older kernels I think is to add the
missing call to xfs_idestroy_fork just prior to calling kmem_cache_free.

Found by fuzzing a.sfattr.hdr.totsize = lastbit in xfs/399.

Fixes: 2ed5b09b3e8f ("xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode")
Probably-Fixes: 0f45a1b20cd8 ("xfs: improve local fork verification")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff c78c2d09 Tue Jul 19 10:14:55 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: don't leak memory when attr fork loading fails

I observed the following evidence of a memory leak while running xfs/399
from the xfs fsck test suite (edited for brevity):

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_attr_shortform_verify_struct.part.0+0x7b/0xb0 [xfs], inode 0x1172 attr fork
XFS: Assertion failed: ip->i_af.if_u1.if_data == NULL, file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c, line: 315
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 2 PID: 91635 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
CPU: 2 PID: 91635 Comm: xfs_scrub Tainted: G W 5.19.0-rc7-xfsx #rc7 6e6475eb29fd9dda3181f81b7ca7ff961d277a40
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.15.0-1 04/01/2014
RIP: 0010:assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_ifork_zap_attr+0x7c/0xb0
xfs_iformat_attr_fork+0x86/0x110
xfs_inode_from_disk+0x41d/0x480
xfs_iget+0x389/0xd70
xfs_bulkstat_one_int+0x5b/0x540
xfs_bulkstat_iwalk+0x1e/0x30
xfs_iwalk_ag_recs+0xd1/0x160
xfs_iwalk_run_callbacks+0xb9/0x180
xfs_iwalk_ag+0x1d8/0x2e0
xfs_iwalk+0x141/0x220
xfs_bulkstat+0x105/0x180
xfs_ioc_bulkstat.constprop.0.isra.0+0xc5/0x130
xfs_file_ioctl+0xa5f/0xef0
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

This newly-added assertion checks that there aren't any incore data
structures hanging off the incore fork when we're trying to reset its
contents. From the call trace, it is evident that iget was trying to
construct an incore inode from the ondisk inode, but the attr fork
verifier failed and we were trying to undo all the memory allocations
that we had done earlier.

The three assertions in xfs_ifork_zap_attr check that the caller has
already called xfs_idestroy_fork, which clearly has not been done here.
As the zap function then zeroes the pointers, we've effectively leaked
the memory.

The shortest change would have been to insert an extra call to
xfs_idestroy_fork, but it makes more sense to bundle the _idestroy_fork
call into _zap_attr, since all other callsites call _idestroy_fork
immediately prior to calling _zap_attr. IOWs, it eliminates one way to
fail.

Note: This change only applies cleanly to 2ed5b09b3e8f, since we just
reworked the attr fork lifetime. However, I think this memory leak has
existed since 0f45a1b20cd8, since the chain xfs_iformat_attr_fork ->
xfs_iformat_local -> xfs_init_local_fork will allocate
ifp->if_u1.if_data, but if xfs_ifork_verify_local_attr fails,
xfs_iformat_attr_fork will free i_afp without freeing any of the stuff
hanging off i_afp. The solution for older kernels I think is to add the
missing call to xfs_idestroy_fork just prior to calling kmem_cache_free.

Found by fuzzing a.sfattr.hdr.totsize = lastbit in xfs/399.

Fixes: 2ed5b09b3e8f ("xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode")
Probably-Fixes: 0f45a1b20cd8 ("xfs: improve local fork verification")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff c78c2d09 Tue Jul 19 10:14:55 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: don't leak memory when attr fork loading fails

I observed the following evidence of a memory leak while running xfs/399
from the xfs fsck test suite (edited for brevity):

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_attr_shortform_verify_struct.part.0+0x7b/0xb0 [xfs], inode 0x1172 attr fork
XFS: Assertion failed: ip->i_af.if_u1.if_data == NULL, file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c, line: 315
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 2 PID: 91635 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
CPU: 2 PID: 91635 Comm: xfs_scrub Tainted: G W 5.19.0-rc7-xfsx #rc7 6e6475eb29fd9dda3181f81b7ca7ff961d277a40
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.15.0-1 04/01/2014
RIP: 0010:assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_ifork_zap_attr+0x7c/0xb0
xfs_iformat_attr_fork+0x86/0x110
xfs_inode_from_disk+0x41d/0x480
xfs_iget+0x389/0xd70
xfs_bulkstat_one_int+0x5b/0x540
xfs_bulkstat_iwalk+0x1e/0x30
xfs_iwalk_ag_recs+0xd1/0x160
xfs_iwalk_run_callbacks+0xb9/0x180
xfs_iwalk_ag+0x1d8/0x2e0
xfs_iwalk+0x141/0x220
xfs_bulkstat+0x105/0x180
xfs_ioc_bulkstat.constprop.0.isra.0+0xc5/0x130
xfs_file_ioctl+0xa5f/0xef0
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

This newly-added assertion checks that there aren't any incore data
structures hanging off the incore fork when we're trying to reset its
contents. From the call trace, it is evident that iget was trying to
construct an incore inode from the ondisk inode, but the attr fork
verifier failed and we were trying to undo all the memory allocations
that we had done earlier.

The three assertions in xfs_ifork_zap_attr check that the caller has
already called xfs_idestroy_fork, which clearly has not been done here.
As the zap function then zeroes the pointers, we've effectively leaked
the memory.

The shortest change would have been to insert an extra call to
xfs_idestroy_fork, but it makes more sense to bundle the _idestroy_fork
call into _zap_attr, since all other callsites call _idestroy_fork
immediately prior to calling _zap_attr. IOWs, it eliminates one way to
fail.

Note: This change only applies cleanly to 2ed5b09b3e8f, since we just
reworked the attr fork lifetime. However, I think this memory leak has
existed since 0f45a1b20cd8, since the chain xfs_iformat_attr_fork ->
xfs_iformat_local -> xfs_init_local_fork will allocate
ifp->if_u1.if_data, but if xfs_ifork_verify_local_attr fails,
xfs_iformat_attr_fork will free i_afp without freeing any of the stuff
hanging off i_afp. The solution for older kernels I think is to add the
missing call to xfs_idestroy_fork just prior to calling kmem_cache_free.

Found by fuzzing a.sfattr.hdr.totsize = lastbit in xfs/399.

Fixes: 2ed5b09b3e8f ("xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode")
Probably-Fixes: 0f45a1b20cd8 ("xfs: improve local fork verification")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff c78c2d09 Tue Jul 19 10:14:55 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: don't leak memory when attr fork loading fails

I observed the following evidence of a memory leak while running xfs/399
from the xfs fsck test suite (edited for brevity):

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_attr_shortform_verify_struct.part.0+0x7b/0xb0 [xfs], inode 0x1172 attr fork
XFS: Assertion failed: ip->i_af.if_u1.if_data == NULL, file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c, line: 315
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 2 PID: 91635 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
CPU: 2 PID: 91635 Comm: xfs_scrub Tainted: G W 5.19.0-rc7-xfsx #rc7 6e6475eb29fd9dda3181f81b7ca7ff961d277a40
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.15.0-1 04/01/2014
RIP: 0010:assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_ifork_zap_attr+0x7c/0xb0
xfs_iformat_attr_fork+0x86/0x110
xfs_inode_from_disk+0x41d/0x480
xfs_iget+0x389/0xd70
xfs_bulkstat_one_int+0x5b/0x540
xfs_bulkstat_iwalk+0x1e/0x30
xfs_iwalk_ag_recs+0xd1/0x160
xfs_iwalk_run_callbacks+0xb9/0x180
xfs_iwalk_ag+0x1d8/0x2e0
xfs_iwalk+0x141/0x220
xfs_bulkstat+0x105/0x180
xfs_ioc_bulkstat.constprop.0.isra.0+0xc5/0x130
xfs_file_ioctl+0xa5f/0xef0
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

This newly-added assertion checks that there aren't any incore data
structures hanging off the incore fork when we're trying to reset its
contents. From the call trace, it is evident that iget was trying to
construct an incore inode from the ondisk inode, but the attr fork
verifier failed and we were trying to undo all the memory allocations
that we had done earlier.

The three assertions in xfs_ifork_zap_attr check that the caller has
already called xfs_idestroy_fork, which clearly has not been done here.
As the zap function then zeroes the pointers, we've effectively leaked
the memory.

The shortest change would have been to insert an extra call to
xfs_idestroy_fork, but it makes more sense to bundle the _idestroy_fork
call into _zap_attr, since all other callsites call _idestroy_fork
immediately prior to calling _zap_attr. IOWs, it eliminates one way to
fail.

Note: This change only applies cleanly to 2ed5b09b3e8f, since we just
reworked the attr fork lifetime. However, I think this memory leak has
existed since 0f45a1b20cd8, since the chain xfs_iformat_attr_fork ->
xfs_iformat_local -> xfs_init_local_fork will allocate
ifp->if_u1.if_data, but if xfs_ifork_verify_local_attr fails,
xfs_iformat_attr_fork will free i_afp without freeing any of the stuff
hanging off i_afp. The solution for older kernels I think is to add the
missing call to xfs_idestroy_fork just prior to calling kmem_cache_free.

Found by fuzzing a.sfattr.hdr.totsize = lastbit in xfs/399.

Fixes: 2ed5b09b3e8f ("xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode")
Probably-Fixes: 0f45a1b20cd8 ("xfs: improve local fork verification")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff c78c2d09 Tue Jul 19 10:14:55 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: don't leak memory when attr fork loading fails

I observed the following evidence of a memory leak while running xfs/399
from the xfs fsck test suite (edited for brevity):

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_attr_shortform_verify_struct.part.0+0x7b/0xb0 [xfs], inode 0x1172 attr fork
XFS: Assertion failed: ip->i_af.if_u1.if_data == NULL, file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c, line: 315
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 2 PID: 91635 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
CPU: 2 PID: 91635 Comm: xfs_scrub Tainted: G W 5.19.0-rc7-xfsx #rc7 6e6475eb29fd9dda3181f81b7ca7ff961d277a40
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.15.0-1 04/01/2014
RIP: 0010:assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_ifork_zap_attr+0x7c/0xb0
xfs_iformat_attr_fork+0x86/0x110
xfs_inode_from_disk+0x41d/0x480
xfs_iget+0x389/0xd70
xfs_bulkstat_one_int+0x5b/0x540
xfs_bulkstat_iwalk+0x1e/0x30
xfs_iwalk_ag_recs+0xd1/0x160
xfs_iwalk_run_callbacks+0xb9/0x180
xfs_iwalk_ag+0x1d8/0x2e0
xfs_iwalk+0x141/0x220
xfs_bulkstat+0x105/0x180
xfs_ioc_bulkstat.constprop.0.isra.0+0xc5/0x130
xfs_file_ioctl+0xa5f/0xef0
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

This newly-added assertion checks that there aren't any incore data
structures hanging off the incore fork when we're trying to reset its
contents. From the call trace, it is evident that iget was trying to
construct an incore inode from the ondisk inode, but the attr fork
verifier failed and we were trying to undo all the memory allocations
that we had done earlier.

The three assertions in xfs_ifork_zap_attr check that the caller has
already called xfs_idestroy_fork, which clearly has not been done here.
As the zap function then zeroes the pointers, we've effectively leaked
the memory.

The shortest change would have been to insert an extra call to
xfs_idestroy_fork, but it makes more sense to bundle the _idestroy_fork
call into _zap_attr, since all other callsites call _idestroy_fork
immediately prior to calling _zap_attr. IOWs, it eliminates one way to
fail.

Note: This change only applies cleanly to 2ed5b09b3e8f, since we just
reworked the attr fork lifetime. However, I think this memory leak has
existed since 0f45a1b20cd8, since the chain xfs_iformat_attr_fork ->
xfs_iformat_local -> xfs_init_local_fork will allocate
ifp->if_u1.if_data, but if xfs_ifork_verify_local_attr fails,
xfs_iformat_attr_fork will free i_afp without freeing any of the stuff
hanging off i_afp. The solution for older kernels I think is to add the
missing call to xfs_idestroy_fork just prior to calling kmem_cache_free.

Found by fuzzing a.sfattr.hdr.totsize = lastbit in xfs/399.

Fixes: 2ed5b09b3e8f ("xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode")
Probably-Fixes: 0f45a1b20cd8 ("xfs: improve local fork verification")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff c78c2d09 Tue Jul 19 10:14:55 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: don't leak memory when attr fork loading fails

I observed the following evidence of a memory leak while running xfs/399
from the xfs fsck test suite (edited for brevity):

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_attr_shortform_verify_struct.part.0+0x7b/0xb0 [xfs], inode 0x1172 attr fork
XFS: Assertion failed: ip->i_af.if_u1.if_data == NULL, file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c, line: 315
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 2 PID: 91635 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
CPU: 2 PID: 91635 Comm: xfs_scrub Tainted: G W 5.19.0-rc7-xfsx #rc7 6e6475eb29fd9dda3181f81b7ca7ff961d277a40
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.15.0-1 04/01/2014
RIP: 0010:assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_ifork_zap_attr+0x7c/0xb0
xfs_iformat_attr_fork+0x86/0x110
xfs_inode_from_disk+0x41d/0x480
xfs_iget+0x389/0xd70
xfs_bulkstat_one_int+0x5b/0x540
xfs_bulkstat_iwalk+0x1e/0x30
xfs_iwalk_ag_recs+0xd1/0x160
xfs_iwalk_run_callbacks+0xb9/0x180
xfs_iwalk_ag+0x1d8/0x2e0
xfs_iwalk+0x141/0x220
xfs_bulkstat+0x105/0x180
xfs_ioc_bulkstat.constprop.0.isra.0+0xc5/0x130
xfs_file_ioctl+0xa5f/0xef0
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

This newly-added assertion checks that there aren't any incore data
structures hanging off the incore fork when we're trying to reset its
contents. From the call trace, it is evident that iget was trying to
construct an incore inode from the ondisk inode, but the attr fork
verifier failed and we were trying to undo all the memory allocations
that we had done earlier.

The three assertions in xfs_ifork_zap_attr check that the caller has
already called xfs_idestroy_fork, which clearly has not been done here.
As the zap function then zeroes the pointers, we've effectively leaked
the memory.

The shortest change would have been to insert an extra call to
xfs_idestroy_fork, but it makes more sense to bundle the _idestroy_fork
call into _zap_attr, since all other callsites call _idestroy_fork
immediately prior to calling _zap_attr. IOWs, it eliminates one way to
fail.

Note: This change only applies cleanly to 2ed5b09b3e8f, since we just
reworked the attr fork lifetime. However, I think this memory leak has
existed since 0f45a1b20cd8, since the chain xfs_iformat_attr_fork ->
xfs_iformat_local -> xfs_init_local_fork will allocate
ifp->if_u1.if_data, but if xfs_ifork_verify_local_attr fails,
xfs_iformat_attr_fork will free i_afp without freeing any of the stuff
hanging off i_afp. The solution for older kernels I think is to add the
missing call to xfs_idestroy_fork just prior to calling kmem_cache_free.

Found by fuzzing a.sfattr.hdr.totsize = lastbit in xfs/399.

Fixes: 2ed5b09b3e8f ("xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode")
Probably-Fixes: 0f45a1b20cd8 ("xfs: improve local fork verification")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff c78c2d09 Tue Jul 19 10:14:55 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: don't leak memory when attr fork loading fails

I observed the following evidence of a memory leak while running xfs/399
from the xfs fsck test suite (edited for brevity):

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_attr_shortform_verify_struct.part.0+0x7b/0xb0 [xfs], inode 0x1172 attr fork
XFS: Assertion failed: ip->i_af.if_u1.if_data == NULL, file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c, line: 315
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 2 PID: 91635 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
CPU: 2 PID: 91635 Comm: xfs_scrub Tainted: G W 5.19.0-rc7-xfsx #rc7 6e6475eb29fd9dda3181f81b7ca7ff961d277a40
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.15.0-1 04/01/2014
RIP: 0010:assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_ifork_zap_attr+0x7c/0xb0
xfs_iformat_attr_fork+0x86/0x110
xfs_inode_from_disk+0x41d/0x480
xfs_iget+0x389/0xd70
xfs_bulkstat_one_int+0x5b/0x540
xfs_bulkstat_iwalk+0x1e/0x30
xfs_iwalk_ag_recs+0xd1/0x160
xfs_iwalk_run_callbacks+0xb9/0x180
xfs_iwalk_ag+0x1d8/0x2e0
xfs_iwalk+0x141/0x220
xfs_bulkstat+0x105/0x180
xfs_ioc_bulkstat.constprop.0.isra.0+0xc5/0x130
xfs_file_ioctl+0xa5f/0xef0
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

This newly-added assertion checks that there aren't any incore data
structures hanging off the incore fork when we're trying to reset its
contents. From the call trace, it is evident that iget was trying to
construct an incore inode from the ondisk inode, but the attr fork
verifier failed and we were trying to undo all the memory allocations
that we had done earlier.

The three assertions in xfs_ifork_zap_attr check that the caller has
already called xfs_idestroy_fork, which clearly has not been done here.
As the zap function then zeroes the pointers, we've effectively leaked
the memory.

The shortest change would have been to insert an extra call to
xfs_idestroy_fork, but it makes more sense to bundle the _idestroy_fork
call into _zap_attr, since all other callsites call _idestroy_fork
immediately prior to calling _zap_attr. IOWs, it eliminates one way to
fail.

Note: This change only applies cleanly to 2ed5b09b3e8f, since we just
reworked the attr fork lifetime. However, I think this memory leak has
existed since 0f45a1b20cd8, since the chain xfs_iformat_attr_fork ->
xfs_iformat_local -> xfs_init_local_fork will allocate
ifp->if_u1.if_data, but if xfs_ifork_verify_local_attr fails,
xfs_iformat_attr_fork will free i_afp without freeing any of the stuff
hanging off i_afp. The solution for older kernels I think is to add the
missing call to xfs_idestroy_fork just prior to calling kmem_cache_free.

Found by fuzzing a.sfattr.hdr.totsize = lastbit in xfs/399.

Fixes: 2ed5b09b3e8f ("xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode")
Probably-Fixes: 0f45a1b20cd8 ("xfs: improve local fork verification")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff c78c2d09 Tue Jul 19 10:14:55 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: don't leak memory when attr fork loading fails

I observed the following evidence of a memory leak while running xfs/399
from the xfs fsck test suite (edited for brevity):

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_attr_shortform_verify_struct.part.0+0x7b/0xb0 [xfs], inode 0x1172 attr fork
XFS: Assertion failed: ip->i_af.if_u1.if_data == NULL, file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c, line: 315
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 2 PID: 91635 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
CPU: 2 PID: 91635 Comm: xfs_scrub Tainted: G W 5.19.0-rc7-xfsx #rc7 6e6475eb29fd9dda3181f81b7ca7ff961d277a40
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.15.0-1 04/01/2014
RIP: 0010:assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_ifork_zap_attr+0x7c/0xb0
xfs_iformat_attr_fork+0x86/0x110
xfs_inode_from_disk+0x41d/0x480
xfs_iget+0x389/0xd70
xfs_bulkstat_one_int+0x5b/0x540
xfs_bulkstat_iwalk+0x1e/0x30
xfs_iwalk_ag_recs+0xd1/0x160
xfs_iwalk_run_callbacks+0xb9/0x180
xfs_iwalk_ag+0x1d8/0x2e0
xfs_iwalk+0x141/0x220
xfs_bulkstat+0x105/0x180
xfs_ioc_bulkstat.constprop.0.isra.0+0xc5/0x130
xfs_file_ioctl+0xa5f/0xef0
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

This newly-added assertion checks that there aren't any incore data
structures hanging off the incore fork when we're trying to reset its
contents. From the call trace, it is evident that iget was trying to
construct an incore inode from the ondisk inode, but the attr fork
verifier failed and we were trying to undo all the memory allocations
that we had done earlier.

The three assertions in xfs_ifork_zap_attr check that the caller has
already called xfs_idestroy_fork, which clearly has not been done here.
As the zap function then zeroes the pointers, we've effectively leaked
the memory.

The shortest change would have been to insert an extra call to
xfs_idestroy_fork, but it makes more sense to bundle the _idestroy_fork
call into _zap_attr, since all other callsites call _idestroy_fork
immediately prior to calling _zap_attr. IOWs, it eliminates one way to
fail.

Note: This change only applies cleanly to 2ed5b09b3e8f, since we just
reworked the attr fork lifetime. However, I think this memory leak has
existed since 0f45a1b20cd8, since the chain xfs_iformat_attr_fork ->
xfs_iformat_local -> xfs_init_local_fork will allocate
ifp->if_u1.if_data, but if xfs_ifork_verify_local_attr fails,
xfs_iformat_attr_fork will free i_afp without freeing any of the stuff
hanging off i_afp. The solution for older kernels I think is to add the
missing call to xfs_idestroy_fork just prior to calling kmem_cache_free.

Found by fuzzing a.sfattr.hdr.totsize = lastbit in xfs/399.

Fixes: 2ed5b09b3e8f ("xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode")
Probably-Fixes: 0f45a1b20cd8 ("xfs: improve local fork verification")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff c78c2d09 Tue Jul 19 10:14:55 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: don't leak memory when attr fork loading fails

I observed the following evidence of a memory leak while running xfs/399
from the xfs fsck test suite (edited for brevity):

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_attr_shortform_verify_struct.part.0+0x7b/0xb0 [xfs], inode 0x1172 attr fork
XFS: Assertion failed: ip->i_af.if_u1.if_data == NULL, file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c, line: 315
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 2 PID: 91635 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
CPU: 2 PID: 91635 Comm: xfs_scrub Tainted: G W 5.19.0-rc7-xfsx #rc7 6e6475eb29fd9dda3181f81b7ca7ff961d277a40
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.15.0-1 04/01/2014
RIP: 0010:assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_ifork_zap_attr+0x7c/0xb0
xfs_iformat_attr_fork+0x86/0x110
xfs_inode_from_disk+0x41d/0x480
xfs_iget+0x389/0xd70
xfs_bulkstat_one_int+0x5b/0x540
xfs_bulkstat_iwalk+0x1e/0x30
xfs_iwalk_ag_recs+0xd1/0x160
xfs_iwalk_run_callbacks+0xb9/0x180
xfs_iwalk_ag+0x1d8/0x2e0
xfs_iwalk+0x141/0x220
xfs_bulkstat+0x105/0x180
xfs_ioc_bulkstat.constprop.0.isra.0+0xc5/0x130
xfs_file_ioctl+0xa5f/0xef0
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

This newly-added assertion checks that there aren't any incore data
structures hanging off the incore fork when we're trying to reset its
contents. From the call trace, it is evident that iget was trying to
construct an incore inode from the ondisk inode, but the attr fork
verifier failed and we were trying to undo all the memory allocations
that we had done earlier.

The three assertions in xfs_ifork_zap_attr check that the caller has
already called xfs_idestroy_fork, which clearly has not been done here.
As the zap function then zeroes the pointers, we've effectively leaked
the memory.

The shortest change would have been to insert an extra call to
xfs_idestroy_fork, but it makes more sense to bundle the _idestroy_fork
call into _zap_attr, since all other callsites call _idestroy_fork
immediately prior to calling _zap_attr. IOWs, it eliminates one way to
fail.

Note: This change only applies cleanly to 2ed5b09b3e8f, since we just
reworked the attr fork lifetime. However, I think this memory leak has
existed since 0f45a1b20cd8, since the chain xfs_iformat_attr_fork ->
xfs_iformat_local -> xfs_init_local_fork will allocate
ifp->if_u1.if_data, but if xfs_ifork_verify_local_attr fails,
xfs_iformat_attr_fork will free i_afp without freeing any of the stuff
hanging off i_afp. The solution for older kernels I think is to add the
missing call to xfs_idestroy_fork just prior to calling kmem_cache_free.

Found by fuzzing a.sfattr.hdr.totsize = lastbit in xfs/399.

Fixes: 2ed5b09b3e8f ("xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode")
Probably-Fixes: 0f45a1b20cd8 ("xfs: improve local fork verification")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff c78c2d09 Tue Jul 19 10:14:55 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: don't leak memory when attr fork loading fails

I observed the following evidence of a memory leak while running xfs/399
from the xfs fsck test suite (edited for brevity):

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_attr_shortform_verify_struct.part.0+0x7b/0xb0 [xfs], inode 0x1172 attr fork
XFS: Assertion failed: ip->i_af.if_u1.if_data == NULL, file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c, line: 315
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 2 PID: 91635 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
CPU: 2 PID: 91635 Comm: xfs_scrub Tainted: G W 5.19.0-rc7-xfsx #rc7 6e6475eb29fd9dda3181f81b7ca7ff961d277a40
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.15.0-1 04/01/2014
RIP: 0010:assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_ifork_zap_attr+0x7c/0xb0
xfs_iformat_attr_fork+0x86/0x110
xfs_inode_from_disk+0x41d/0x480
xfs_iget+0x389/0xd70
xfs_bulkstat_one_int+0x5b/0x540
xfs_bulkstat_iwalk+0x1e/0x30
xfs_iwalk_ag_recs+0xd1/0x160
xfs_iwalk_run_callbacks+0xb9/0x180
xfs_iwalk_ag+0x1d8/0x2e0
xfs_iwalk+0x141/0x220
xfs_bulkstat+0x105/0x180
xfs_ioc_bulkstat.constprop.0.isra.0+0xc5/0x130
xfs_file_ioctl+0xa5f/0xef0
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

This newly-added assertion checks that there aren't any incore data
structures hanging off the incore fork when we're trying to reset its
contents. From the call trace, it is evident that iget was trying to
construct an incore inode from the ondisk inode, but the attr fork
verifier failed and we were trying to undo all the memory allocations
that we had done earlier.

The three assertions in xfs_ifork_zap_attr check that the caller has
already called xfs_idestroy_fork, which clearly has not been done here.
As the zap function then zeroes the pointers, we've effectively leaked
the memory.

The shortest change would have been to insert an extra call to
xfs_idestroy_fork, but it makes more sense to bundle the _idestroy_fork
call into _zap_attr, since all other callsites call _idestroy_fork
immediately prior to calling _zap_attr. IOWs, it eliminates one way to
fail.

Note: This change only applies cleanly to 2ed5b09b3e8f, since we just
reworked the attr fork lifetime. However, I think this memory leak has
existed since 0f45a1b20cd8, since the chain xfs_iformat_attr_fork ->
xfs_iformat_local -> xfs_init_local_fork will allocate
ifp->if_u1.if_data, but if xfs_ifork_verify_local_attr fails,
xfs_iformat_attr_fork will free i_afp without freeing any of the stuff
hanging off i_afp. The solution for older kernels I think is to add the
missing call to xfs_idestroy_fork just prior to calling kmem_cache_free.

Found by fuzzing a.sfattr.hdr.totsize = lastbit in xfs/399.

Fixes: 2ed5b09b3e8f ("xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode")
Probably-Fixes: 0f45a1b20cd8 ("xfs: improve local fork verification")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff c78c2d09 Tue Jul 19 10:14:55 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: don't leak memory when attr fork loading fails

I observed the following evidence of a memory leak while running xfs/399
from the xfs fsck test suite (edited for brevity):

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_attr_shortform_verify_struct.part.0+0x7b/0xb0 [xfs], inode 0x1172 attr fork
XFS: Assertion failed: ip->i_af.if_u1.if_data == NULL, file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c, line: 315
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 2 PID: 91635 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
CPU: 2 PID: 91635 Comm: xfs_scrub Tainted: G W 5.19.0-rc7-xfsx #rc7 6e6475eb29fd9dda3181f81b7ca7ff961d277a40
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.15.0-1 04/01/2014
RIP: 0010:assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_ifork_zap_attr+0x7c/0xb0
xfs_iformat_attr_fork+0x86/0x110
xfs_inode_from_disk+0x41d/0x480
xfs_iget+0x389/0xd70
xfs_bulkstat_one_int+0x5b/0x540
xfs_bulkstat_iwalk+0x1e/0x30
xfs_iwalk_ag_recs+0xd1/0x160
xfs_iwalk_run_callbacks+0xb9/0x180
xfs_iwalk_ag+0x1d8/0x2e0
xfs_iwalk+0x141/0x220
xfs_bulkstat+0x105/0x180
xfs_ioc_bulkstat.constprop.0.isra.0+0xc5/0x130
xfs_file_ioctl+0xa5f/0xef0
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

This newly-added assertion checks that there aren't any incore data
structures hanging off the incore fork when we're trying to reset its
contents. From the call trace, it is evident that iget was trying to
construct an incore inode from the ondisk inode, but the attr fork
verifier failed and we were trying to undo all the memory allocations
that we had done earlier.

The three assertions in xfs_ifork_zap_attr check that the caller has
already called xfs_idestroy_fork, which clearly has not been done here.
As the zap function then zeroes the pointers, we've effectively leaked
the memory.

The shortest change would have been to insert an extra call to
xfs_idestroy_fork, but it makes more sense to bundle the _idestroy_fork
call into _zap_attr, since all other callsites call _idestroy_fork
immediately prior to calling _zap_attr. IOWs, it eliminates one way to
fail.

Note: This change only applies cleanly to 2ed5b09b3e8f, since we just
reworked the attr fork lifetime. However, I think this memory leak has
existed since 0f45a1b20cd8, since the chain xfs_iformat_attr_fork ->
xfs_iformat_local -> xfs_init_local_fork will allocate
ifp->if_u1.if_data, but if xfs_ifork_verify_local_attr fails,
xfs_iformat_attr_fork will free i_afp without freeing any of the stuff
hanging off i_afp. The solution for older kernels I think is to add the
missing call to xfs_idestroy_fork just prior to calling kmem_cache_free.

Found by fuzzing a.sfattr.hdr.totsize = lastbit in xfs/399.

Fixes: 2ed5b09b3e8f ("xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode")
Probably-Fixes: 0f45a1b20cd8 ("xfs: improve local fork verification")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff c78c2d09 Tue Jul 19 10:14:55 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: don't leak memory when attr fork loading fails

I observed the following evidence of a memory leak while running xfs/399
from the xfs fsck test suite (edited for brevity):

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_attr_shortform_verify_struct.part.0+0x7b/0xb0 [xfs], inode 0x1172 attr fork
XFS: Assertion failed: ip->i_af.if_u1.if_data == NULL, file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c, line: 315
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 2 PID: 91635 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
CPU: 2 PID: 91635 Comm: xfs_scrub Tainted: G W 5.19.0-rc7-xfsx #rc7 6e6475eb29fd9dda3181f81b7ca7ff961d277a40
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.15.0-1 04/01/2014
RIP: 0010:assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_ifork_zap_attr+0x7c/0xb0
xfs_iformat_attr_fork+0x86/0x110
xfs_inode_from_disk+0x41d/0x480
xfs_iget+0x389/0xd70
xfs_bulkstat_one_int+0x5b/0x540
xfs_bulkstat_iwalk+0x1e/0x30
xfs_iwalk_ag_recs+0xd1/0x160
xfs_iwalk_run_callbacks+0xb9/0x180
xfs_iwalk_ag+0x1d8/0x2e0
xfs_iwalk+0x141/0x220
xfs_bulkstat+0x105/0x180
xfs_ioc_bulkstat.constprop.0.isra.0+0xc5/0x130
xfs_file_ioctl+0xa5f/0xef0
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

This newly-added assertion checks that there aren't any incore data
structures hanging off the incore fork when we're trying to reset its
contents. From the call trace, it is evident that iget was trying to
construct an incore inode from the ondisk inode, but the attr fork
verifier failed and we were trying to undo all the memory allocations
that we had done earlier.

The three assertions in xfs_ifork_zap_attr check that the caller has
already called xfs_idestroy_fork, which clearly has not been done here.
As the zap function then zeroes the pointers, we've effectively leaked
the memory.

The shortest change would have been to insert an extra call to
xfs_idestroy_fork, but it makes more sense to bundle the _idestroy_fork
call into _zap_attr, since all other callsites call _idestroy_fork
immediately prior to calling _zap_attr. IOWs, it eliminates one way to
fail.

Note: This change only applies cleanly to 2ed5b09b3e8f, since we just
reworked the attr fork lifetime. However, I think this memory leak has
existed since 0f45a1b20cd8, since the chain xfs_iformat_attr_fork ->
xfs_iformat_local -> xfs_init_local_fork will allocate
ifp->if_u1.if_data, but if xfs_ifork_verify_local_attr fails,
xfs_iformat_attr_fork will free i_afp without freeing any of the stuff
hanging off i_afp. The solution for older kernels I think is to add the
missing call to xfs_idestroy_fork just prior to calling kmem_cache_free.

Found by fuzzing a.sfattr.hdr.totsize = lastbit in xfs/399.

Fixes: 2ed5b09b3e8f ("xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode")
Probably-Fixes: 0f45a1b20cd8 ("xfs: improve local fork verification")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff c78c2d09 Tue Jul 19 10:14:55 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: don't leak memory when attr fork loading fails

I observed the following evidence of a memory leak while running xfs/399
from the xfs fsck test suite (edited for brevity):

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_attr_shortform_verify_struct.part.0+0x7b/0xb0 [xfs], inode 0x1172 attr fork
XFS: Assertion failed: ip->i_af.if_u1.if_data == NULL, file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c, line: 315
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 2 PID: 91635 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
CPU: 2 PID: 91635 Comm: xfs_scrub Tainted: G W 5.19.0-rc7-xfsx #rc7 6e6475eb29fd9dda3181f81b7ca7ff961d277a40
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.15.0-1 04/01/2014
RIP: 0010:assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_ifork_zap_attr+0x7c/0xb0
xfs_iformat_attr_fork+0x86/0x110
xfs_inode_from_disk+0x41d/0x480
xfs_iget+0x389/0xd70
xfs_bulkstat_one_int+0x5b/0x540
xfs_bulkstat_iwalk+0x1e/0x30
xfs_iwalk_ag_recs+0xd1/0x160
xfs_iwalk_run_callbacks+0xb9/0x180
xfs_iwalk_ag+0x1d8/0x2e0
xfs_iwalk+0x141/0x220
xfs_bulkstat+0x105/0x180
xfs_ioc_bulkstat.constprop.0.isra.0+0xc5/0x130
xfs_file_ioctl+0xa5f/0xef0
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

This newly-added assertion checks that there aren't any incore data
structures hanging off the incore fork when we're trying to reset its
contents. From the call trace, it is evident that iget was trying to
construct an incore inode from the ondisk inode, but the attr fork
verifier failed and we were trying to undo all the memory allocations
that we had done earlier.

The three assertions in xfs_ifork_zap_attr check that the caller has
already called xfs_idestroy_fork, which clearly has not been done here.
As the zap function then zeroes the pointers, we've effectively leaked
the memory.

The shortest change would have been to insert an extra call to
xfs_idestroy_fork, but it makes more sense to bundle the _idestroy_fork
call into _zap_attr, since all other callsites call _idestroy_fork
immediately prior to calling _zap_attr. IOWs, it eliminates one way to
fail.

Note: This change only applies cleanly to 2ed5b09b3e8f, since we just
reworked the attr fork lifetime. However, I think this memory leak has
existed since 0f45a1b20cd8, since the chain xfs_iformat_attr_fork ->
xfs_iformat_local -> xfs_init_local_fork will allocate
ifp->if_u1.if_data, but if xfs_ifork_verify_local_attr fails,
xfs_iformat_attr_fork will free i_afp without freeing any of the stuff
hanging off i_afp. The solution for older kernels I think is to add the
missing call to xfs_idestroy_fork just prior to calling kmem_cache_free.

Found by fuzzing a.sfattr.hdr.totsize = lastbit in xfs/399.

Fixes: 2ed5b09b3e8f ("xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode")
Probably-Fixes: 0f45a1b20cd8 ("xfs: improve local fork verification")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff c78c2d09 Tue Jul 19 10:14:55 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: don't leak memory when attr fork loading fails

I observed the following evidence of a memory leak while running xfs/399
from the xfs fsck test suite (edited for brevity):

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_attr_shortform_verify_struct.part.0+0x7b/0xb0 [xfs], inode 0x1172 attr fork
XFS: Assertion failed: ip->i_af.if_u1.if_data == NULL, file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c, line: 315
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 2 PID: 91635 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
CPU: 2 PID: 91635 Comm: xfs_scrub Tainted: G W 5.19.0-rc7-xfsx #rc7 6e6475eb29fd9dda3181f81b7ca7ff961d277a40
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.15.0-1 04/01/2014
RIP: 0010:assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_ifork_zap_attr+0x7c/0xb0
xfs_iformat_attr_fork+0x86/0x110
xfs_inode_from_disk+0x41d/0x480
xfs_iget+0x389/0xd70
xfs_bulkstat_one_int+0x5b/0x540
xfs_bulkstat_iwalk+0x1e/0x30
xfs_iwalk_ag_recs+0xd1/0x160
xfs_iwalk_run_callbacks+0xb9/0x180
xfs_iwalk_ag+0x1d8/0x2e0
xfs_iwalk+0x141/0x220
xfs_bulkstat+0x105/0x180
xfs_ioc_bulkstat.constprop.0.isra.0+0xc5/0x130
xfs_file_ioctl+0xa5f/0xef0
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

This newly-added assertion checks that there aren't any incore data
structures hanging off the incore fork when we're trying to reset its
contents. From the call trace, it is evident that iget was trying to
construct an incore inode from the ondisk inode, but the attr fork
verifier failed and we were trying to undo all the memory allocations
that we had done earlier.

The three assertions in xfs_ifork_zap_attr check that the caller has
already called xfs_idestroy_fork, which clearly has not been done here.
As the zap function then zeroes the pointers, we've effectively leaked
the memory.

The shortest change would have been to insert an extra call to
xfs_idestroy_fork, but it makes more sense to bundle the _idestroy_fork
call into _zap_attr, since all other callsites call _idestroy_fork
immediately prior to calling _zap_attr. IOWs, it eliminates one way to
fail.

Note: This change only applies cleanly to 2ed5b09b3e8f, since we just
reworked the attr fork lifetime. However, I think this memory leak has
existed since 0f45a1b20cd8, since the chain xfs_iformat_attr_fork ->
xfs_iformat_local -> xfs_init_local_fork will allocate
ifp->if_u1.if_data, but if xfs_ifork_verify_local_attr fails,
xfs_iformat_attr_fork will free i_afp without freeing any of the stuff
hanging off i_afp. The solution for older kernels I think is to add the
missing call to xfs_idestroy_fork just prior to calling kmem_cache_free.

Found by fuzzing a.sfattr.hdr.totsize = lastbit in xfs/399.

Fixes: 2ed5b09b3e8f ("xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode")
Probably-Fixes: 0f45a1b20cd8 ("xfs: improve local fork verification")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff c78c2d09 Tue Jul 19 10:14:55 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: don't leak memory when attr fork loading fails

I observed the following evidence of a memory leak while running xfs/399
from the xfs fsck test suite (edited for brevity):

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_attr_shortform_verify_struct.part.0+0x7b/0xb0 [xfs], inode 0x1172 attr fork
XFS: Assertion failed: ip->i_af.if_u1.if_data == NULL, file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c, line: 315
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 2 PID: 91635 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
CPU: 2 PID: 91635 Comm: xfs_scrub Tainted: G W 5.19.0-rc7-xfsx #rc7 6e6475eb29fd9dda3181f81b7ca7ff961d277a40
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.15.0-1 04/01/2014
RIP: 0010:assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_ifork_zap_attr+0x7c/0xb0
xfs_iformat_attr_fork+0x86/0x110
xfs_inode_from_disk+0x41d/0x480
xfs_iget+0x389/0xd70
xfs_bulkstat_one_int+0x5b/0x540
xfs_bulkstat_iwalk+0x1e/0x30
xfs_iwalk_ag_recs+0xd1/0x160
xfs_iwalk_run_callbacks+0xb9/0x180
xfs_iwalk_ag+0x1d8/0x2e0
xfs_iwalk+0x141/0x220
xfs_bulkstat+0x105/0x180
xfs_ioc_bulkstat.constprop.0.isra.0+0xc5/0x130
xfs_file_ioctl+0xa5f/0xef0
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

This newly-added assertion checks that there aren't any incore data
structures hanging off the incore fork when we're trying to reset its
contents. From the call trace, it is evident that iget was trying to
construct an incore inode from the ondisk inode, but the attr fork
verifier failed and we were trying to undo all the memory allocations
that we had done earlier.

The three assertions in xfs_ifork_zap_attr check that the caller has
already called xfs_idestroy_fork, which clearly has not been done here.
As the zap function then zeroes the pointers, we've effectively leaked
the memory.

The shortest change would have been to insert an extra call to
xfs_idestroy_fork, but it makes more sense to bundle the _idestroy_fork
call into _zap_attr, since all other callsites call _idestroy_fork
immediately prior to calling _zap_attr. IOWs, it eliminates one way to
fail.

Note: This change only applies cleanly to 2ed5b09b3e8f, since we just
reworked the attr fork lifetime. However, I think this memory leak has
existed since 0f45a1b20cd8, since the chain xfs_iformat_attr_fork ->
xfs_iformat_local -> xfs_init_local_fork will allocate
ifp->if_u1.if_data, but if xfs_ifork_verify_local_attr fails,
xfs_iformat_attr_fork will free i_afp without freeing any of the stuff
hanging off i_afp. The solution for older kernels I think is to add the
missing call to xfs_idestroy_fork just prior to calling kmem_cache_free.

Found by fuzzing a.sfattr.hdr.totsize = lastbit in xfs/399.

Fixes: 2ed5b09b3e8f ("xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode")
Probably-Fixes: 0f45a1b20cd8 ("xfs: improve local fork verification")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff c78c2d09 Tue Jul 19 10:14:55 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: don't leak memory when attr fork loading fails

I observed the following evidence of a memory leak while running xfs/399
from the xfs fsck test suite (edited for brevity):

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_attr_shortform_verify_struct.part.0+0x7b/0xb0 [xfs], inode 0x1172 attr fork
XFS: Assertion failed: ip->i_af.if_u1.if_data == NULL, file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c, line: 315
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 2 PID: 91635 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
CPU: 2 PID: 91635 Comm: xfs_scrub Tainted: G W 5.19.0-rc7-xfsx #rc7 6e6475eb29fd9dda3181f81b7ca7ff961d277a40
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.15.0-1 04/01/2014
RIP: 0010:assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_ifork_zap_attr+0x7c/0xb0
xfs_iformat_attr_fork+0x86/0x110
xfs_inode_from_disk+0x41d/0x480
xfs_iget+0x389/0xd70
xfs_bulkstat_one_int+0x5b/0x540
xfs_bulkstat_iwalk+0x1e/0x30
xfs_iwalk_ag_recs+0xd1/0x160
xfs_iwalk_run_callbacks+0xb9/0x180
xfs_iwalk_ag+0x1d8/0x2e0
xfs_iwalk+0x141/0x220
xfs_bulkstat+0x105/0x180
xfs_ioc_bulkstat.constprop.0.isra.0+0xc5/0x130
xfs_file_ioctl+0xa5f/0xef0
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

This newly-added assertion checks that there aren't any incore data
structures hanging off the incore fork when we're trying to reset its
contents. From the call trace, it is evident that iget was trying to
construct an incore inode from the ondisk inode, but the attr fork
verifier failed and we were trying to undo all the memory allocations
that we had done earlier.

The three assertions in xfs_ifork_zap_attr check that the caller has
already called xfs_idestroy_fork, which clearly has not been done here.
As the zap function then zeroes the pointers, we've effectively leaked
the memory.

The shortest change would have been to insert an extra call to
xfs_idestroy_fork, but it makes more sense to bundle the _idestroy_fork
call into _zap_attr, since all other callsites call _idestroy_fork
immediately prior to calling _zap_attr. IOWs, it eliminates one way to
fail.

Note: This change only applies cleanly to 2ed5b09b3e8f, since we just
reworked the attr fork lifetime. However, I think this memory leak has
existed since 0f45a1b20cd8, since the chain xfs_iformat_attr_fork ->
xfs_iformat_local -> xfs_init_local_fork will allocate
ifp->if_u1.if_data, but if xfs_ifork_verify_local_attr fails,
xfs_iformat_attr_fork will free i_afp without freeing any of the stuff
hanging off i_afp. The solution for older kernels I think is to add the
missing call to xfs_idestroy_fork just prior to calling kmem_cache_free.

Found by fuzzing a.sfattr.hdr.totsize = lastbit in xfs/399.

Fixes: 2ed5b09b3e8f ("xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode")
Probably-Fixes: 0f45a1b20cd8 ("xfs: improve local fork verification")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff c78c2d09 Tue Jul 19 10:14:55 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: don't leak memory when attr fork loading fails

I observed the following evidence of a memory leak while running xfs/399
from the xfs fsck test suite (edited for brevity):

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_attr_shortform_verify_struct.part.0+0x7b/0xb0 [xfs], inode 0x1172 attr fork
XFS: Assertion failed: ip->i_af.if_u1.if_data == NULL, file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c, line: 315
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 2 PID: 91635 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
CPU: 2 PID: 91635 Comm: xfs_scrub Tainted: G W 5.19.0-rc7-xfsx #rc7 6e6475eb29fd9dda3181f81b7ca7ff961d277a40
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.15.0-1 04/01/2014
RIP: 0010:assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_ifork_zap_attr+0x7c/0xb0
xfs_iformat_attr_fork+0x86/0x110
xfs_inode_from_disk+0x41d/0x480
xfs_iget+0x389/0xd70
xfs_bulkstat_one_int+0x5b/0x540
xfs_bulkstat_iwalk+0x1e/0x30
xfs_iwalk_ag_recs+0xd1/0x160
xfs_iwalk_run_callbacks+0xb9/0x180
xfs_iwalk_ag+0x1d8/0x2e0
xfs_iwalk+0x141/0x220
xfs_bulkstat+0x105/0x180
xfs_ioc_bulkstat.constprop.0.isra.0+0xc5/0x130
xfs_file_ioctl+0xa5f/0xef0
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

This newly-added assertion checks that there aren't any incore data
structures hanging off the incore fork when we're trying to reset its
contents. From the call trace, it is evident that iget was trying to
construct an incore inode from the ondisk inode, but the attr fork
verifier failed and we were trying to undo all the memory allocations
that we had done earlier.

The three assertions in xfs_ifork_zap_attr check that the caller has
already called xfs_idestroy_fork, which clearly has not been done here.
As the zap function then zeroes the pointers, we've effectively leaked
the memory.

The shortest change would have been to insert an extra call to
xfs_idestroy_fork, but it makes more sense to bundle the _idestroy_fork
call into _zap_attr, since all other callsites call _idestroy_fork
immediately prior to calling _zap_attr. IOWs, it eliminates one way to
fail.

Note: This change only applies cleanly to 2ed5b09b3e8f, since we just
reworked the attr fork lifetime. However, I think this memory leak has
existed since 0f45a1b20cd8, since the chain xfs_iformat_attr_fork ->
xfs_iformat_local -> xfs_init_local_fork will allocate
ifp->if_u1.if_data, but if xfs_ifork_verify_local_attr fails,
xfs_iformat_attr_fork will free i_afp without freeing any of the stuff
hanging off i_afp. The solution for older kernels I think is to add the
missing call to xfs_idestroy_fork just prior to calling kmem_cache_free.

Found by fuzzing a.sfattr.hdr.totsize = lastbit in xfs/399.

Fixes: 2ed5b09b3e8f ("xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode")
Probably-Fixes: 0f45a1b20cd8 ("xfs: improve local fork verification")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff c78c2d09 Tue Jul 19 10:14:55 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: don't leak memory when attr fork loading fails

I observed the following evidence of a memory leak while running xfs/399
from the xfs fsck test suite (edited for brevity):

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_attr_shortform_verify_struct.part.0+0x7b/0xb0 [xfs], inode 0x1172 attr fork
XFS: Assertion failed: ip->i_af.if_u1.if_data == NULL, file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c, line: 315
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 2 PID: 91635 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
CPU: 2 PID: 91635 Comm: xfs_scrub Tainted: G W 5.19.0-rc7-xfsx #rc7 6e6475eb29fd9dda3181f81b7ca7ff961d277a40
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.15.0-1 04/01/2014
RIP: 0010:assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_ifork_zap_attr+0x7c/0xb0
xfs_iformat_attr_fork+0x86/0x110
xfs_inode_from_disk+0x41d/0x480
xfs_iget+0x389/0xd70
xfs_bulkstat_one_int+0x5b/0x540
xfs_bulkstat_iwalk+0x1e/0x30
xfs_iwalk_ag_recs+0xd1/0x160
xfs_iwalk_run_callbacks+0xb9/0x180
xfs_iwalk_ag+0x1d8/0x2e0
xfs_iwalk+0x141/0x220
xfs_bulkstat+0x105/0x180
xfs_ioc_bulkstat.constprop.0.isra.0+0xc5/0x130
xfs_file_ioctl+0xa5f/0xef0
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

This newly-added assertion checks that there aren't any incore data
structures hanging off the incore fork when we're trying to reset its
contents. From the call trace, it is evident that iget was trying to
construct an incore inode from the ondisk inode, but the attr fork
verifier failed and we were trying to undo all the memory allocations
that we had done earlier.

The three assertions in xfs_ifork_zap_attr check that the caller has
already called xfs_idestroy_fork, which clearly has not been done here.
As the zap function then zeroes the pointers, we've effectively leaked
the memory.

The shortest change would have been to insert an extra call to
xfs_idestroy_fork, but it makes more sense to bundle the _idestroy_fork
call into _zap_attr, since all other callsites call _idestroy_fork
immediately prior to calling _zap_attr. IOWs, it eliminates one way to
fail.

Note: This change only applies cleanly to 2ed5b09b3e8f, since we just
reworked the attr fork lifetime. However, I think this memory leak has
existed since 0f45a1b20cd8, since the chain xfs_iformat_attr_fork ->
xfs_iformat_local -> xfs_init_local_fork will allocate
ifp->if_u1.if_data, but if xfs_ifork_verify_local_attr fails,
xfs_iformat_attr_fork will free i_afp without freeing any of the stuff
hanging off i_afp. The solution for older kernels I think is to add the
missing call to xfs_idestroy_fork just prior to calling kmem_cache_free.

Found by fuzzing a.sfattr.hdr.totsize = lastbit in xfs/399.

Fixes: 2ed5b09b3e8f ("xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode")
Probably-Fixes: 0f45a1b20cd8 ("xfs: improve local fork verification")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff c78c2d09 Tue Jul 19 10:14:55 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: don't leak memory when attr fork loading fails

I observed the following evidence of a memory leak while running xfs/399
from the xfs fsck test suite (edited for brevity):

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_attr_shortform_verify_struct.part.0+0x7b/0xb0 [xfs], inode 0x1172 attr fork
XFS: Assertion failed: ip->i_af.if_u1.if_data == NULL, file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c, line: 315
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 2 PID: 91635 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
CPU: 2 PID: 91635 Comm: xfs_scrub Tainted: G W 5.19.0-rc7-xfsx #rc7 6e6475eb29fd9dda3181f81b7ca7ff961d277a40
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.15.0-1 04/01/2014
RIP: 0010:assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_ifork_zap_attr+0x7c/0xb0
xfs_iformat_attr_fork+0x86/0x110
xfs_inode_from_disk+0x41d/0x480
xfs_iget+0x389/0xd70
xfs_bulkstat_one_int+0x5b/0x540
xfs_bulkstat_iwalk+0x1e/0x30
xfs_iwalk_ag_recs+0xd1/0x160
xfs_iwalk_run_callbacks+0xb9/0x180
xfs_iwalk_ag+0x1d8/0x2e0
xfs_iwalk+0x141/0x220
xfs_bulkstat+0x105/0x180
xfs_ioc_bulkstat.constprop.0.isra.0+0xc5/0x130
xfs_file_ioctl+0xa5f/0xef0
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

This newly-added assertion checks that there aren't any incore data
structures hanging off the incore fork when we're trying to reset its
contents. From the call trace, it is evident that iget was trying to
construct an incore inode from the ondisk inode, but the attr fork
verifier failed and we were trying to undo all the memory allocations
that we had done earlier.

The three assertions in xfs_ifork_zap_attr check that the caller has
already called xfs_idestroy_fork, which clearly has not been done here.
As the zap function then zeroes the pointers, we've effectively leaked
the memory.

The shortest change would have been to insert an extra call to
xfs_idestroy_fork, but it makes more sense to bundle the _idestroy_fork
call into _zap_attr, since all other callsites call _idestroy_fork
immediately prior to calling _zap_attr. IOWs, it eliminates one way to
fail.

Note: This change only applies cleanly to 2ed5b09b3e8f, since we just
reworked the attr fork lifetime. However, I think this memory leak has
existed since 0f45a1b20cd8, since the chain xfs_iformat_attr_fork ->
xfs_iformat_local -> xfs_init_local_fork will allocate
ifp->if_u1.if_data, but if xfs_ifork_verify_local_attr fails,
xfs_iformat_attr_fork will free i_afp without freeing any of the stuff
hanging off i_afp. The solution for older kernels I think is to add the
missing call to xfs_idestroy_fork just prior to calling kmem_cache_free.

Found by fuzzing a.sfattr.hdr.totsize = lastbit in xfs/399.

Fixes: 2ed5b09b3e8f ("xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode")
Probably-Fixes: 0f45a1b20cd8 ("xfs: improve local fork verification")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff c78c2d09 Tue Jul 19 10:14:55 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: don't leak memory when attr fork loading fails

I observed the following evidence of a memory leak while running xfs/399
from the xfs fsck test suite (edited for brevity):

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_attr_shortform_verify_struct.part.0+0x7b/0xb0 [xfs], inode 0x1172 attr fork
XFS: Assertion failed: ip->i_af.if_u1.if_data == NULL, file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c, line: 315
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 2 PID: 91635 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
CPU: 2 PID: 91635 Comm: xfs_scrub Tainted: G W 5.19.0-rc7-xfsx #rc7 6e6475eb29fd9dda3181f81b7ca7ff961d277a40
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.15.0-1 04/01/2014
RIP: 0010:assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_ifork_zap_attr+0x7c/0xb0
xfs_iformat_attr_fork+0x86/0x110
xfs_inode_from_disk+0x41d/0x480
xfs_iget+0x389/0xd70
xfs_bulkstat_one_int+0x5b/0x540
xfs_bulkstat_iwalk+0x1e/0x30
xfs_iwalk_ag_recs+0xd1/0x160
xfs_iwalk_run_callbacks+0xb9/0x180
xfs_iwalk_ag+0x1d8/0x2e0
xfs_iwalk+0x141/0x220
xfs_bulkstat+0x105/0x180
xfs_ioc_bulkstat.constprop.0.isra.0+0xc5/0x130
xfs_file_ioctl+0xa5f/0xef0
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

This newly-added assertion checks that there aren't any incore data
structures hanging off the incore fork when we're trying to reset its
contents. From the call trace, it is evident that iget was trying to
construct an incore inode from the ondisk inode, but the attr fork
verifier failed and we were trying to undo all the memory allocations
that we had done earlier.

The three assertions in xfs_ifork_zap_attr check that the caller has
already called xfs_idestroy_fork, which clearly has not been done here.
As the zap function then zeroes the pointers, we've effectively leaked
the memory.

The shortest change would have been to insert an extra call to
xfs_idestroy_fork, but it makes more sense to bundle the _idestroy_fork
call into _zap_attr, since all other callsites call _idestroy_fork
immediately prior to calling _zap_attr. IOWs, it eliminates one way to
fail.

Note: This change only applies cleanly to 2ed5b09b3e8f, since we just
reworked the attr fork lifetime. However, I think this memory leak has
existed since 0f45a1b20cd8, since the chain xfs_iformat_attr_fork ->
xfs_iformat_local -> xfs_init_local_fork will allocate
ifp->if_u1.if_data, but if xfs_ifork_verify_local_attr fails,
xfs_iformat_attr_fork will free i_afp without freeing any of the stuff
hanging off i_afp. The solution for older kernels I think is to add the
missing call to xfs_idestroy_fork just prior to calling kmem_cache_free.

Found by fuzzing a.sfattr.hdr.totsize = lastbit in xfs/399.

Fixes: 2ed5b09b3e8f ("xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode")
Probably-Fixes: 0f45a1b20cd8 ("xfs: improve local fork verification")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff c78c2d09 Tue Jul 19 10:14:55 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: don't leak memory when attr fork loading fails

I observed the following evidence of a memory leak while running xfs/399
from the xfs fsck test suite (edited for brevity):

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_attr_shortform_verify_struct.part.0+0x7b/0xb0 [xfs], inode 0x1172 attr fork
XFS: Assertion failed: ip->i_af.if_u1.if_data == NULL, file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c, line: 315
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 2 PID: 91635 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
CPU: 2 PID: 91635 Comm: xfs_scrub Tainted: G W 5.19.0-rc7-xfsx #rc7 6e6475eb29fd9dda3181f81b7ca7ff961d277a40
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.15.0-1 04/01/2014
RIP: 0010:assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_ifork_zap_attr+0x7c/0xb0
xfs_iformat_attr_fork+0x86/0x110
xfs_inode_from_disk+0x41d/0x480
xfs_iget+0x389/0xd70
xfs_bulkstat_one_int+0x5b/0x540
xfs_bulkstat_iwalk+0x1e/0x30
xfs_iwalk_ag_recs+0xd1/0x160
xfs_iwalk_run_callbacks+0xb9/0x180
xfs_iwalk_ag+0x1d8/0x2e0
xfs_iwalk+0x141/0x220
xfs_bulkstat+0x105/0x180
xfs_ioc_bulkstat.constprop.0.isra.0+0xc5/0x130
xfs_file_ioctl+0xa5f/0xef0
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

This newly-added assertion checks that there aren't any incore data
structures hanging off the incore fork when we're trying to reset its
contents. From the call trace, it is evident that iget was trying to
construct an incore inode from the ondisk inode, but the attr fork
verifier failed and we were trying to undo all the memory allocations
that we had done earlier.

The three assertions in xfs_ifork_zap_attr check that the caller has
already called xfs_idestroy_fork, which clearly has not been done here.
As the zap function then zeroes the pointers, we've effectively leaked
the memory.

The shortest change would have been to insert an extra call to
xfs_idestroy_fork, but it makes more sense to bundle the _idestroy_fork
call into _zap_attr, since all other callsites call _idestroy_fork
immediately prior to calling _zap_attr. IOWs, it eliminates one way to
fail.

Note: This change only applies cleanly to 2ed5b09b3e8f, since we just
reworked the attr fork lifetime. However, I think this memory leak has
existed since 0f45a1b20cd8, since the chain xfs_iformat_attr_fork ->
xfs_iformat_local -> xfs_init_local_fork will allocate
ifp->if_u1.if_data, but if xfs_ifork_verify_local_attr fails,
xfs_iformat_attr_fork will free i_afp without freeing any of the stuff
hanging off i_afp. The solution for older kernels I think is to add the
missing call to xfs_idestroy_fork just prior to calling kmem_cache_free.

Found by fuzzing a.sfattr.hdr.totsize = lastbit in xfs/399.

Fixes: 2ed5b09b3e8f ("xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode")
Probably-Fixes: 0f45a1b20cd8 ("xfs: improve local fork verification")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff c78c2d09 Tue Jul 19 10:14:55 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: don't leak memory when attr fork loading fails

I observed the following evidence of a memory leak while running xfs/399
from the xfs fsck test suite (edited for brevity):

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_attr_shortform_verify_struct.part.0+0x7b/0xb0 [xfs], inode 0x1172 attr fork
XFS: Assertion failed: ip->i_af.if_u1.if_data == NULL, file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c, line: 315
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 2 PID: 91635 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
CPU: 2 PID: 91635 Comm: xfs_scrub Tainted: G W 5.19.0-rc7-xfsx #rc7 6e6475eb29fd9dda3181f81b7ca7ff961d277a40
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.15.0-1 04/01/2014
RIP: 0010:assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_ifork_zap_attr+0x7c/0xb0
xfs_iformat_attr_fork+0x86/0x110
xfs_inode_from_disk+0x41d/0x480
xfs_iget+0x389/0xd70
xfs_bulkstat_one_int+0x5b/0x540
xfs_bulkstat_iwalk+0x1e/0x30
xfs_iwalk_ag_recs+0xd1/0x160
xfs_iwalk_run_callbacks+0xb9/0x180
xfs_iwalk_ag+0x1d8/0x2e0
xfs_iwalk+0x141/0x220
xfs_bulkstat+0x105/0x180
xfs_ioc_bulkstat.constprop.0.isra.0+0xc5/0x130
xfs_file_ioctl+0xa5f/0xef0
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

This newly-added assertion checks that there aren't any incore data
structures hanging off the incore fork when we're trying to reset its
contents. From the call trace, it is evident that iget was trying to
construct an incore inode from the ondisk inode, but the attr fork
verifier failed and we were trying to undo all the memory allocations
that we had done earlier.

The three assertions in xfs_ifork_zap_attr check that the caller has
already called xfs_idestroy_fork, which clearly has not been done here.
As the zap function then zeroes the pointers, we've effectively leaked
the memory.

The shortest change would have been to insert an extra call to
xfs_idestroy_fork, but it makes more sense to bundle the _idestroy_fork
call into _zap_attr, since all other callsites call _idestroy_fork
immediately prior to calling _zap_attr. IOWs, it eliminates one way to
fail.

Note: This change only applies cleanly to 2ed5b09b3e8f, since we just
reworked the attr fork lifetime. However, I think this memory leak has
existed since 0f45a1b20cd8, since the chain xfs_iformat_attr_fork ->
xfs_iformat_local -> xfs_init_local_fork will allocate
ifp->if_u1.if_data, but if xfs_ifork_verify_local_attr fails,
xfs_iformat_attr_fork will free i_afp without freeing any of the stuff
hanging off i_afp. The solution for older kernels I think is to add the
missing call to xfs_idestroy_fork just prior to calling kmem_cache_free.

Found by fuzzing a.sfattr.hdr.totsize = lastbit in xfs/399.

Fixes: 2ed5b09b3e8f ("xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode")
Probably-Fixes: 0f45a1b20cd8 ("xfs: improve local fork verification")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff c78c2d09 Tue Jul 19 10:14:55 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: don't leak memory when attr fork loading fails

I observed the following evidence of a memory leak while running xfs/399
from the xfs fsck test suite (edited for brevity):

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_attr_shortform_verify_struct.part.0+0x7b/0xb0 [xfs], inode 0x1172 attr fork
XFS: Assertion failed: ip->i_af.if_u1.if_data == NULL, file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c, line: 315
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 2 PID: 91635 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
CPU: 2 PID: 91635 Comm: xfs_scrub Tainted: G W 5.19.0-rc7-xfsx #rc7 6e6475eb29fd9dda3181f81b7ca7ff961d277a40
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.15.0-1 04/01/2014
RIP: 0010:assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_ifork_zap_attr+0x7c/0xb0
xfs_iformat_attr_fork+0x86/0x110
xfs_inode_from_disk+0x41d/0x480
xfs_iget+0x389/0xd70
xfs_bulkstat_one_int+0x5b/0x540
xfs_bulkstat_iwalk+0x1e/0x30
xfs_iwalk_ag_recs+0xd1/0x160
xfs_iwalk_run_callbacks+0xb9/0x180
xfs_iwalk_ag+0x1d8/0x2e0
xfs_iwalk+0x141/0x220
xfs_bulkstat+0x105/0x180
xfs_ioc_bulkstat.constprop.0.isra.0+0xc5/0x130
xfs_file_ioctl+0xa5f/0xef0
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

This newly-added assertion checks that there aren't any incore data
structures hanging off the incore fork when we're trying to reset its
contents. From the call trace, it is evident that iget was trying to
construct an incore inode from the ondisk inode, but the attr fork
verifier failed and we were trying to undo all the memory allocations
that we had done earlier.

The three assertions in xfs_ifork_zap_attr check that the caller has
already called xfs_idestroy_fork, which clearly has not been done here.
As the zap function then zeroes the pointers, we've effectively leaked
the memory.

The shortest change would have been to insert an extra call to
xfs_idestroy_fork, but it makes more sense to bundle the _idestroy_fork
call into _zap_attr, since all other callsites call _idestroy_fork
immediately prior to calling _zap_attr. IOWs, it eliminates one way to
fail.

Note: This change only applies cleanly to 2ed5b09b3e8f, since we just
reworked the attr fork lifetime. However, I think this memory leak has
existed since 0f45a1b20cd8, since the chain xfs_iformat_attr_fork ->
xfs_iformat_local -> xfs_init_local_fork will allocate
ifp->if_u1.if_data, but if xfs_ifork_verify_local_attr fails,
xfs_iformat_attr_fork will free i_afp without freeing any of the stuff
hanging off i_afp. The solution for older kernels I think is to add the
missing call to xfs_idestroy_fork just prior to calling kmem_cache_free.

Found by fuzzing a.sfattr.hdr.totsize = lastbit in xfs/399.

Fixes: 2ed5b09b3e8f ("xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode")
Probably-Fixes: 0f45a1b20cd8 ("xfs: improve local fork verification")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff c78c2d09 Tue Jul 19 10:14:55 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: don't leak memory when attr fork loading fails

I observed the following evidence of a memory leak while running xfs/399
from the xfs fsck test suite (edited for brevity):

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_attr_shortform_verify_struct.part.0+0x7b/0xb0 [xfs], inode 0x1172 attr fork
XFS: Assertion failed: ip->i_af.if_u1.if_data == NULL, file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c, line: 315
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 2 PID: 91635 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
CPU: 2 PID: 91635 Comm: xfs_scrub Tainted: G W 5.19.0-rc7-xfsx #rc7 6e6475eb29fd9dda3181f81b7ca7ff961d277a40
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.15.0-1 04/01/2014
RIP: 0010:assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_ifork_zap_attr+0x7c/0xb0
xfs_iformat_attr_fork+0x86/0x110
xfs_inode_from_disk+0x41d/0x480
xfs_iget+0x389/0xd70
xfs_bulkstat_one_int+0x5b/0x540
xfs_bulkstat_iwalk+0x1e/0x30
xfs_iwalk_ag_recs+0xd1/0x160
xfs_iwalk_run_callbacks+0xb9/0x180
xfs_iwalk_ag+0x1d8/0x2e0
xfs_iwalk+0x141/0x220
xfs_bulkstat+0x105/0x180
xfs_ioc_bulkstat.constprop.0.isra.0+0xc5/0x130
xfs_file_ioctl+0xa5f/0xef0
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

This newly-added assertion checks that there aren't any incore data
structures hanging off the incore fork when we're trying to reset its
contents. From the call trace, it is evident that iget was trying to
construct an incore inode from the ondisk inode, but the attr fork
verifier failed and we were trying to undo all the memory allocations
that we had done earlier.

The three assertions in xfs_ifork_zap_attr check that the caller has
already called xfs_idestroy_fork, which clearly has not been done here.
As the zap function then zeroes the pointers, we've effectively leaked
the memory.

The shortest change would have been to insert an extra call to
xfs_idestroy_fork, but it makes more sense to bundle the _idestroy_fork
call into _zap_attr, since all other callsites call _idestroy_fork
immediately prior to calling _zap_attr. IOWs, it eliminates one way to
fail.

Note: This change only applies cleanly to 2ed5b09b3e8f, since we just
reworked the attr fork lifetime. However, I think this memory leak has
existed since 0f45a1b20cd8, since the chain xfs_iformat_attr_fork ->
xfs_iformat_local -> xfs_init_local_fork will allocate
ifp->if_u1.if_data, but if xfs_ifork_verify_local_attr fails,
xfs_iformat_attr_fork will free i_afp without freeing any of the stuff
hanging off i_afp. The solution for older kernels I think is to add the
missing call to xfs_idestroy_fork just prior to calling kmem_cache_free.

Found by fuzzing a.sfattr.hdr.totsize = lastbit in xfs/399.

Fixes: 2ed5b09b3e8f ("xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode")
Probably-Fixes: 0f45a1b20cd8 ("xfs: improve local fork verification")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff c78c2d09 Tue Jul 19 10:14:55 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: don't leak memory when attr fork loading fails

I observed the following evidence of a memory leak while running xfs/399
from the xfs fsck test suite (edited for brevity):

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_attr_shortform_verify_struct.part.0+0x7b/0xb0 [xfs], inode 0x1172 attr fork
XFS: Assertion failed: ip->i_af.if_u1.if_data == NULL, file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c, line: 315
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 2 PID: 91635 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
CPU: 2 PID: 91635 Comm: xfs_scrub Tainted: G W 5.19.0-rc7-xfsx #rc7 6e6475eb29fd9dda3181f81b7ca7ff961d277a40
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.15.0-1 04/01/2014
RIP: 0010:assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_ifork_zap_attr+0x7c/0xb0
xfs_iformat_attr_fork+0x86/0x110
xfs_inode_from_disk+0x41d/0x480
xfs_iget+0x389/0xd70
xfs_bulkstat_one_int+0x5b/0x540
xfs_bulkstat_iwalk+0x1e/0x30
xfs_iwalk_ag_recs+0xd1/0x160
xfs_iwalk_run_callbacks+0xb9/0x180
xfs_iwalk_ag+0x1d8/0x2e0
xfs_iwalk+0x141/0x220
xfs_bulkstat+0x105/0x180
xfs_ioc_bulkstat.constprop.0.isra.0+0xc5/0x130
xfs_file_ioctl+0xa5f/0xef0
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

This newly-added assertion checks that there aren't any incore data
structures hanging off the incore fork when we're trying to reset its
contents. From the call trace, it is evident that iget was trying to
construct an incore inode from the ondisk inode, but the attr fork
verifier failed and we were trying to undo all the memory allocations
that we had done earlier.

The three assertions in xfs_ifork_zap_attr check that the caller has
already called xfs_idestroy_fork, which clearly has not been done here.
As the zap function then zeroes the pointers, we've effectively leaked
the memory.

The shortest change would have been to insert an extra call to
xfs_idestroy_fork, but it makes more sense to bundle the _idestroy_fork
call into _zap_attr, since all other callsites call _idestroy_fork
immediately prior to calling _zap_attr. IOWs, it eliminates one way to
fail.

Note: This change only applies cleanly to 2ed5b09b3e8f, since we just
reworked the attr fork lifetime. However, I think this memory leak has
existed since 0f45a1b20cd8, since the chain xfs_iformat_attr_fork ->
xfs_iformat_local -> xfs_init_local_fork will allocate
ifp->if_u1.if_data, but if xfs_ifork_verify_local_attr fails,
xfs_iformat_attr_fork will free i_afp without freeing any of the stuff
hanging off i_afp. The solution for older kernels I think is to add the
missing call to xfs_idestroy_fork just prior to calling kmem_cache_free.

Found by fuzzing a.sfattr.hdr.totsize = lastbit in xfs/399.

Fixes: 2ed5b09b3e8f ("xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode")
Probably-Fixes: 0f45a1b20cd8 ("xfs: improve local fork verification")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff c78c2d09 Tue Jul 19 10:14:55 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: don't leak memory when attr fork loading fails

I observed the following evidence of a memory leak while running xfs/399
from the xfs fsck test suite (edited for brevity):

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_attr_shortform_verify_struct.part.0+0x7b/0xb0 [xfs], inode 0x1172 attr fork
XFS: Assertion failed: ip->i_af.if_u1.if_data == NULL, file: fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c, line: 315
------------[ cut here ]------------
WARNING: CPU: 2 PID: 91635 at fs/xfs/xfs_message.c:104 assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
CPU: 2 PID: 91635 Comm: xfs_scrub Tainted: G W 5.19.0-rc7-xfsx #rc7 6e6475eb29fd9dda3181f81b7ca7ff961d277a40
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.15.0-1 04/01/2014
RIP: 0010:assfail+0x46/0x4a [xfs]
Call Trace:
<TASK>
xfs_ifork_zap_attr+0x7c/0xb0
xfs_iformat_attr_fork+0x86/0x110
xfs_inode_from_disk+0x41d/0x480
xfs_iget+0x389/0xd70
xfs_bulkstat_one_int+0x5b/0x540
xfs_bulkstat_iwalk+0x1e/0x30
xfs_iwalk_ag_recs+0xd1/0x160
xfs_iwalk_run_callbacks+0xb9/0x180
xfs_iwalk_ag+0x1d8/0x2e0
xfs_iwalk+0x141/0x220
xfs_bulkstat+0x105/0x180
xfs_ioc_bulkstat.constprop.0.isra.0+0xc5/0x130
xfs_file_ioctl+0xa5f/0xef0
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x82/0xa0
do_syscall_64+0x2b/0x80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0

This newly-added assertion checks that there aren't any incore data
structures hanging off the incore fork when we're trying to reset its
contents. From the call trace, it is evident that iget was trying to
construct an incore inode from the ondisk inode, but the attr fork
verifier failed and we were trying to undo all the memory allocations
that we had done earlier.

The three assertions in xfs_ifork_zap_attr check that the caller has
already called xfs_idestroy_fork, which clearly has not been done here.
As the zap function then zeroes the pointers, we've effectively leaked
the memory.

The shortest change would have been to insert an extra call to
xfs_idestroy_fork, but it makes more sense to bundle the _idestroy_fork
call into _zap_attr, since all other callsites call _idestroy_fork
immediately prior to calling _zap_attr. IOWs, it eliminates one way to
fail.

Note: This change only applies cleanly to 2ed5b09b3e8f, since we just
reworked the attr fork lifetime. However, I think this memory leak has
existed since 0f45a1b20cd8, since the chain xfs_iformat_attr_fork ->
xfs_iformat_local -> xfs_init_local_fork will allocate
ifp->if_u1.if_data, but if xfs_ifork_verify_local_attr fails,
xfs_iformat_attr_fork will free i_afp without freeing any of the stuff
hanging off i_afp. The solution for older kernels I think is to add the
missing call to xfs_idestroy_fork just prior to calling kmem_cache_free.

Found by fuzzing a.sfattr.hdr.totsize = lastbit in xfs/399.

Fixes: 2ed5b09b3e8f ("xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode")
Probably-Fixes: 0f45a1b20cd8 ("xfs: improve local fork verification")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
H A Dxfs_refcount.cdiff 0b3a76e9 Mon Jan 15 15:59:46 MST 2024 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: use GFP_KERNEL in pure transaction contexts

When running in a transaction context, memory allocations are scoped
to GFP_NOFS. Hence we don't need to use GFP_NOFS contexts in pure
transaction context allocations - GFP_KERNEL will automatically get
converted to GFP_NOFS as appropriate.

Go through the code and convert all the obvious GFP_NOFS allocations
in transaction context to use GFP_KERNEL. This further reduces the
explicit use of GFP_NOFS in XFS.

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: "Darrick J. Wong" <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Chandan Babu R <chandanbabu@kernel.org>
diff 0b11553e Wed Feb 01 11:16:04 MST 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: pass refcount intent directly through the log intent code

Pass the incore refcount intent through the CUI logging code instead of
repeatedly boxing and unboxing parameters.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
diff ebd9027d Wed Aug 18 19:46:55 MDT 2021 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert xfs_sb_version_has checks to use mount features

This is a conversion of the remaining xfs_sb_version_has..(sbp)
checks to use xfs_has_..(mp) feature checks.

This was largely done with a vim replacement macro that did:

:0,$s/xfs_sb_version_has\(.*\)&\(.*\)->m_sb/xfs_has_\1\2/g<CR>

A couple of other variants were also used, and the rest touched up
by hand.

$ size -t fs/xfs/built-in.a
text data bss dec hex filename
before 1127533 311352 484 1439369 15f689 (TOTALS)
after 1125360 311352 484 1437196 15ee0c (TOTALS)

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
diff 707e0dda Mon Aug 26 01:06:22 MDT 2019 Tetsuo Handa <penguin-kernel@I-love.SAKURA.ne.jp> fs: xfs: Remove KM_NOSLEEP and KM_SLEEP.

Since no caller is using KM_NOSLEEP and no callee branches on KM_SLEEP,
we can remove KM_NOSLEEP and replace KM_SLEEP with 0.

Signed-off-by: Tetsuo Handa <penguin-kernel@I-love.SAKURA.ne.jp>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0f37d178 Wed Aug 01 08:20:34 MDT 2018 Brian Foster <bfoster@redhat.com> xfs: pass transaction to xfs_defer_add()

The majority of remaining references to struct xfs_defer_ops in XFS
are associated with xfs_defer_add(). At this point, there are no
more external xfs_defer_ops users left. All instances of
xfs_defer_ops are embedded in the transaction, which means we can
safely pass the transaction down to the dfops add interface.

Update xfs_defer_add() to receive the transaction as a parameter.
Various subsystems implement wrappers to allocate and construct the
context specific data structures for the associated deferred
operation type. Update these to also carry the transaction down as
needed and clean up unused dfops parameters along the way.

This removes most of the remaining references to struct
xfs_defer_ops throughout the code and facilitates removal of the
structure.

Signed-off-by: Brian Foster <bfoster@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
[darrick: fix unused variable warnings with ftrace disabled]
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b04b6b8 Thu Jul 19 01:26:31 MDT 2018 Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com> xfs: trivial xfs_btree_del_cursor cleanups

The error argument to xfs_btree_del_cursor already understands the
"nonzero for error" semantics, so remove pointless error testing in the
callers and pass it directly.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Foster <bfoster@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Carlos Maiolino <cmaiolino@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
H A Dxfs_attr_remote.cdiff 0e6acf29 Fri May 21 00:51:23 MDT 2021 Allison Henderson <allison.henderson@oracle.com> xfs: Remove xfs_attr_rmtval_set

This function is no longer used, so it is safe to remove

Signed-off-by: Allison Henderson <allison.henderson@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Chandan Babu R <chandanrlinux@gmail.com>
diff 0e3eccce Thu Jan 23 18:01:17 MST 2020 Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com> xfs: make xfs_buf_read return an error code

Convert xfs_buf_read() to return numeric error codes like most
everywhere else in xfs.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff f5b999c0 Wed Jun 12 10:00:00 MDT 2019 Eric Sandeen <sandeen@redhat.com> xfs: remove unused flag arguments

There are several functions which take a flag argument that is
only ever passed as "0," so remove these arguments.

Signed-off-by: Eric Sandeen <sandeen@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Foster <bfoster@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Bill O'Donnell <billodo@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Allison Collins <allison.henderson@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff a8198666 Wed Aug 01 08:20:32 MDT 2018 Brian Foster <bfoster@redhat.com> xfs: automatic dfops inode relogging

Inodes that are held across deferred operations are explicitly
joined to the dfops structure to ensure appropriate relogging.
While inodes are currently joined explicitly, we can detect the
conditions that require relogging at dfops finish time by inspecting
the transaction item list for inodes with ili_lock_flags == 0.

Replace the xfs_defer_ijoin() infrastructure with such detection and
automatic relogging of held inodes. This eliminates the need for the
per-dfops inode list, replaced by an on-stack variant in
xfs_defer_trans_roll().

Signed-off-by: Brian Foster <bfoster@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
H A Dxfs_inode_buf.cdiff 0e24ec3c Thu Feb 22 01:33:03 MST 2024 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: remember sick inodes that get inactivated

If an unhealthy inode gets inactivated, remember this fact in the
per-fs health summary.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
H A Dxfs_dir2.cdiff 0b3a76e9 Mon Jan 15 15:59:46 MST 2024 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: use GFP_KERNEL in pure transaction contexts

When running in a transaction context, memory allocations are scoped
to GFP_NOFS. Hence we don't need to use GFP_NOFS contexts in pure
transaction context allocations - GFP_KERNEL will automatically get
converted to GFP_NOFS as appropriate.

Go through the code and convert all the obvious GFP_NOFS allocations
in transaction context to use GFP_KERNEL. This further reduces the
explicit use of GFP_NOFS in XFS.

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: "Darrick J. Wong" <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Chandan Babu R <chandanbabu@kernel.org>
diff ebd9027d Wed Aug 18 19:46:55 MDT 2021 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert xfs_sb_version_has checks to use mount features

This is a conversion of the remaining xfs_sb_version_has..(sbp)
checks to use xfs_has_..(mp) feature checks.

This was largely done with a vim replacement macro that did:

:0,$s/xfs_sb_version_has\(.*\)&\(.*\)->m_sb/xfs_has_\1\2/g<CR>

A couple of other variants were also used, and the rest touched up
by hand.

$ size -t fs/xfs/built-in.a
text data bss dec hex filename
before 1127533 311352 484 1439369 15f689 (TOTALS)
after 1125360 311352 484 1437196 15ee0c (TOTALS)

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
diff 707e0dda Mon Aug 26 01:06:22 MDT 2019 Tetsuo Handa <penguin-kernel@I-love.SAKURA.ne.jp> fs: xfs: Remove KM_NOSLEEP and KM_SLEEP.

Since no caller is using KM_NOSLEEP and no callee branches on KM_SLEEP,
we can remove KM_NOSLEEP and replace KM_SLEEP with 0.

Signed-off-by: Tetsuo Handa <penguin-kernel@I-love.SAKURA.ne.jp>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
H A Dxfs_dir2_node.cdiff ebd9027d Wed Aug 18 19:46:55 MDT 2021 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert xfs_sb_version_has checks to use mount features

This is a conversion of the remaining xfs_sb_version_has..(sbp)
checks to use xfs_has_..(mp) feature checks.

This was largely done with a vim replacement macro that did:

:0,$s/xfs_sb_version_has\(.*\)&\(.*\)->m_sb/xfs_has_\1\2/g<CR>

A couple of other variants were also used, and the rest touched up
by hand.

$ size -t fs/xfs/built-in.a
text data bss dec hex filename
before 1127533 311352 484 1439369 15f689 (TOTALS)
after 1125360 311352 484 1437196 15ee0c (TOTALS)

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
diff 0e822255 Thu Aug 29 10:04:07 MDT 2019 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: factor free block index lookup from xfs_dir2_node_addname_int()

Simplify the logic in xfs_dir2_node_addname_int() by factoring out
the free block index lookup code that finds a block with enough free
space for the entry to be added. The code that is moved gets a major
cleanup at the same time, but there is no algorithm change here.

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
H A Dxfs_refcount_btree.cdiff 0ed5f735 Thu Sep 23 11:32:06 MDT 2021 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: compute absolute maximum nlevels for each btree type

Add code for all five btree types so that we can compute the absolute
maximum possible btree height for each btree type. This is a setup for
the next patch, which makes every btree type have its own cursor cache.

The functions are exported so that we can have xfs_db report the
absolute maximum btree heights for each btree type, rather than making
everyone run their own ad-hoc computations.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 04fcad80 Wed Aug 18 19:46:57 MDT 2021 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: introduce xfs_buf_daddr()

Introduce a helper function xfs_buf_daddr() to extract the disk
address of the buffer from the struct xfs_buf. This will replace
direct accesses to bp->b_bn and bp->b_maps[0].bm_bn, as well as
the XFS_BUF_ADDR() macro.

This patch introduces the helper function and replaces all uses of
XFS_BUF_ADDR() as this is just a simple sed replacement.

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
H A Dxfs_attr.cdiff 0b3a76e9 Mon Jan 15 15:59:46 MST 2024 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: use GFP_KERNEL in pure transaction contexts

When running in a transaction context, memory allocations are scoped
to GFP_NOFS. Hence we don't need to use GFP_NOFS contexts in pure
transaction context allocations - GFP_KERNEL will automatically get
converted to GFP_NOFS as appropriate.

Go through the code and convert all the obvious GFP_NOFS allocations
in transaction context to use GFP_KERNEL. This further reduces the
explicit use of GFP_NOFS in XFS.

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: "Darrick J. Wong" <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Chandan Babu R <chandanbabu@kernel.org>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 2ed5b09b Sat Jul 09 11:56:06 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: make inode attribute forks a permanent part of struct xfs_inode

Syzkaller reported a UAF bug a while back:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: use-after-free in xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
Read of size 4 at addr ffff88802cec919c by task syz-executor262/2958

CPU: 2 PID: 2958 Comm: syz-executor262 Not tainted
5.15.0-0.30.3-20220406_1406 #3
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29
04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x82/0xa9 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_address_description.constprop.9+0x21/0x2d5 mm/kasan/report.c:256
__kasan_report mm/kasan/report.c:442 [inline]
kasan_report.cold.14+0x7f/0x11b mm/kasan/report.c:459
xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared+0xe3/0xf6 fs/xfs/xfs_inode.c:127
xfs_attr_get+0x378/0x4c2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:159
xfs_xattr_get+0xe3/0x150 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:36
__vfs_getxattr+0xdf/0x13d fs/xattr.c:399
cap_inode_need_killpriv+0x41/0x5d security/commoncap.c:300
security_inode_need_killpriv+0x4c/0x97 security/security.c:1408
dentry_needs_remove_privs.part.28+0x21/0x63 fs/inode.c:1912
dentry_needs_remove_privs+0x80/0x9e fs/inode.c:1908
do_truncate+0xc3/0x1e0 fs/open.c:56
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0
RIP: 0033:0x7f7ef4bb753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48
89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73
01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007f7ef52c2ed8 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000055
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000404148 RCX: 00007f7ef4bb753d
RDX: 00007f7ef4bb753d RSI: 0000000000000000 RDI: 0000000020004fc0
RBP: 0000000000404140 R08: 0000000000000000 R09: 0000000000000000
R10: 0000000000000000 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0030656c69662f2e
R13: 00007ffd794db37f R14: 00007ffd794db470 R15: 00007f7ef52c2fc0
</TASK>

Allocated by task 2953:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track mm/kasan/common.c:46 [inline]
set_alloc_info mm/kasan/common.c:434 [inline]
__kasan_slab_alloc+0x68/0x7c mm/kasan/common.c:467
kasan_slab_alloc include/linux/kasan.h:254 [inline]
slab_post_alloc_hook mm/slab.h:519 [inline]
slab_alloc_node mm/slub.c:3213 [inline]
slab_alloc mm/slub.c:3221 [inline]
kmem_cache_alloc+0x11b/0x3eb mm/slub.c:3226
kmem_cache_zalloc include/linux/slab.h:711 [inline]
xfs_ifork_alloc+0x25/0xa2 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_inode_fork.c:287
xfs_bmap_add_attrfork+0x3f2/0x9b1 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_bmap.c:1098
xfs_attr_set+0xe38/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:746
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_setxattr+0x11b/0x177 fs/xattr.c:180
__vfs_setxattr_noperm+0x128/0x5e0 fs/xattr.c:214
__vfs_setxattr_locked+0x1d4/0x258 fs/xattr.c:275
vfs_setxattr+0x154/0x33d fs/xattr.c:301
setxattr+0x216/0x29f fs/xattr.c:575
__do_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:632 [inline]
__se_sys_fsetxattr fs/xattr.c:621 [inline]
__x64_sys_fsetxattr+0x243/0x2fe fs/xattr.c:621
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

Freed by task 2949:
kasan_save_stack+0x19/0x38 mm/kasan/common.c:38
kasan_set_track+0x1c/0x21 mm/kasan/common.c:46
kasan_set_free_info+0x20/0x30 mm/kasan/generic.c:360
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:366 [inline]
____kasan_slab_free mm/kasan/common.c:328 [inline]
__kasan_slab_free+0xe2/0x10e mm/kasan/common.c:374
kasan_slab_free include/linux/kasan.h:230 [inline]
slab_free_hook mm/slub.c:1700 [inline]
slab_free_freelist_hook mm/slub.c:1726 [inline]
slab_free mm/slub.c:3492 [inline]
kmem_cache_free+0xdc/0x3ce mm/slub.c:3508
xfs_attr_fork_remove+0x8d/0x132 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:773
xfs_attr_sf_removename+0x5dd/0x6cb fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr_leaf.c:822
xfs_attr_remove_iter+0x68c/0x805 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:1413
xfs_attr_remove_args+0xb1/0x10d fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:684
xfs_attr_set+0xf1e/0x12a7 fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_attr.c:802
xfs_xattr_set+0xeb/0x1a9 fs/xfs/xfs_xattr.c:59
__vfs_removexattr+0x106/0x16a fs/xattr.c:468
cap_inode_killpriv+0x24/0x47 security/commoncap.c:324
security_inode_killpriv+0x54/0xa1 security/security.c:1414
setattr_prepare+0x1a6/0x897 fs/attr.c:146
xfs_vn_change_ok+0x111/0x15e fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:682
xfs_vn_setattr_size+0x5f/0x15a fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1065
xfs_vn_setattr+0x125/0x2ad fs/xfs/xfs_iops.c:1093
notify_change+0xae5/0x10a1 fs/attr.c:410
do_truncate+0x134/0x1e0 fs/open.c:64
handle_truncate fs/namei.c:3084 [inline]
do_open fs/namei.c:3432 [inline]
path_openat+0x30ab/0x396d fs/namei.c:3561
do_filp_open+0x1c4/0x290 fs/namei.c:3588
do_sys_openat2+0x60d/0x98c fs/open.c:1212
do_sys_open+0xcf/0x13c fs/open.c:1228
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x7e arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0x0

The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff88802cec9188
which belongs to the cache xfs_ifork of size 40
The buggy address is located 20 bytes inside of
40-byte region [ffff88802cec9188, ffff88802cec91b0)
The buggy address belongs to the page:
page:00000000c3af36a1 refcount:1 mapcount:0 mapping:0000000000000000
index:0x0 pfn:0x2cec9
flags: 0xfffffc0000200(slab|node=0|zone=1|lastcpupid=0x1fffff)
raw: 000fffffc0000200 ffffea00009d2580 0000000600000006 ffff88801a9ffc80
raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080490049 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000
page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected

Memory state around the buggy address:
ffff88802cec9080: fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9100: fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc
>ffff88802cec9180: fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fb
^
ffff88802cec9200: fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fb fb fb
ffff88802cec9280: fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb fc fc fa fb fb fb fb
==================================================================

The root cause of this bug is the unlocked access to xfs_inode.i_afp
from the getxattr code paths while trying to determine which ILOCK mode
to use to stabilize the xattr data. Unfortunately, the VFS does not
acquire i_rwsem when vfs_getxattr (or listxattr) call into the
filesystem, which means that getxattr can race with a removexattr that's
tearing down the attr fork and crash:

xfs_attr_set: xfs_attr_get:
xfs_attr_fork_remove: xfs_ilock_attr_map_shared:

xfs_idestroy_fork(ip->i_afp);
kmem_cache_free(xfs_ifork_cache, ip->i_afp);

if (ip->i_afp &&

ip->i_afp = NULL;

xfs_need_iread_extents(ip->i_afp))
<KABOOM>

ip->i_forkoff = 0;

Regrettably, the VFS is much more lax about i_rwsem and getxattr than
is immediately obvious -- not only does it not guarantee that we hold
i_rwsem, it actually doesn't guarantee that we *don't* hold it either.
The getxattr system call won't acquire the lock before calling XFS, but
the file capabilities code calls getxattr with and without i_rwsem held
to determine if the "security.capabilities" xattr is set on the file.

Fixing the VFS locking requires a treewide investigation into every code
path that could touch an xattr and what i_rwsem state it expects or sets
up. That could take years or even prove impossible; fortunately, we
can fix this UAF problem inside XFS.

An earlier version of this patch used smp_wmb in xfs_attr_fork_remove to
ensure that i_forkoff is always zeroed before i_afp is set to null and
changed the read paths to use smp_rmb before accessing i_forkoff and
i_afp, which avoided these UAF problems. However, the patch author was
too busy dealing with other problems in the meantime, and by the time he
came back to this issue, the situation had changed a bit.

On a modern system with selinux, each inode will always have at least
one xattr for the selinux label, so it doesn't make much sense to keep
incurring the extra pointer dereference. Furthermore, Allison's
upcoming parent pointer patchset will also cause nearly every inode in
the filesystem to have extended attributes. Therefore, make the inode
attribute fork structure part of struct xfs_inode, at a cost of 40 more
bytes.

This patch adds a clunky if_present field where necessary to maintain
the existing logic of xattr fork null pointer testing in the existing
codebase. The next patch switches the logic over to XFS_IFORK_Q and it
all goes away.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
H A Dxfs_dir2.hdiff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff c8ce540d Fri Jun 16 12:00:05 MDT 2017 Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com> xfs: remove double-underscore integer types

This is a purely mechanical patch that removes the private
__{u,}int{8,16,32,64}_t typedefs in favor of using the system
{u,}int{8,16,32,64}_t typedefs. This is the sed script used to perform
the transformation and fix the resulting whitespace and indentation
errors:

s/typedef\t__uint8_t/typedef __uint8_t\t/g
s/typedef\t__uint/typedef __uint/g
s/typedef\t__int\([0-9]*\)_t/typedef int\1_t\t/g
s/__uint8_t\t/__uint8_t\t\t/g
s/__uint/uint/g
s/__int\([0-9]*\)_t\t/__int\1_t\t\t/g
s/__int/int/g
/^typedef.*int[0-9]*_t;$/d

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
diff c8ce540d Fri Jun 16 12:00:05 MDT 2017 Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com> xfs: remove double-underscore integer types

This is a purely mechanical patch that removes the private
__{u,}int{8,16,32,64}_t typedefs in favor of using the system
{u,}int{8,16,32,64}_t typedefs. This is the sed script used to perform
the transformation and fix the resulting whitespace and indentation
errors:

s/typedef\t__uint8_t/typedef __uint8_t\t/g
s/typedef\t__uint/typedef __uint/g
s/typedef\t__int\([0-9]*\)_t/typedef int\1_t\t/g
s/__uint8_t\t/__uint8_t\t\t/g
s/__uint/uint/g
s/__int\([0-9]*\)_t\t/__int\1_t\t\t/g
s/__int/int/g
/^typedef.*int[0-9]*_t;$/d

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
diff c8ce540d Fri Jun 16 12:00:05 MDT 2017 Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com> xfs: remove double-underscore integer types

This is a purely mechanical patch that removes the private
__{u,}int{8,16,32,64}_t typedefs in favor of using the system
{u,}int{8,16,32,64}_t typedefs. This is the sed script used to perform
the transformation and fix the resulting whitespace and indentation
errors:

s/typedef\t__uint8_t/typedef __uint8_t\t/g
s/typedef\t__uint/typedef __uint/g
s/typedef\t__int\([0-9]*\)_t/typedef int\1_t\t/g
s/__uint8_t\t/__uint8_t\t\t/g
s/__uint/uint/g
s/__int\([0-9]*\)_t\t/__int\1_t\t\t/g
s/__int/int/g
/^typedef.*int[0-9]*_t;$/d

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
/linux-master/fs/xfs/scrub/
H A Dialloc.cdiff 0d296634 Thu Aug 10 08:48:12 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: hide xfs_inode_is_allocated in scrub common code

This function is only used by online fsck, so let's move it there.
In the next patch, we'll fix it to work properly and to require that the
caller hold the AGI buffer locked. No major changes aside from
adjusting the signature a bit.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 43004b2a Wed Dec 12 09:46:24 MST 2018 Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com> xfs: add a block to inode count converter

Add new helpers to convert units of fs blocks into inodes, and AG blocks
into AG inodes, respectively. Convert all the open-coded conversions
and XFS_OFFBNO_TO_AGINO(, , 0) calls to use them, as appropriate. The
OFFBNO_TO_AGINO macro is retained for xfs_repair.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Foster <bfoster@redhat.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
H A Dscrub.cdiff e0319282 Mon Sep 11 09:39:06 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: only call xchk_stats_merge after validating scrub inputs

Harshit Mogalapalli slogged through several reports from our internal
syzbot instance and observed that they all had a common stack trace:

BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in __raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in _raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
Write of size 4 at addr 0000001dd87ee280 by task syz-executor365/1543

CPU: 2 PID: 1543 Comm: syz-executor365 Not tainted 6.5.0-syzk #1
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x83/0xb0 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_report+0x3f8/0x620 mm/kasan/report.c:478
kasan_report+0xb0/0xe0 mm/kasan/report.c:588
check_region_inline mm/kasan/generic.c:181 [inline]
kasan_check_range+0x139/0x1e0 mm/kasan/generic.c:187
instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
__raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
_raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:351 [inline]
xchk_stats_merge_one.isra.1+0x39/0x650 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:191
xchk_stats_merge+0x5f/0xe0 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:225
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x252/0x14e0 fs/xfs/scrub/scrub.c:599
xfs_ioc_scrub_metadata+0xc8/0x160 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1646
xfs_file_ioctl+0x3fd/0x1870 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1955
vfs_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:51 [inline]
__do_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:871 [inline]
__se_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:857 [inline]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x199/0x220 fs/ioctl.c:857
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3e/0x90 arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x6e/0xd8
RIP: 0033:0x7ff155af753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48 89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73 01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007ffc006e2568 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000010
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000000000 RCX: 00007ff155af753d
RDX: 00000000200000c0 RSI: 00000000c040583c RDI: 0000000000000003
RBP: 00000000ffffffff R08: 00000000004010c0 R09: 00000000004010c0
R10: 00000000004010c0 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0000000000400cb0
R13: 00007ffc006e2670 R14: 0000000000000000 R15: 0000000000000000
</TASK>

The root cause here is that xchk_stats_merge_one walks off the end of
the xchk_scrub_stats.cs_stats array because it has been fed a garbage
value in sm->sm_type. That occurs because I put the xchk_stats_merge
in the wrong place -- it should have been after the last xchk_teardown
call on our way out of xfs_scrub_metadata because we only call the
teardown function if we called the setup function, and we don't call the
setup functions if the inputs are obviously garbage.

Thanks to Harshit for triaging the bug reports and bringing this to my
attention.

Fixes: d7a74cad8f45 ("xfs: track usage statistics of online fsck")
Reported-by: Harshit Mogalapalli <harshit.m.mogalapalli@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff e0319282 Mon Sep 11 09:39:06 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: only call xchk_stats_merge after validating scrub inputs

Harshit Mogalapalli slogged through several reports from our internal
syzbot instance and observed that they all had a common stack trace:

BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in __raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in _raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
Write of size 4 at addr 0000001dd87ee280 by task syz-executor365/1543

CPU: 2 PID: 1543 Comm: syz-executor365 Not tainted 6.5.0-syzk #1
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x83/0xb0 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_report+0x3f8/0x620 mm/kasan/report.c:478
kasan_report+0xb0/0xe0 mm/kasan/report.c:588
check_region_inline mm/kasan/generic.c:181 [inline]
kasan_check_range+0x139/0x1e0 mm/kasan/generic.c:187
instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
__raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
_raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:351 [inline]
xchk_stats_merge_one.isra.1+0x39/0x650 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:191
xchk_stats_merge+0x5f/0xe0 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:225
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x252/0x14e0 fs/xfs/scrub/scrub.c:599
xfs_ioc_scrub_metadata+0xc8/0x160 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1646
xfs_file_ioctl+0x3fd/0x1870 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1955
vfs_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:51 [inline]
__do_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:871 [inline]
__se_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:857 [inline]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x199/0x220 fs/ioctl.c:857
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3e/0x90 arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x6e/0xd8
RIP: 0033:0x7ff155af753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48 89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73 01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007ffc006e2568 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000010
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000000000 RCX: 00007ff155af753d
RDX: 00000000200000c0 RSI: 00000000c040583c RDI: 0000000000000003
RBP: 00000000ffffffff R08: 00000000004010c0 R09: 00000000004010c0
R10: 00000000004010c0 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0000000000400cb0
R13: 00007ffc006e2670 R14: 0000000000000000 R15: 0000000000000000
</TASK>

The root cause here is that xchk_stats_merge_one walks off the end of
the xchk_scrub_stats.cs_stats array because it has been fed a garbage
value in sm->sm_type. That occurs because I put the xchk_stats_merge
in the wrong place -- it should have been after the last xchk_teardown
call on our way out of xfs_scrub_metadata because we only call the
teardown function if we called the setup function, and we don't call the
setup functions if the inputs are obviously garbage.

Thanks to Harshit for triaging the bug reports and bringing this to my
attention.

Fixes: d7a74cad8f45 ("xfs: track usage statistics of online fsck")
Reported-by: Harshit Mogalapalli <harshit.m.mogalapalli@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff e0319282 Mon Sep 11 09:39:06 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: only call xchk_stats_merge after validating scrub inputs

Harshit Mogalapalli slogged through several reports from our internal
syzbot instance and observed that they all had a common stack trace:

BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in __raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in _raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
Write of size 4 at addr 0000001dd87ee280 by task syz-executor365/1543

CPU: 2 PID: 1543 Comm: syz-executor365 Not tainted 6.5.0-syzk #1
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x83/0xb0 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_report+0x3f8/0x620 mm/kasan/report.c:478
kasan_report+0xb0/0xe0 mm/kasan/report.c:588
check_region_inline mm/kasan/generic.c:181 [inline]
kasan_check_range+0x139/0x1e0 mm/kasan/generic.c:187
instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
__raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
_raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:351 [inline]
xchk_stats_merge_one.isra.1+0x39/0x650 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:191
xchk_stats_merge+0x5f/0xe0 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:225
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x252/0x14e0 fs/xfs/scrub/scrub.c:599
xfs_ioc_scrub_metadata+0xc8/0x160 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1646
xfs_file_ioctl+0x3fd/0x1870 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1955
vfs_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:51 [inline]
__do_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:871 [inline]
__se_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:857 [inline]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x199/0x220 fs/ioctl.c:857
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3e/0x90 arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x6e/0xd8
RIP: 0033:0x7ff155af753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48 89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73 01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007ffc006e2568 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000010
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000000000 RCX: 00007ff155af753d
RDX: 00000000200000c0 RSI: 00000000c040583c RDI: 0000000000000003
RBP: 00000000ffffffff R08: 00000000004010c0 R09: 00000000004010c0
R10: 00000000004010c0 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0000000000400cb0
R13: 00007ffc006e2670 R14: 0000000000000000 R15: 0000000000000000
</TASK>

The root cause here is that xchk_stats_merge_one walks off the end of
the xchk_scrub_stats.cs_stats array because it has been fed a garbage
value in sm->sm_type. That occurs because I put the xchk_stats_merge
in the wrong place -- it should have been after the last xchk_teardown
call on our way out of xfs_scrub_metadata because we only call the
teardown function if we called the setup function, and we don't call the
setup functions if the inputs are obviously garbage.

Thanks to Harshit for triaging the bug reports and bringing this to my
attention.

Fixes: d7a74cad8f45 ("xfs: track usage statistics of online fsck")
Reported-by: Harshit Mogalapalli <harshit.m.mogalapalli@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff e0319282 Mon Sep 11 09:39:06 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: only call xchk_stats_merge after validating scrub inputs

Harshit Mogalapalli slogged through several reports from our internal
syzbot instance and observed that they all had a common stack trace:

BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in __raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in _raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
Write of size 4 at addr 0000001dd87ee280 by task syz-executor365/1543

CPU: 2 PID: 1543 Comm: syz-executor365 Not tainted 6.5.0-syzk #1
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x83/0xb0 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_report+0x3f8/0x620 mm/kasan/report.c:478
kasan_report+0xb0/0xe0 mm/kasan/report.c:588
check_region_inline mm/kasan/generic.c:181 [inline]
kasan_check_range+0x139/0x1e0 mm/kasan/generic.c:187
instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
__raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
_raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:351 [inline]
xchk_stats_merge_one.isra.1+0x39/0x650 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:191
xchk_stats_merge+0x5f/0xe0 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:225
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x252/0x14e0 fs/xfs/scrub/scrub.c:599
xfs_ioc_scrub_metadata+0xc8/0x160 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1646
xfs_file_ioctl+0x3fd/0x1870 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1955
vfs_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:51 [inline]
__do_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:871 [inline]
__se_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:857 [inline]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x199/0x220 fs/ioctl.c:857
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3e/0x90 arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x6e/0xd8
RIP: 0033:0x7ff155af753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48 89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73 01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007ffc006e2568 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000010
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000000000 RCX: 00007ff155af753d
RDX: 00000000200000c0 RSI: 00000000c040583c RDI: 0000000000000003
RBP: 00000000ffffffff R08: 00000000004010c0 R09: 00000000004010c0
R10: 00000000004010c0 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0000000000400cb0
R13: 00007ffc006e2670 R14: 0000000000000000 R15: 0000000000000000
</TASK>

The root cause here is that xchk_stats_merge_one walks off the end of
the xchk_scrub_stats.cs_stats array because it has been fed a garbage
value in sm->sm_type. That occurs because I put the xchk_stats_merge
in the wrong place -- it should have been after the last xchk_teardown
call on our way out of xfs_scrub_metadata because we only call the
teardown function if we called the setup function, and we don't call the
setup functions if the inputs are obviously garbage.

Thanks to Harshit for triaging the bug reports and bringing this to my
attention.

Fixes: d7a74cad8f45 ("xfs: track usage statistics of online fsck")
Reported-by: Harshit Mogalapalli <harshit.m.mogalapalli@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff e0319282 Mon Sep 11 09:39:06 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: only call xchk_stats_merge after validating scrub inputs

Harshit Mogalapalli slogged through several reports from our internal
syzbot instance and observed that they all had a common stack trace:

BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in __raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in _raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
Write of size 4 at addr 0000001dd87ee280 by task syz-executor365/1543

CPU: 2 PID: 1543 Comm: syz-executor365 Not tainted 6.5.0-syzk #1
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x83/0xb0 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_report+0x3f8/0x620 mm/kasan/report.c:478
kasan_report+0xb0/0xe0 mm/kasan/report.c:588
check_region_inline mm/kasan/generic.c:181 [inline]
kasan_check_range+0x139/0x1e0 mm/kasan/generic.c:187
instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
__raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
_raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:351 [inline]
xchk_stats_merge_one.isra.1+0x39/0x650 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:191
xchk_stats_merge+0x5f/0xe0 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:225
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x252/0x14e0 fs/xfs/scrub/scrub.c:599
xfs_ioc_scrub_metadata+0xc8/0x160 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1646
xfs_file_ioctl+0x3fd/0x1870 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1955
vfs_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:51 [inline]
__do_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:871 [inline]
__se_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:857 [inline]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x199/0x220 fs/ioctl.c:857
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3e/0x90 arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x6e/0xd8
RIP: 0033:0x7ff155af753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48 89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73 01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007ffc006e2568 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000010
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000000000 RCX: 00007ff155af753d
RDX: 00000000200000c0 RSI: 00000000c040583c RDI: 0000000000000003
RBP: 00000000ffffffff R08: 00000000004010c0 R09: 00000000004010c0
R10: 00000000004010c0 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0000000000400cb0
R13: 00007ffc006e2670 R14: 0000000000000000 R15: 0000000000000000
</TASK>

The root cause here is that xchk_stats_merge_one walks off the end of
the xchk_scrub_stats.cs_stats array because it has been fed a garbage
value in sm->sm_type. That occurs because I put the xchk_stats_merge
in the wrong place -- it should have been after the last xchk_teardown
call on our way out of xfs_scrub_metadata because we only call the
teardown function if we called the setup function, and we don't call the
setup functions if the inputs are obviously garbage.

Thanks to Harshit for triaging the bug reports and bringing this to my
attention.

Fixes: d7a74cad8f45 ("xfs: track usage statistics of online fsck")
Reported-by: Harshit Mogalapalli <harshit.m.mogalapalli@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff e0319282 Mon Sep 11 09:39:06 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: only call xchk_stats_merge after validating scrub inputs

Harshit Mogalapalli slogged through several reports from our internal
syzbot instance and observed that they all had a common stack trace:

BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in __raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in _raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
Write of size 4 at addr 0000001dd87ee280 by task syz-executor365/1543

CPU: 2 PID: 1543 Comm: syz-executor365 Not tainted 6.5.0-syzk #1
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x83/0xb0 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_report+0x3f8/0x620 mm/kasan/report.c:478
kasan_report+0xb0/0xe0 mm/kasan/report.c:588
check_region_inline mm/kasan/generic.c:181 [inline]
kasan_check_range+0x139/0x1e0 mm/kasan/generic.c:187
instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
__raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
_raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:351 [inline]
xchk_stats_merge_one.isra.1+0x39/0x650 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:191
xchk_stats_merge+0x5f/0xe0 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:225
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x252/0x14e0 fs/xfs/scrub/scrub.c:599
xfs_ioc_scrub_metadata+0xc8/0x160 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1646
xfs_file_ioctl+0x3fd/0x1870 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1955
vfs_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:51 [inline]
__do_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:871 [inline]
__se_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:857 [inline]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x199/0x220 fs/ioctl.c:857
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3e/0x90 arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x6e/0xd8
RIP: 0033:0x7ff155af753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48 89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73 01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007ffc006e2568 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000010
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000000000 RCX: 00007ff155af753d
RDX: 00000000200000c0 RSI: 00000000c040583c RDI: 0000000000000003
RBP: 00000000ffffffff R08: 00000000004010c0 R09: 00000000004010c0
R10: 00000000004010c0 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0000000000400cb0
R13: 00007ffc006e2670 R14: 0000000000000000 R15: 0000000000000000
</TASK>

The root cause here is that xchk_stats_merge_one walks off the end of
the xchk_scrub_stats.cs_stats array because it has been fed a garbage
value in sm->sm_type. That occurs because I put the xchk_stats_merge
in the wrong place -- it should have been after the last xchk_teardown
call on our way out of xfs_scrub_metadata because we only call the
teardown function if we called the setup function, and we don't call the
setup functions if the inputs are obviously garbage.

Thanks to Harshit for triaging the bug reports and bringing this to my
attention.

Fixes: d7a74cad8f45 ("xfs: track usage statistics of online fsck")
Reported-by: Harshit Mogalapalli <harshit.m.mogalapalli@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff e0319282 Mon Sep 11 09:39:06 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: only call xchk_stats_merge after validating scrub inputs

Harshit Mogalapalli slogged through several reports from our internal
syzbot instance and observed that they all had a common stack trace:

BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in __raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in _raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
Write of size 4 at addr 0000001dd87ee280 by task syz-executor365/1543

CPU: 2 PID: 1543 Comm: syz-executor365 Not tainted 6.5.0-syzk #1
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x83/0xb0 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_report+0x3f8/0x620 mm/kasan/report.c:478
kasan_report+0xb0/0xe0 mm/kasan/report.c:588
check_region_inline mm/kasan/generic.c:181 [inline]
kasan_check_range+0x139/0x1e0 mm/kasan/generic.c:187
instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
__raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
_raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:351 [inline]
xchk_stats_merge_one.isra.1+0x39/0x650 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:191
xchk_stats_merge+0x5f/0xe0 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:225
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x252/0x14e0 fs/xfs/scrub/scrub.c:599
xfs_ioc_scrub_metadata+0xc8/0x160 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1646
xfs_file_ioctl+0x3fd/0x1870 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1955
vfs_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:51 [inline]
__do_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:871 [inline]
__se_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:857 [inline]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x199/0x220 fs/ioctl.c:857
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3e/0x90 arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x6e/0xd8
RIP: 0033:0x7ff155af753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48 89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73 01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007ffc006e2568 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000010
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000000000 RCX: 00007ff155af753d
RDX: 00000000200000c0 RSI: 00000000c040583c RDI: 0000000000000003
RBP: 00000000ffffffff R08: 00000000004010c0 R09: 00000000004010c0
R10: 00000000004010c0 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0000000000400cb0
R13: 00007ffc006e2670 R14: 0000000000000000 R15: 0000000000000000
</TASK>

The root cause here is that xchk_stats_merge_one walks off the end of
the xchk_scrub_stats.cs_stats array because it has been fed a garbage
value in sm->sm_type. That occurs because I put the xchk_stats_merge
in the wrong place -- it should have been after the last xchk_teardown
call on our way out of xfs_scrub_metadata because we only call the
teardown function if we called the setup function, and we don't call the
setup functions if the inputs are obviously garbage.

Thanks to Harshit for triaging the bug reports and bringing this to my
attention.

Fixes: d7a74cad8f45 ("xfs: track usage statistics of online fsck")
Reported-by: Harshit Mogalapalli <harshit.m.mogalapalli@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff e0319282 Mon Sep 11 09:39:06 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: only call xchk_stats_merge after validating scrub inputs

Harshit Mogalapalli slogged through several reports from our internal
syzbot instance and observed that they all had a common stack trace:

BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in __raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in _raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
Write of size 4 at addr 0000001dd87ee280 by task syz-executor365/1543

CPU: 2 PID: 1543 Comm: syz-executor365 Not tainted 6.5.0-syzk #1
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x83/0xb0 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_report+0x3f8/0x620 mm/kasan/report.c:478
kasan_report+0xb0/0xe0 mm/kasan/report.c:588
check_region_inline mm/kasan/generic.c:181 [inline]
kasan_check_range+0x139/0x1e0 mm/kasan/generic.c:187
instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
__raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
_raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:351 [inline]
xchk_stats_merge_one.isra.1+0x39/0x650 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:191
xchk_stats_merge+0x5f/0xe0 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:225
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x252/0x14e0 fs/xfs/scrub/scrub.c:599
xfs_ioc_scrub_metadata+0xc8/0x160 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1646
xfs_file_ioctl+0x3fd/0x1870 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1955
vfs_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:51 [inline]
__do_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:871 [inline]
__se_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:857 [inline]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x199/0x220 fs/ioctl.c:857
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3e/0x90 arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x6e/0xd8
RIP: 0033:0x7ff155af753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48 89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73 01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007ffc006e2568 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000010
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000000000 RCX: 00007ff155af753d
RDX: 00000000200000c0 RSI: 00000000c040583c RDI: 0000000000000003
RBP: 00000000ffffffff R08: 00000000004010c0 R09: 00000000004010c0
R10: 00000000004010c0 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0000000000400cb0
R13: 00007ffc006e2670 R14: 0000000000000000 R15: 0000000000000000
</TASK>

The root cause here is that xchk_stats_merge_one walks off the end of
the xchk_scrub_stats.cs_stats array because it has been fed a garbage
value in sm->sm_type. That occurs because I put the xchk_stats_merge
in the wrong place -- it should have been after the last xchk_teardown
call on our way out of xfs_scrub_metadata because we only call the
teardown function if we called the setup function, and we don't call the
setup functions if the inputs are obviously garbage.

Thanks to Harshit for triaging the bug reports and bringing this to my
attention.

Fixes: d7a74cad8f45 ("xfs: track usage statistics of online fsck")
Reported-by: Harshit Mogalapalli <harshit.m.mogalapalli@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff e0319282 Mon Sep 11 09:39:06 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: only call xchk_stats_merge after validating scrub inputs

Harshit Mogalapalli slogged through several reports from our internal
syzbot instance and observed that they all had a common stack trace:

BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in __raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in _raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
Write of size 4 at addr 0000001dd87ee280 by task syz-executor365/1543

CPU: 2 PID: 1543 Comm: syz-executor365 Not tainted 6.5.0-syzk #1
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x83/0xb0 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_report+0x3f8/0x620 mm/kasan/report.c:478
kasan_report+0xb0/0xe0 mm/kasan/report.c:588
check_region_inline mm/kasan/generic.c:181 [inline]
kasan_check_range+0x139/0x1e0 mm/kasan/generic.c:187
instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
__raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
_raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:351 [inline]
xchk_stats_merge_one.isra.1+0x39/0x650 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:191
xchk_stats_merge+0x5f/0xe0 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:225
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x252/0x14e0 fs/xfs/scrub/scrub.c:599
xfs_ioc_scrub_metadata+0xc8/0x160 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1646
xfs_file_ioctl+0x3fd/0x1870 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1955
vfs_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:51 [inline]
__do_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:871 [inline]
__se_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:857 [inline]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x199/0x220 fs/ioctl.c:857
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3e/0x90 arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x6e/0xd8
RIP: 0033:0x7ff155af753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48 89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73 01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007ffc006e2568 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000010
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000000000 RCX: 00007ff155af753d
RDX: 00000000200000c0 RSI: 00000000c040583c RDI: 0000000000000003
RBP: 00000000ffffffff R08: 00000000004010c0 R09: 00000000004010c0
R10: 00000000004010c0 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0000000000400cb0
R13: 00007ffc006e2670 R14: 0000000000000000 R15: 0000000000000000
</TASK>

The root cause here is that xchk_stats_merge_one walks off the end of
the xchk_scrub_stats.cs_stats array because it has been fed a garbage
value in sm->sm_type. That occurs because I put the xchk_stats_merge
in the wrong place -- it should have been after the last xchk_teardown
call on our way out of xfs_scrub_metadata because we only call the
teardown function if we called the setup function, and we don't call the
setup functions if the inputs are obviously garbage.

Thanks to Harshit for triaging the bug reports and bringing this to my
attention.

Fixes: d7a74cad8f45 ("xfs: track usage statistics of online fsck")
Reported-by: Harshit Mogalapalli <harshit.m.mogalapalli@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff e0319282 Mon Sep 11 09:39:06 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: only call xchk_stats_merge after validating scrub inputs

Harshit Mogalapalli slogged through several reports from our internal
syzbot instance and observed that they all had a common stack trace:

BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in __raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in _raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
Write of size 4 at addr 0000001dd87ee280 by task syz-executor365/1543

CPU: 2 PID: 1543 Comm: syz-executor365 Not tainted 6.5.0-syzk #1
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x83/0xb0 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_report+0x3f8/0x620 mm/kasan/report.c:478
kasan_report+0xb0/0xe0 mm/kasan/report.c:588
check_region_inline mm/kasan/generic.c:181 [inline]
kasan_check_range+0x139/0x1e0 mm/kasan/generic.c:187
instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
__raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
_raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:351 [inline]
xchk_stats_merge_one.isra.1+0x39/0x650 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:191
xchk_stats_merge+0x5f/0xe0 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:225
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x252/0x14e0 fs/xfs/scrub/scrub.c:599
xfs_ioc_scrub_metadata+0xc8/0x160 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1646
xfs_file_ioctl+0x3fd/0x1870 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1955
vfs_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:51 [inline]
__do_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:871 [inline]
__se_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:857 [inline]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x199/0x220 fs/ioctl.c:857
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3e/0x90 arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x6e/0xd8
RIP: 0033:0x7ff155af753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48 89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73 01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007ffc006e2568 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000010
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000000000 RCX: 00007ff155af753d
RDX: 00000000200000c0 RSI: 00000000c040583c RDI: 0000000000000003
RBP: 00000000ffffffff R08: 00000000004010c0 R09: 00000000004010c0
R10: 00000000004010c0 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0000000000400cb0
R13: 00007ffc006e2670 R14: 0000000000000000 R15: 0000000000000000
</TASK>

The root cause here is that xchk_stats_merge_one walks off the end of
the xchk_scrub_stats.cs_stats array because it has been fed a garbage
value in sm->sm_type. That occurs because I put the xchk_stats_merge
in the wrong place -- it should have been after the last xchk_teardown
call on our way out of xfs_scrub_metadata because we only call the
teardown function if we called the setup function, and we don't call the
setup functions if the inputs are obviously garbage.

Thanks to Harshit for triaging the bug reports and bringing this to my
attention.

Fixes: d7a74cad8f45 ("xfs: track usage statistics of online fsck")
Reported-by: Harshit Mogalapalli <harshit.m.mogalapalli@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff e0319282 Mon Sep 11 09:39:06 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: only call xchk_stats_merge after validating scrub inputs

Harshit Mogalapalli slogged through several reports from our internal
syzbot instance and observed that they all had a common stack trace:

BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in __raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in _raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
Write of size 4 at addr 0000001dd87ee280 by task syz-executor365/1543

CPU: 2 PID: 1543 Comm: syz-executor365 Not tainted 6.5.0-syzk #1
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x83/0xb0 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_report+0x3f8/0x620 mm/kasan/report.c:478
kasan_report+0xb0/0xe0 mm/kasan/report.c:588
check_region_inline mm/kasan/generic.c:181 [inline]
kasan_check_range+0x139/0x1e0 mm/kasan/generic.c:187
instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
__raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
_raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:351 [inline]
xchk_stats_merge_one.isra.1+0x39/0x650 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:191
xchk_stats_merge+0x5f/0xe0 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:225
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x252/0x14e0 fs/xfs/scrub/scrub.c:599
xfs_ioc_scrub_metadata+0xc8/0x160 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1646
xfs_file_ioctl+0x3fd/0x1870 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1955
vfs_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:51 [inline]
__do_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:871 [inline]
__se_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:857 [inline]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x199/0x220 fs/ioctl.c:857
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3e/0x90 arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x6e/0xd8
RIP: 0033:0x7ff155af753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48 89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73 01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007ffc006e2568 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000010
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000000000 RCX: 00007ff155af753d
RDX: 00000000200000c0 RSI: 00000000c040583c RDI: 0000000000000003
RBP: 00000000ffffffff R08: 00000000004010c0 R09: 00000000004010c0
R10: 00000000004010c0 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0000000000400cb0
R13: 00007ffc006e2670 R14: 0000000000000000 R15: 0000000000000000
</TASK>

The root cause here is that xchk_stats_merge_one walks off the end of
the xchk_scrub_stats.cs_stats array because it has been fed a garbage
value in sm->sm_type. That occurs because I put the xchk_stats_merge
in the wrong place -- it should have been after the last xchk_teardown
call on our way out of xfs_scrub_metadata because we only call the
teardown function if we called the setup function, and we don't call the
setup functions if the inputs are obviously garbage.

Thanks to Harshit for triaging the bug reports and bringing this to my
attention.

Fixes: d7a74cad8f45 ("xfs: track usage statistics of online fsck")
Reported-by: Harshit Mogalapalli <harshit.m.mogalapalli@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff e0319282 Mon Sep 11 09:39:06 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: only call xchk_stats_merge after validating scrub inputs

Harshit Mogalapalli slogged through several reports from our internal
syzbot instance and observed that they all had a common stack trace:

BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in __raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in _raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
Write of size 4 at addr 0000001dd87ee280 by task syz-executor365/1543

CPU: 2 PID: 1543 Comm: syz-executor365 Not tainted 6.5.0-syzk #1
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x83/0xb0 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_report+0x3f8/0x620 mm/kasan/report.c:478
kasan_report+0xb0/0xe0 mm/kasan/report.c:588
check_region_inline mm/kasan/generic.c:181 [inline]
kasan_check_range+0x139/0x1e0 mm/kasan/generic.c:187
instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
__raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
_raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:351 [inline]
xchk_stats_merge_one.isra.1+0x39/0x650 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:191
xchk_stats_merge+0x5f/0xe0 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:225
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x252/0x14e0 fs/xfs/scrub/scrub.c:599
xfs_ioc_scrub_metadata+0xc8/0x160 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1646
xfs_file_ioctl+0x3fd/0x1870 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1955
vfs_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:51 [inline]
__do_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:871 [inline]
__se_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:857 [inline]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x199/0x220 fs/ioctl.c:857
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3e/0x90 arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x6e/0xd8
RIP: 0033:0x7ff155af753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48 89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73 01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007ffc006e2568 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000010
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000000000 RCX: 00007ff155af753d
RDX: 00000000200000c0 RSI: 00000000c040583c RDI: 0000000000000003
RBP: 00000000ffffffff R08: 00000000004010c0 R09: 00000000004010c0
R10: 00000000004010c0 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0000000000400cb0
R13: 00007ffc006e2670 R14: 0000000000000000 R15: 0000000000000000
</TASK>

The root cause here is that xchk_stats_merge_one walks off the end of
the xchk_scrub_stats.cs_stats array because it has been fed a garbage
value in sm->sm_type. That occurs because I put the xchk_stats_merge
in the wrong place -- it should have been after the last xchk_teardown
call on our way out of xfs_scrub_metadata because we only call the
teardown function if we called the setup function, and we don't call the
setup functions if the inputs are obviously garbage.

Thanks to Harshit for triaging the bug reports and bringing this to my
attention.

Fixes: d7a74cad8f45 ("xfs: track usage statistics of online fsck")
Reported-by: Harshit Mogalapalli <harshit.m.mogalapalli@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff e0319282 Mon Sep 11 09:39:06 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: only call xchk_stats_merge after validating scrub inputs

Harshit Mogalapalli slogged through several reports from our internal
syzbot instance and observed that they all had a common stack trace:

BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in __raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in _raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
Write of size 4 at addr 0000001dd87ee280 by task syz-executor365/1543

CPU: 2 PID: 1543 Comm: syz-executor365 Not tainted 6.5.0-syzk #1
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x83/0xb0 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_report+0x3f8/0x620 mm/kasan/report.c:478
kasan_report+0xb0/0xe0 mm/kasan/report.c:588
check_region_inline mm/kasan/generic.c:181 [inline]
kasan_check_range+0x139/0x1e0 mm/kasan/generic.c:187
instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
__raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
_raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:351 [inline]
xchk_stats_merge_one.isra.1+0x39/0x650 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:191
xchk_stats_merge+0x5f/0xe0 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:225
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x252/0x14e0 fs/xfs/scrub/scrub.c:599
xfs_ioc_scrub_metadata+0xc8/0x160 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1646
xfs_file_ioctl+0x3fd/0x1870 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1955
vfs_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:51 [inline]
__do_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:871 [inline]
__se_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:857 [inline]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x199/0x220 fs/ioctl.c:857
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3e/0x90 arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x6e/0xd8
RIP: 0033:0x7ff155af753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48 89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73 01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007ffc006e2568 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000010
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000000000 RCX: 00007ff155af753d
RDX: 00000000200000c0 RSI: 00000000c040583c RDI: 0000000000000003
RBP: 00000000ffffffff R08: 00000000004010c0 R09: 00000000004010c0
R10: 00000000004010c0 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0000000000400cb0
R13: 00007ffc006e2670 R14: 0000000000000000 R15: 0000000000000000
</TASK>

The root cause here is that xchk_stats_merge_one walks off the end of
the xchk_scrub_stats.cs_stats array because it has been fed a garbage
value in sm->sm_type. That occurs because I put the xchk_stats_merge
in the wrong place -- it should have been after the last xchk_teardown
call on our way out of xfs_scrub_metadata because we only call the
teardown function if we called the setup function, and we don't call the
setup functions if the inputs are obviously garbage.

Thanks to Harshit for triaging the bug reports and bringing this to my
attention.

Fixes: d7a74cad8f45 ("xfs: track usage statistics of online fsck")
Reported-by: Harshit Mogalapalli <harshit.m.mogalapalli@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff e0319282 Mon Sep 11 09:39:06 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: only call xchk_stats_merge after validating scrub inputs

Harshit Mogalapalli slogged through several reports from our internal
syzbot instance and observed that they all had a common stack trace:

BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in __raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in _raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
Write of size 4 at addr 0000001dd87ee280 by task syz-executor365/1543

CPU: 2 PID: 1543 Comm: syz-executor365 Not tainted 6.5.0-syzk #1
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x83/0xb0 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_report+0x3f8/0x620 mm/kasan/report.c:478
kasan_report+0xb0/0xe0 mm/kasan/report.c:588
check_region_inline mm/kasan/generic.c:181 [inline]
kasan_check_range+0x139/0x1e0 mm/kasan/generic.c:187
instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
__raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
_raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:351 [inline]
xchk_stats_merge_one.isra.1+0x39/0x650 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:191
xchk_stats_merge+0x5f/0xe0 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:225
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x252/0x14e0 fs/xfs/scrub/scrub.c:599
xfs_ioc_scrub_metadata+0xc8/0x160 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1646
xfs_file_ioctl+0x3fd/0x1870 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1955
vfs_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:51 [inline]
__do_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:871 [inline]
__se_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:857 [inline]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x199/0x220 fs/ioctl.c:857
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3e/0x90 arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x6e/0xd8
RIP: 0033:0x7ff155af753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48 89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73 01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007ffc006e2568 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000010
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000000000 RCX: 00007ff155af753d
RDX: 00000000200000c0 RSI: 00000000c040583c RDI: 0000000000000003
RBP: 00000000ffffffff R08: 00000000004010c0 R09: 00000000004010c0
R10: 00000000004010c0 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0000000000400cb0
R13: 00007ffc006e2670 R14: 0000000000000000 R15: 0000000000000000
</TASK>

The root cause here is that xchk_stats_merge_one walks off the end of
the xchk_scrub_stats.cs_stats array because it has been fed a garbage
value in sm->sm_type. That occurs because I put the xchk_stats_merge
in the wrong place -- it should have been after the last xchk_teardown
call on our way out of xfs_scrub_metadata because we only call the
teardown function if we called the setup function, and we don't call the
setup functions if the inputs are obviously garbage.

Thanks to Harshit for triaging the bug reports and bringing this to my
attention.

Fixes: d7a74cad8f45 ("xfs: track usage statistics of online fsck")
Reported-by: Harshit Mogalapalli <harshit.m.mogalapalli@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff e0319282 Mon Sep 11 09:39:06 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: only call xchk_stats_merge after validating scrub inputs

Harshit Mogalapalli slogged through several reports from our internal
syzbot instance and observed that they all had a common stack trace:

BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in __raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in _raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
Write of size 4 at addr 0000001dd87ee280 by task syz-executor365/1543

CPU: 2 PID: 1543 Comm: syz-executor365 Not tainted 6.5.0-syzk #1
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x83/0xb0 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_report+0x3f8/0x620 mm/kasan/report.c:478
kasan_report+0xb0/0xe0 mm/kasan/report.c:588
check_region_inline mm/kasan/generic.c:181 [inline]
kasan_check_range+0x139/0x1e0 mm/kasan/generic.c:187
instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
__raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
_raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:351 [inline]
xchk_stats_merge_one.isra.1+0x39/0x650 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:191
xchk_stats_merge+0x5f/0xe0 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:225
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x252/0x14e0 fs/xfs/scrub/scrub.c:599
xfs_ioc_scrub_metadata+0xc8/0x160 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1646
xfs_file_ioctl+0x3fd/0x1870 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1955
vfs_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:51 [inline]
__do_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:871 [inline]
__se_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:857 [inline]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x199/0x220 fs/ioctl.c:857
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3e/0x90 arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x6e/0xd8
RIP: 0033:0x7ff155af753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48 89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73 01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007ffc006e2568 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000010
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000000000 RCX: 00007ff155af753d
RDX: 00000000200000c0 RSI: 00000000c040583c RDI: 0000000000000003
RBP: 00000000ffffffff R08: 00000000004010c0 R09: 00000000004010c0
R10: 00000000004010c0 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0000000000400cb0
R13: 00007ffc006e2670 R14: 0000000000000000 R15: 0000000000000000
</TASK>

The root cause here is that xchk_stats_merge_one walks off the end of
the xchk_scrub_stats.cs_stats array because it has been fed a garbage
value in sm->sm_type. That occurs because I put the xchk_stats_merge
in the wrong place -- it should have been after the last xchk_teardown
call on our way out of xfs_scrub_metadata because we only call the
teardown function if we called the setup function, and we don't call the
setup functions if the inputs are obviously garbage.

Thanks to Harshit for triaging the bug reports and bringing this to my
attention.

Fixes: d7a74cad8f45 ("xfs: track usage statistics of online fsck")
Reported-by: Harshit Mogalapalli <harshit.m.mogalapalli@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff e0319282 Mon Sep 11 09:39:06 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: only call xchk_stats_merge after validating scrub inputs

Harshit Mogalapalli slogged through several reports from our internal
syzbot instance and observed that they all had a common stack trace:

BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in __raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in _raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
Write of size 4 at addr 0000001dd87ee280 by task syz-executor365/1543

CPU: 2 PID: 1543 Comm: syz-executor365 Not tainted 6.5.0-syzk #1
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x83/0xb0 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_report+0x3f8/0x620 mm/kasan/report.c:478
kasan_report+0xb0/0xe0 mm/kasan/report.c:588
check_region_inline mm/kasan/generic.c:181 [inline]
kasan_check_range+0x139/0x1e0 mm/kasan/generic.c:187
instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
__raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
_raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:351 [inline]
xchk_stats_merge_one.isra.1+0x39/0x650 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:191
xchk_stats_merge+0x5f/0xe0 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:225
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x252/0x14e0 fs/xfs/scrub/scrub.c:599
xfs_ioc_scrub_metadata+0xc8/0x160 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1646
xfs_file_ioctl+0x3fd/0x1870 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1955
vfs_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:51 [inline]
__do_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:871 [inline]
__se_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:857 [inline]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x199/0x220 fs/ioctl.c:857
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3e/0x90 arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x6e/0xd8
RIP: 0033:0x7ff155af753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48 89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73 01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007ffc006e2568 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000010
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000000000 RCX: 00007ff155af753d
RDX: 00000000200000c0 RSI: 00000000c040583c RDI: 0000000000000003
RBP: 00000000ffffffff R08: 00000000004010c0 R09: 00000000004010c0
R10: 00000000004010c0 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0000000000400cb0
R13: 00007ffc006e2670 R14: 0000000000000000 R15: 0000000000000000
</TASK>

The root cause here is that xchk_stats_merge_one walks off the end of
the xchk_scrub_stats.cs_stats array because it has been fed a garbage
value in sm->sm_type. That occurs because I put the xchk_stats_merge
in the wrong place -- it should have been after the last xchk_teardown
call on our way out of xfs_scrub_metadata because we only call the
teardown function if we called the setup function, and we don't call the
setup functions if the inputs are obviously garbage.

Thanks to Harshit for triaging the bug reports and bringing this to my
attention.

Fixes: d7a74cad8f45 ("xfs: track usage statistics of online fsck")
Reported-by: Harshit Mogalapalli <harshit.m.mogalapalli@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff e0319282 Mon Sep 11 09:39:06 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: only call xchk_stats_merge after validating scrub inputs

Harshit Mogalapalli slogged through several reports from our internal
syzbot instance and observed that they all had a common stack trace:

BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in __raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in _raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
Write of size 4 at addr 0000001dd87ee280 by task syz-executor365/1543

CPU: 2 PID: 1543 Comm: syz-executor365 Not tainted 6.5.0-syzk #1
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x83/0xb0 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_report+0x3f8/0x620 mm/kasan/report.c:478
kasan_report+0xb0/0xe0 mm/kasan/report.c:588
check_region_inline mm/kasan/generic.c:181 [inline]
kasan_check_range+0x139/0x1e0 mm/kasan/generic.c:187
instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
__raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
_raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:351 [inline]
xchk_stats_merge_one.isra.1+0x39/0x650 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:191
xchk_stats_merge+0x5f/0xe0 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:225
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x252/0x14e0 fs/xfs/scrub/scrub.c:599
xfs_ioc_scrub_metadata+0xc8/0x160 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1646
xfs_file_ioctl+0x3fd/0x1870 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1955
vfs_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:51 [inline]
__do_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:871 [inline]
__se_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:857 [inline]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x199/0x220 fs/ioctl.c:857
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3e/0x90 arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x6e/0xd8
RIP: 0033:0x7ff155af753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48 89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73 01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007ffc006e2568 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000010
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000000000 RCX: 00007ff155af753d
RDX: 00000000200000c0 RSI: 00000000c040583c RDI: 0000000000000003
RBP: 00000000ffffffff R08: 00000000004010c0 R09: 00000000004010c0
R10: 00000000004010c0 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0000000000400cb0
R13: 00007ffc006e2670 R14: 0000000000000000 R15: 0000000000000000
</TASK>

The root cause here is that xchk_stats_merge_one walks off the end of
the xchk_scrub_stats.cs_stats array because it has been fed a garbage
value in sm->sm_type. That occurs because I put the xchk_stats_merge
in the wrong place -- it should have been after the last xchk_teardown
call on our way out of xfs_scrub_metadata because we only call the
teardown function if we called the setup function, and we don't call the
setup functions if the inputs are obviously garbage.

Thanks to Harshit for triaging the bug reports and bringing this to my
attention.

Fixes: d7a74cad8f45 ("xfs: track usage statistics of online fsck")
Reported-by: Harshit Mogalapalli <harshit.m.mogalapalli@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff e0319282 Mon Sep 11 09:39:06 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: only call xchk_stats_merge after validating scrub inputs

Harshit Mogalapalli slogged through several reports from our internal
syzbot instance and observed that they all had a common stack trace:

BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in __raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in _raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
Write of size 4 at addr 0000001dd87ee280 by task syz-executor365/1543

CPU: 2 PID: 1543 Comm: syz-executor365 Not tainted 6.5.0-syzk #1
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x83/0xb0 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_report+0x3f8/0x620 mm/kasan/report.c:478
kasan_report+0xb0/0xe0 mm/kasan/report.c:588
check_region_inline mm/kasan/generic.c:181 [inline]
kasan_check_range+0x139/0x1e0 mm/kasan/generic.c:187
instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
__raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
_raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:351 [inline]
xchk_stats_merge_one.isra.1+0x39/0x650 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:191
xchk_stats_merge+0x5f/0xe0 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:225
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x252/0x14e0 fs/xfs/scrub/scrub.c:599
xfs_ioc_scrub_metadata+0xc8/0x160 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1646
xfs_file_ioctl+0x3fd/0x1870 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1955
vfs_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:51 [inline]
__do_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:871 [inline]
__se_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:857 [inline]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x199/0x220 fs/ioctl.c:857
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3e/0x90 arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x6e/0xd8
RIP: 0033:0x7ff155af753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48 89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73 01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007ffc006e2568 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000010
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000000000 RCX: 00007ff155af753d
RDX: 00000000200000c0 RSI: 00000000c040583c RDI: 0000000000000003
RBP: 00000000ffffffff R08: 00000000004010c0 R09: 00000000004010c0
R10: 00000000004010c0 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0000000000400cb0
R13: 00007ffc006e2670 R14: 0000000000000000 R15: 0000000000000000
</TASK>

The root cause here is that xchk_stats_merge_one walks off the end of
the xchk_scrub_stats.cs_stats array because it has been fed a garbage
value in sm->sm_type. That occurs because I put the xchk_stats_merge
in the wrong place -- it should have been after the last xchk_teardown
call on our way out of xfs_scrub_metadata because we only call the
teardown function if we called the setup function, and we don't call the
setup functions if the inputs are obviously garbage.

Thanks to Harshit for triaging the bug reports and bringing this to my
attention.

Fixes: d7a74cad8f45 ("xfs: track usage statistics of online fsck")
Reported-by: Harshit Mogalapalli <harshit.m.mogalapalli@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff e0319282 Mon Sep 11 09:39:06 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: only call xchk_stats_merge after validating scrub inputs

Harshit Mogalapalli slogged through several reports from our internal
syzbot instance and observed that they all had a common stack trace:

BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in __raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in _raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
Write of size 4 at addr 0000001dd87ee280 by task syz-executor365/1543

CPU: 2 PID: 1543 Comm: syz-executor365 Not tainted 6.5.0-syzk #1
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x83/0xb0 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_report+0x3f8/0x620 mm/kasan/report.c:478
kasan_report+0xb0/0xe0 mm/kasan/report.c:588
check_region_inline mm/kasan/generic.c:181 [inline]
kasan_check_range+0x139/0x1e0 mm/kasan/generic.c:187
instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
__raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
_raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:351 [inline]
xchk_stats_merge_one.isra.1+0x39/0x650 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:191
xchk_stats_merge+0x5f/0xe0 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:225
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x252/0x14e0 fs/xfs/scrub/scrub.c:599
xfs_ioc_scrub_metadata+0xc8/0x160 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1646
xfs_file_ioctl+0x3fd/0x1870 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1955
vfs_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:51 [inline]
__do_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:871 [inline]
__se_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:857 [inline]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x199/0x220 fs/ioctl.c:857
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3e/0x90 arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x6e/0xd8
RIP: 0033:0x7ff155af753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48 89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73 01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007ffc006e2568 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000010
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000000000 RCX: 00007ff155af753d
RDX: 00000000200000c0 RSI: 00000000c040583c RDI: 0000000000000003
RBP: 00000000ffffffff R08: 00000000004010c0 R09: 00000000004010c0
R10: 00000000004010c0 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0000000000400cb0
R13: 00007ffc006e2670 R14: 0000000000000000 R15: 0000000000000000
</TASK>

The root cause here is that xchk_stats_merge_one walks off the end of
the xchk_scrub_stats.cs_stats array because it has been fed a garbage
value in sm->sm_type. That occurs because I put the xchk_stats_merge
in the wrong place -- it should have been after the last xchk_teardown
call on our way out of xfs_scrub_metadata because we only call the
teardown function if we called the setup function, and we don't call the
setup functions if the inputs are obviously garbage.

Thanks to Harshit for triaging the bug reports and bringing this to my
attention.

Fixes: d7a74cad8f45 ("xfs: track usage statistics of online fsck")
Reported-by: Harshit Mogalapalli <harshit.m.mogalapalli@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff e0319282 Mon Sep 11 09:39:06 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: only call xchk_stats_merge after validating scrub inputs

Harshit Mogalapalli slogged through several reports from our internal
syzbot instance and observed that they all had a common stack trace:

BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in __raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in _raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
Write of size 4 at addr 0000001dd87ee280 by task syz-executor365/1543

CPU: 2 PID: 1543 Comm: syz-executor365 Not tainted 6.5.0-syzk #1
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x83/0xb0 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_report+0x3f8/0x620 mm/kasan/report.c:478
kasan_report+0xb0/0xe0 mm/kasan/report.c:588
check_region_inline mm/kasan/generic.c:181 [inline]
kasan_check_range+0x139/0x1e0 mm/kasan/generic.c:187
instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
__raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
_raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:351 [inline]
xchk_stats_merge_one.isra.1+0x39/0x650 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:191
xchk_stats_merge+0x5f/0xe0 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:225
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x252/0x14e0 fs/xfs/scrub/scrub.c:599
xfs_ioc_scrub_metadata+0xc8/0x160 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1646
xfs_file_ioctl+0x3fd/0x1870 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1955
vfs_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:51 [inline]
__do_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:871 [inline]
__se_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:857 [inline]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x199/0x220 fs/ioctl.c:857
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3e/0x90 arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x6e/0xd8
RIP: 0033:0x7ff155af753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48 89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73 01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007ffc006e2568 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000010
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000000000 RCX: 00007ff155af753d
RDX: 00000000200000c0 RSI: 00000000c040583c RDI: 0000000000000003
RBP: 00000000ffffffff R08: 00000000004010c0 R09: 00000000004010c0
R10: 00000000004010c0 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0000000000400cb0
R13: 00007ffc006e2670 R14: 0000000000000000 R15: 0000000000000000
</TASK>

The root cause here is that xchk_stats_merge_one walks off the end of
the xchk_scrub_stats.cs_stats array because it has been fed a garbage
value in sm->sm_type. That occurs because I put the xchk_stats_merge
in the wrong place -- it should have been after the last xchk_teardown
call on our way out of xfs_scrub_metadata because we only call the
teardown function if we called the setup function, and we don't call the
setup functions if the inputs are obviously garbage.

Thanks to Harshit for triaging the bug reports and bringing this to my
attention.

Fixes: d7a74cad8f45 ("xfs: track usage statistics of online fsck")
Reported-by: Harshit Mogalapalli <harshit.m.mogalapalli@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff e0319282 Mon Sep 11 09:39:06 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: only call xchk_stats_merge after validating scrub inputs

Harshit Mogalapalli slogged through several reports from our internal
syzbot instance and observed that they all had a common stack trace:

BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in __raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in _raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
Write of size 4 at addr 0000001dd87ee280 by task syz-executor365/1543

CPU: 2 PID: 1543 Comm: syz-executor365 Not tainted 6.5.0-syzk #1
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x83/0xb0 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_report+0x3f8/0x620 mm/kasan/report.c:478
kasan_report+0xb0/0xe0 mm/kasan/report.c:588
check_region_inline mm/kasan/generic.c:181 [inline]
kasan_check_range+0x139/0x1e0 mm/kasan/generic.c:187
instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
__raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
_raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:351 [inline]
xchk_stats_merge_one.isra.1+0x39/0x650 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:191
xchk_stats_merge+0x5f/0xe0 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:225
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x252/0x14e0 fs/xfs/scrub/scrub.c:599
xfs_ioc_scrub_metadata+0xc8/0x160 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1646
xfs_file_ioctl+0x3fd/0x1870 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1955
vfs_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:51 [inline]
__do_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:871 [inline]
__se_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:857 [inline]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x199/0x220 fs/ioctl.c:857
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3e/0x90 arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x6e/0xd8
RIP: 0033:0x7ff155af753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48 89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73 01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007ffc006e2568 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000010
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000000000 RCX: 00007ff155af753d
RDX: 00000000200000c0 RSI: 00000000c040583c RDI: 0000000000000003
RBP: 00000000ffffffff R08: 00000000004010c0 R09: 00000000004010c0
R10: 00000000004010c0 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0000000000400cb0
R13: 00007ffc006e2670 R14: 0000000000000000 R15: 0000000000000000
</TASK>

The root cause here is that xchk_stats_merge_one walks off the end of
the xchk_scrub_stats.cs_stats array because it has been fed a garbage
value in sm->sm_type. That occurs because I put the xchk_stats_merge
in the wrong place -- it should have been after the last xchk_teardown
call on our way out of xfs_scrub_metadata because we only call the
teardown function if we called the setup function, and we don't call the
setup functions if the inputs are obviously garbage.

Thanks to Harshit for triaging the bug reports and bringing this to my
attention.

Fixes: d7a74cad8f45 ("xfs: track usage statistics of online fsck")
Reported-by: Harshit Mogalapalli <harshit.m.mogalapalli@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff e0319282 Mon Sep 11 09:39:06 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: only call xchk_stats_merge after validating scrub inputs

Harshit Mogalapalli slogged through several reports from our internal
syzbot instance and observed that they all had a common stack trace:

BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in __raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in _raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
Write of size 4 at addr 0000001dd87ee280 by task syz-executor365/1543

CPU: 2 PID: 1543 Comm: syz-executor365 Not tainted 6.5.0-syzk #1
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x83/0xb0 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_report+0x3f8/0x620 mm/kasan/report.c:478
kasan_report+0xb0/0xe0 mm/kasan/report.c:588
check_region_inline mm/kasan/generic.c:181 [inline]
kasan_check_range+0x139/0x1e0 mm/kasan/generic.c:187
instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
__raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
_raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:351 [inline]
xchk_stats_merge_one.isra.1+0x39/0x650 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:191
xchk_stats_merge+0x5f/0xe0 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:225
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x252/0x14e0 fs/xfs/scrub/scrub.c:599
xfs_ioc_scrub_metadata+0xc8/0x160 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1646
xfs_file_ioctl+0x3fd/0x1870 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1955
vfs_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:51 [inline]
__do_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:871 [inline]
__se_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:857 [inline]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x199/0x220 fs/ioctl.c:857
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3e/0x90 arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x6e/0xd8
RIP: 0033:0x7ff155af753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48 89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73 01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007ffc006e2568 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000010
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000000000 RCX: 00007ff155af753d
RDX: 00000000200000c0 RSI: 00000000c040583c RDI: 0000000000000003
RBP: 00000000ffffffff R08: 00000000004010c0 R09: 00000000004010c0
R10: 00000000004010c0 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0000000000400cb0
R13: 00007ffc006e2670 R14: 0000000000000000 R15: 0000000000000000
</TASK>

The root cause here is that xchk_stats_merge_one walks off the end of
the xchk_scrub_stats.cs_stats array because it has been fed a garbage
value in sm->sm_type. That occurs because I put the xchk_stats_merge
in the wrong place -- it should have been after the last xchk_teardown
call on our way out of xfs_scrub_metadata because we only call the
teardown function if we called the setup function, and we don't call the
setup functions if the inputs are obviously garbage.

Thanks to Harshit for triaging the bug reports and bringing this to my
attention.

Fixes: d7a74cad8f45 ("xfs: track usage statistics of online fsck")
Reported-by: Harshit Mogalapalli <harshit.m.mogalapalli@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff e0319282 Mon Sep 11 09:39:06 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: only call xchk_stats_merge after validating scrub inputs

Harshit Mogalapalli slogged through several reports from our internal
syzbot instance and observed that they all had a common stack trace:

BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in __raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in _raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
Write of size 4 at addr 0000001dd87ee280 by task syz-executor365/1543

CPU: 2 PID: 1543 Comm: syz-executor365 Not tainted 6.5.0-syzk #1
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x83/0xb0 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_report+0x3f8/0x620 mm/kasan/report.c:478
kasan_report+0xb0/0xe0 mm/kasan/report.c:588
check_region_inline mm/kasan/generic.c:181 [inline]
kasan_check_range+0x139/0x1e0 mm/kasan/generic.c:187
instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
__raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
_raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:351 [inline]
xchk_stats_merge_one.isra.1+0x39/0x650 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:191
xchk_stats_merge+0x5f/0xe0 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:225
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x252/0x14e0 fs/xfs/scrub/scrub.c:599
xfs_ioc_scrub_metadata+0xc8/0x160 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1646
xfs_file_ioctl+0x3fd/0x1870 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1955
vfs_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:51 [inline]
__do_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:871 [inline]
__se_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:857 [inline]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x199/0x220 fs/ioctl.c:857
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3e/0x90 arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x6e/0xd8
RIP: 0033:0x7ff155af753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48 89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73 01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007ffc006e2568 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000010
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000000000 RCX: 00007ff155af753d
RDX: 00000000200000c0 RSI: 00000000c040583c RDI: 0000000000000003
RBP: 00000000ffffffff R08: 00000000004010c0 R09: 00000000004010c0
R10: 00000000004010c0 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0000000000400cb0
R13: 00007ffc006e2670 R14: 0000000000000000 R15: 0000000000000000
</TASK>

The root cause here is that xchk_stats_merge_one walks off the end of
the xchk_scrub_stats.cs_stats array because it has been fed a garbage
value in sm->sm_type. That occurs because I put the xchk_stats_merge
in the wrong place -- it should have been after the last xchk_teardown
call on our way out of xfs_scrub_metadata because we only call the
teardown function if we called the setup function, and we don't call the
setup functions if the inputs are obviously garbage.

Thanks to Harshit for triaging the bug reports and bringing this to my
attention.

Fixes: d7a74cad8f45 ("xfs: track usage statistics of online fsck")
Reported-by: Harshit Mogalapalli <harshit.m.mogalapalli@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff e0319282 Mon Sep 11 09:39:06 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: only call xchk_stats_merge after validating scrub inputs

Harshit Mogalapalli slogged through several reports from our internal
syzbot instance and observed that they all had a common stack trace:

BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in __raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in _raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
Write of size 4 at addr 0000001dd87ee280 by task syz-executor365/1543

CPU: 2 PID: 1543 Comm: syz-executor365 Not tainted 6.5.0-syzk #1
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x83/0xb0 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_report+0x3f8/0x620 mm/kasan/report.c:478
kasan_report+0xb0/0xe0 mm/kasan/report.c:588
check_region_inline mm/kasan/generic.c:181 [inline]
kasan_check_range+0x139/0x1e0 mm/kasan/generic.c:187
instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
__raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
_raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:351 [inline]
xchk_stats_merge_one.isra.1+0x39/0x650 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:191
xchk_stats_merge+0x5f/0xe0 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:225
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x252/0x14e0 fs/xfs/scrub/scrub.c:599
xfs_ioc_scrub_metadata+0xc8/0x160 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1646
xfs_file_ioctl+0x3fd/0x1870 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1955
vfs_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:51 [inline]
__do_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:871 [inline]
__se_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:857 [inline]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x199/0x220 fs/ioctl.c:857
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3e/0x90 arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x6e/0xd8
RIP: 0033:0x7ff155af753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48 89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73 01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007ffc006e2568 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000010
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000000000 RCX: 00007ff155af753d
RDX: 00000000200000c0 RSI: 00000000c040583c RDI: 0000000000000003
RBP: 00000000ffffffff R08: 00000000004010c0 R09: 00000000004010c0
R10: 00000000004010c0 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0000000000400cb0
R13: 00007ffc006e2670 R14: 0000000000000000 R15: 0000000000000000
</TASK>

The root cause here is that xchk_stats_merge_one walks off the end of
the xchk_scrub_stats.cs_stats array because it has been fed a garbage
value in sm->sm_type. That occurs because I put the xchk_stats_merge
in the wrong place -- it should have been after the last xchk_teardown
call on our way out of xfs_scrub_metadata because we only call the
teardown function if we called the setup function, and we don't call the
setup functions if the inputs are obviously garbage.

Thanks to Harshit for triaging the bug reports and bringing this to my
attention.

Fixes: d7a74cad8f45 ("xfs: track usage statistics of online fsck")
Reported-by: Harshit Mogalapalli <harshit.m.mogalapalli@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff e0319282 Mon Sep 11 09:39:06 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: only call xchk_stats_merge after validating scrub inputs

Harshit Mogalapalli slogged through several reports from our internal
syzbot instance and observed that they all had a common stack trace:

BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in __raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in _raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
Write of size 4 at addr 0000001dd87ee280 by task syz-executor365/1543

CPU: 2 PID: 1543 Comm: syz-executor365 Not tainted 6.5.0-syzk #1
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x83/0xb0 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_report+0x3f8/0x620 mm/kasan/report.c:478
kasan_report+0xb0/0xe0 mm/kasan/report.c:588
check_region_inline mm/kasan/generic.c:181 [inline]
kasan_check_range+0x139/0x1e0 mm/kasan/generic.c:187
instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
__raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
_raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:351 [inline]
xchk_stats_merge_one.isra.1+0x39/0x650 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:191
xchk_stats_merge+0x5f/0xe0 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:225
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x252/0x14e0 fs/xfs/scrub/scrub.c:599
xfs_ioc_scrub_metadata+0xc8/0x160 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1646
xfs_file_ioctl+0x3fd/0x1870 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1955
vfs_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:51 [inline]
__do_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:871 [inline]
__se_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:857 [inline]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x199/0x220 fs/ioctl.c:857
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3e/0x90 arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x6e/0xd8
RIP: 0033:0x7ff155af753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48 89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73 01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007ffc006e2568 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000010
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000000000 RCX: 00007ff155af753d
RDX: 00000000200000c0 RSI: 00000000c040583c RDI: 0000000000000003
RBP: 00000000ffffffff R08: 00000000004010c0 R09: 00000000004010c0
R10: 00000000004010c0 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0000000000400cb0
R13: 00007ffc006e2670 R14: 0000000000000000 R15: 0000000000000000
</TASK>

The root cause here is that xchk_stats_merge_one walks off the end of
the xchk_scrub_stats.cs_stats array because it has been fed a garbage
value in sm->sm_type. That occurs because I put the xchk_stats_merge
in the wrong place -- it should have been after the last xchk_teardown
call on our way out of xfs_scrub_metadata because we only call the
teardown function if we called the setup function, and we don't call the
setup functions if the inputs are obviously garbage.

Thanks to Harshit for triaging the bug reports and bringing this to my
attention.

Fixes: d7a74cad8f45 ("xfs: track usage statistics of online fsck")
Reported-by: Harshit Mogalapalli <harshit.m.mogalapalli@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff e0319282 Mon Sep 11 09:39:06 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: only call xchk_stats_merge after validating scrub inputs

Harshit Mogalapalli slogged through several reports from our internal
syzbot instance and observed that they all had a common stack trace:

BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in __raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in _raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
Write of size 4 at addr 0000001dd87ee280 by task syz-executor365/1543

CPU: 2 PID: 1543 Comm: syz-executor365 Not tainted 6.5.0-syzk #1
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x83/0xb0 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_report+0x3f8/0x620 mm/kasan/report.c:478
kasan_report+0xb0/0xe0 mm/kasan/report.c:588
check_region_inline mm/kasan/generic.c:181 [inline]
kasan_check_range+0x139/0x1e0 mm/kasan/generic.c:187
instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
__raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
_raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:351 [inline]
xchk_stats_merge_one.isra.1+0x39/0x650 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:191
xchk_stats_merge+0x5f/0xe0 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:225
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x252/0x14e0 fs/xfs/scrub/scrub.c:599
xfs_ioc_scrub_metadata+0xc8/0x160 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1646
xfs_file_ioctl+0x3fd/0x1870 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1955
vfs_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:51 [inline]
__do_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:871 [inline]
__se_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:857 [inline]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x199/0x220 fs/ioctl.c:857
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3e/0x90 arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x6e/0xd8
RIP: 0033:0x7ff155af753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48 89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73 01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007ffc006e2568 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000010
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000000000 RCX: 00007ff155af753d
RDX: 00000000200000c0 RSI: 00000000c040583c RDI: 0000000000000003
RBP: 00000000ffffffff R08: 00000000004010c0 R09: 00000000004010c0
R10: 00000000004010c0 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0000000000400cb0
R13: 00007ffc006e2670 R14: 0000000000000000 R15: 0000000000000000
</TASK>

The root cause here is that xchk_stats_merge_one walks off the end of
the xchk_scrub_stats.cs_stats array because it has been fed a garbage
value in sm->sm_type. That occurs because I put the xchk_stats_merge
in the wrong place -- it should have been after the last xchk_teardown
call on our way out of xfs_scrub_metadata because we only call the
teardown function if we called the setup function, and we don't call the
setup functions if the inputs are obviously garbage.

Thanks to Harshit for triaging the bug reports and bringing this to my
attention.

Fixes: d7a74cad8f45 ("xfs: track usage statistics of online fsck")
Reported-by: Harshit Mogalapalli <harshit.m.mogalapalli@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff e0319282 Mon Sep 11 09:39:06 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: only call xchk_stats_merge after validating scrub inputs

Harshit Mogalapalli slogged through several reports from our internal
syzbot instance and observed that they all had a common stack trace:

BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in __raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in _raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
Write of size 4 at addr 0000001dd87ee280 by task syz-executor365/1543

CPU: 2 PID: 1543 Comm: syz-executor365 Not tainted 6.5.0-syzk #1
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x83/0xb0 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_report+0x3f8/0x620 mm/kasan/report.c:478
kasan_report+0xb0/0xe0 mm/kasan/report.c:588
check_region_inline mm/kasan/generic.c:181 [inline]
kasan_check_range+0x139/0x1e0 mm/kasan/generic.c:187
instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
__raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
_raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:351 [inline]
xchk_stats_merge_one.isra.1+0x39/0x650 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:191
xchk_stats_merge+0x5f/0xe0 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:225
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x252/0x14e0 fs/xfs/scrub/scrub.c:599
xfs_ioc_scrub_metadata+0xc8/0x160 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1646
xfs_file_ioctl+0x3fd/0x1870 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1955
vfs_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:51 [inline]
__do_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:871 [inline]
__se_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:857 [inline]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x199/0x220 fs/ioctl.c:857
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3e/0x90 arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x6e/0xd8
RIP: 0033:0x7ff155af753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48 89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73 01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007ffc006e2568 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000010
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000000000 RCX: 00007ff155af753d
RDX: 00000000200000c0 RSI: 00000000c040583c RDI: 0000000000000003
RBP: 00000000ffffffff R08: 00000000004010c0 R09: 00000000004010c0
R10: 00000000004010c0 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0000000000400cb0
R13: 00007ffc006e2670 R14: 0000000000000000 R15: 0000000000000000
</TASK>

The root cause here is that xchk_stats_merge_one walks off the end of
the xchk_scrub_stats.cs_stats array because it has been fed a garbage
value in sm->sm_type. That occurs because I put the xchk_stats_merge
in the wrong place -- it should have been after the last xchk_teardown
call on our way out of xfs_scrub_metadata because we only call the
teardown function if we called the setup function, and we don't call the
setup functions if the inputs are obviously garbage.

Thanks to Harshit for triaging the bug reports and bringing this to my
attention.

Fixes: d7a74cad8f45 ("xfs: track usage statistics of online fsck")
Reported-by: Harshit Mogalapalli <harshit.m.mogalapalli@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff e0319282 Mon Sep 11 09:39:06 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: only call xchk_stats_merge after validating scrub inputs

Harshit Mogalapalli slogged through several reports from our internal
syzbot instance and observed that they all had a common stack trace:

BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in __raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in _raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
Write of size 4 at addr 0000001dd87ee280 by task syz-executor365/1543

CPU: 2 PID: 1543 Comm: syz-executor365 Not tainted 6.5.0-syzk #1
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x83/0xb0 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_report+0x3f8/0x620 mm/kasan/report.c:478
kasan_report+0xb0/0xe0 mm/kasan/report.c:588
check_region_inline mm/kasan/generic.c:181 [inline]
kasan_check_range+0x139/0x1e0 mm/kasan/generic.c:187
instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
__raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
_raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:351 [inline]
xchk_stats_merge_one.isra.1+0x39/0x650 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:191
xchk_stats_merge+0x5f/0xe0 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:225
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x252/0x14e0 fs/xfs/scrub/scrub.c:599
xfs_ioc_scrub_metadata+0xc8/0x160 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1646
xfs_file_ioctl+0x3fd/0x1870 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1955
vfs_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:51 [inline]
__do_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:871 [inline]
__se_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:857 [inline]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x199/0x220 fs/ioctl.c:857
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3e/0x90 arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x6e/0xd8
RIP: 0033:0x7ff155af753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48 89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73 01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007ffc006e2568 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000010
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000000000 RCX: 00007ff155af753d
RDX: 00000000200000c0 RSI: 00000000c040583c RDI: 0000000000000003
RBP: 00000000ffffffff R08: 00000000004010c0 R09: 00000000004010c0
R10: 00000000004010c0 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0000000000400cb0
R13: 00007ffc006e2670 R14: 0000000000000000 R15: 0000000000000000
</TASK>

The root cause here is that xchk_stats_merge_one walks off the end of
the xchk_scrub_stats.cs_stats array because it has been fed a garbage
value in sm->sm_type. That occurs because I put the xchk_stats_merge
in the wrong place -- it should have been after the last xchk_teardown
call on our way out of xfs_scrub_metadata because we only call the
teardown function if we called the setup function, and we don't call the
setup functions if the inputs are obviously garbage.

Thanks to Harshit for triaging the bug reports and bringing this to my
attention.

Fixes: d7a74cad8f45 ("xfs: track usage statistics of online fsck")
Reported-by: Harshit Mogalapalli <harshit.m.mogalapalli@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff e0319282 Mon Sep 11 09:39:06 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: only call xchk_stats_merge after validating scrub inputs

Harshit Mogalapalli slogged through several reports from our internal
syzbot instance and observed that they all had a common stack trace:

BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in __raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in _raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
Write of size 4 at addr 0000001dd87ee280 by task syz-executor365/1543

CPU: 2 PID: 1543 Comm: syz-executor365 Not tainted 6.5.0-syzk #1
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x83/0xb0 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_report+0x3f8/0x620 mm/kasan/report.c:478
kasan_report+0xb0/0xe0 mm/kasan/report.c:588
check_region_inline mm/kasan/generic.c:181 [inline]
kasan_check_range+0x139/0x1e0 mm/kasan/generic.c:187
instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
__raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
_raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:351 [inline]
xchk_stats_merge_one.isra.1+0x39/0x650 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:191
xchk_stats_merge+0x5f/0xe0 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:225
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x252/0x14e0 fs/xfs/scrub/scrub.c:599
xfs_ioc_scrub_metadata+0xc8/0x160 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1646
xfs_file_ioctl+0x3fd/0x1870 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1955
vfs_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:51 [inline]
__do_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:871 [inline]
__se_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:857 [inline]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x199/0x220 fs/ioctl.c:857
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3e/0x90 arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x6e/0xd8
RIP: 0033:0x7ff155af753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48 89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73 01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007ffc006e2568 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000010
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000000000 RCX: 00007ff155af753d
RDX: 00000000200000c0 RSI: 00000000c040583c RDI: 0000000000000003
RBP: 00000000ffffffff R08: 00000000004010c0 R09: 00000000004010c0
R10: 00000000004010c0 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0000000000400cb0
R13: 00007ffc006e2670 R14: 0000000000000000 R15: 0000000000000000
</TASK>

The root cause here is that xchk_stats_merge_one walks off the end of
the xchk_scrub_stats.cs_stats array because it has been fed a garbage
value in sm->sm_type. That occurs because I put the xchk_stats_merge
in the wrong place -- it should have been after the last xchk_teardown
call on our way out of xfs_scrub_metadata because we only call the
teardown function if we called the setup function, and we don't call the
setup functions if the inputs are obviously garbage.

Thanks to Harshit for triaging the bug reports and bringing this to my
attention.

Fixes: d7a74cad8f45 ("xfs: track usage statistics of online fsck")
Reported-by: Harshit Mogalapalli <harshit.m.mogalapalli@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff e0319282 Mon Sep 11 09:39:06 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: only call xchk_stats_merge after validating scrub inputs

Harshit Mogalapalli slogged through several reports from our internal
syzbot instance and observed that they all had a common stack trace:

BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in __raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in _raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
Write of size 4 at addr 0000001dd87ee280 by task syz-executor365/1543

CPU: 2 PID: 1543 Comm: syz-executor365 Not tainted 6.5.0-syzk #1
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x83/0xb0 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_report+0x3f8/0x620 mm/kasan/report.c:478
kasan_report+0xb0/0xe0 mm/kasan/report.c:588
check_region_inline mm/kasan/generic.c:181 [inline]
kasan_check_range+0x139/0x1e0 mm/kasan/generic.c:187
instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
__raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
_raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:351 [inline]
xchk_stats_merge_one.isra.1+0x39/0x650 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:191
xchk_stats_merge+0x5f/0xe0 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:225
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x252/0x14e0 fs/xfs/scrub/scrub.c:599
xfs_ioc_scrub_metadata+0xc8/0x160 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1646
xfs_file_ioctl+0x3fd/0x1870 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1955
vfs_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:51 [inline]
__do_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:871 [inline]
__se_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:857 [inline]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x199/0x220 fs/ioctl.c:857
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3e/0x90 arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x6e/0xd8
RIP: 0033:0x7ff155af753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48 89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73 01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007ffc006e2568 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000010
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000000000 RCX: 00007ff155af753d
RDX: 00000000200000c0 RSI: 00000000c040583c RDI: 0000000000000003
RBP: 00000000ffffffff R08: 00000000004010c0 R09: 00000000004010c0
R10: 00000000004010c0 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0000000000400cb0
R13: 00007ffc006e2670 R14: 0000000000000000 R15: 0000000000000000
</TASK>

The root cause here is that xchk_stats_merge_one walks off the end of
the xchk_scrub_stats.cs_stats array because it has been fed a garbage
value in sm->sm_type. That occurs because I put the xchk_stats_merge
in the wrong place -- it should have been after the last xchk_teardown
call on our way out of xfs_scrub_metadata because we only call the
teardown function if we called the setup function, and we don't call the
setup functions if the inputs are obviously garbage.

Thanks to Harshit for triaging the bug reports and bringing this to my
attention.

Fixes: d7a74cad8f45 ("xfs: track usage statistics of online fsck")
Reported-by: Harshit Mogalapalli <harshit.m.mogalapalli@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff e0319282 Mon Sep 11 09:39:06 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: only call xchk_stats_merge after validating scrub inputs

Harshit Mogalapalli slogged through several reports from our internal
syzbot instance and observed that they all had a common stack trace:

BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in __raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in _raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
Write of size 4 at addr 0000001dd87ee280 by task syz-executor365/1543

CPU: 2 PID: 1543 Comm: syz-executor365 Not tainted 6.5.0-syzk #1
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x83/0xb0 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_report+0x3f8/0x620 mm/kasan/report.c:478
kasan_report+0xb0/0xe0 mm/kasan/report.c:588
check_region_inline mm/kasan/generic.c:181 [inline]
kasan_check_range+0x139/0x1e0 mm/kasan/generic.c:187
instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
__raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
_raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:351 [inline]
xchk_stats_merge_one.isra.1+0x39/0x650 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:191
xchk_stats_merge+0x5f/0xe0 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:225
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x252/0x14e0 fs/xfs/scrub/scrub.c:599
xfs_ioc_scrub_metadata+0xc8/0x160 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1646
xfs_file_ioctl+0x3fd/0x1870 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1955
vfs_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:51 [inline]
__do_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:871 [inline]
__se_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:857 [inline]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x199/0x220 fs/ioctl.c:857
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3e/0x90 arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x6e/0xd8
RIP: 0033:0x7ff155af753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48 89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73 01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007ffc006e2568 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000010
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000000000 RCX: 00007ff155af753d
RDX: 00000000200000c0 RSI: 00000000c040583c RDI: 0000000000000003
RBP: 00000000ffffffff R08: 00000000004010c0 R09: 00000000004010c0
R10: 00000000004010c0 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0000000000400cb0
R13: 00007ffc006e2670 R14: 0000000000000000 R15: 0000000000000000
</TASK>

The root cause here is that xchk_stats_merge_one walks off the end of
the xchk_scrub_stats.cs_stats array because it has been fed a garbage
value in sm->sm_type. That occurs because I put the xchk_stats_merge
in the wrong place -- it should have been after the last xchk_teardown
call on our way out of xfs_scrub_metadata because we only call the
teardown function if we called the setup function, and we don't call the
setup functions if the inputs are obviously garbage.

Thanks to Harshit for triaging the bug reports and bringing this to my
attention.

Fixes: d7a74cad8f45 ("xfs: track usage statistics of online fsck")
Reported-by: Harshit Mogalapalli <harshit.m.mogalapalli@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff e0319282 Mon Sep 11 09:39:06 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: only call xchk_stats_merge after validating scrub inputs

Harshit Mogalapalli slogged through several reports from our internal
syzbot instance and observed that they all had a common stack trace:

BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in __raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in _raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
Write of size 4 at addr 0000001dd87ee280 by task syz-executor365/1543

CPU: 2 PID: 1543 Comm: syz-executor365 Not tainted 6.5.0-syzk #1
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x83/0xb0 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_report+0x3f8/0x620 mm/kasan/report.c:478
kasan_report+0xb0/0xe0 mm/kasan/report.c:588
check_region_inline mm/kasan/generic.c:181 [inline]
kasan_check_range+0x139/0x1e0 mm/kasan/generic.c:187
instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
__raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
_raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:351 [inline]
xchk_stats_merge_one.isra.1+0x39/0x650 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:191
xchk_stats_merge+0x5f/0xe0 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:225
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x252/0x14e0 fs/xfs/scrub/scrub.c:599
xfs_ioc_scrub_metadata+0xc8/0x160 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1646
xfs_file_ioctl+0x3fd/0x1870 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1955
vfs_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:51 [inline]
__do_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:871 [inline]
__se_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:857 [inline]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x199/0x220 fs/ioctl.c:857
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3e/0x90 arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x6e/0xd8
RIP: 0033:0x7ff155af753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48 89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73 01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007ffc006e2568 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000010
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000000000 RCX: 00007ff155af753d
RDX: 00000000200000c0 RSI: 00000000c040583c RDI: 0000000000000003
RBP: 00000000ffffffff R08: 00000000004010c0 R09: 00000000004010c0
R10: 00000000004010c0 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0000000000400cb0
R13: 00007ffc006e2670 R14: 0000000000000000 R15: 0000000000000000
</TASK>

The root cause here is that xchk_stats_merge_one walks off the end of
the xchk_scrub_stats.cs_stats array because it has been fed a garbage
value in sm->sm_type. That occurs because I put the xchk_stats_merge
in the wrong place -- it should have been after the last xchk_teardown
call on our way out of xfs_scrub_metadata because we only call the
teardown function if we called the setup function, and we don't call the
setup functions if the inputs are obviously garbage.

Thanks to Harshit for triaging the bug reports and bringing this to my
attention.

Fixes: d7a74cad8f45 ("xfs: track usage statistics of online fsck")
Reported-by: Harshit Mogalapalli <harshit.m.mogalapalli@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff e0319282 Mon Sep 11 09:39:06 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: only call xchk_stats_merge after validating scrub inputs

Harshit Mogalapalli slogged through several reports from our internal
syzbot instance and observed that they all had a common stack trace:

BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in __raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in _raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
Write of size 4 at addr 0000001dd87ee280 by task syz-executor365/1543

CPU: 2 PID: 1543 Comm: syz-executor365 Not tainted 6.5.0-syzk #1
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x83/0xb0 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_report+0x3f8/0x620 mm/kasan/report.c:478
kasan_report+0xb0/0xe0 mm/kasan/report.c:588
check_region_inline mm/kasan/generic.c:181 [inline]
kasan_check_range+0x139/0x1e0 mm/kasan/generic.c:187
instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
__raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
_raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:351 [inline]
xchk_stats_merge_one.isra.1+0x39/0x650 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:191
xchk_stats_merge+0x5f/0xe0 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:225
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x252/0x14e0 fs/xfs/scrub/scrub.c:599
xfs_ioc_scrub_metadata+0xc8/0x160 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1646
xfs_file_ioctl+0x3fd/0x1870 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1955
vfs_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:51 [inline]
__do_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:871 [inline]
__se_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:857 [inline]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x199/0x220 fs/ioctl.c:857
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3e/0x90 arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x6e/0xd8
RIP: 0033:0x7ff155af753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48 89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73 01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007ffc006e2568 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000010
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000000000 RCX: 00007ff155af753d
RDX: 00000000200000c0 RSI: 00000000c040583c RDI: 0000000000000003
RBP: 00000000ffffffff R08: 00000000004010c0 R09: 00000000004010c0
R10: 00000000004010c0 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0000000000400cb0
R13: 00007ffc006e2670 R14: 0000000000000000 R15: 0000000000000000
</TASK>

The root cause here is that xchk_stats_merge_one walks off the end of
the xchk_scrub_stats.cs_stats array because it has been fed a garbage
value in sm->sm_type. That occurs because I put the xchk_stats_merge
in the wrong place -- it should have been after the last xchk_teardown
call on our way out of xfs_scrub_metadata because we only call the
teardown function if we called the setup function, and we don't call the
setup functions if the inputs are obviously garbage.

Thanks to Harshit for triaging the bug reports and bringing this to my
attention.

Fixes: d7a74cad8f45 ("xfs: track usage statistics of online fsck")
Reported-by: Harshit Mogalapalli <harshit.m.mogalapalli@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff e0319282 Mon Sep 11 09:39:06 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: only call xchk_stats_merge after validating scrub inputs

Harshit Mogalapalli slogged through several reports from our internal
syzbot instance and observed that they all had a common stack trace:

BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in __raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in _raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
Write of size 4 at addr 0000001dd87ee280 by task syz-executor365/1543

CPU: 2 PID: 1543 Comm: syz-executor365 Not tainted 6.5.0-syzk #1
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x83/0xb0 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_report+0x3f8/0x620 mm/kasan/report.c:478
kasan_report+0xb0/0xe0 mm/kasan/report.c:588
check_region_inline mm/kasan/generic.c:181 [inline]
kasan_check_range+0x139/0x1e0 mm/kasan/generic.c:187
instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
__raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
_raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:351 [inline]
xchk_stats_merge_one.isra.1+0x39/0x650 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:191
xchk_stats_merge+0x5f/0xe0 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:225
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x252/0x14e0 fs/xfs/scrub/scrub.c:599
xfs_ioc_scrub_metadata+0xc8/0x160 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1646
xfs_file_ioctl+0x3fd/0x1870 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1955
vfs_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:51 [inline]
__do_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:871 [inline]
__se_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:857 [inline]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x199/0x220 fs/ioctl.c:857
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3e/0x90 arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x6e/0xd8
RIP: 0033:0x7ff155af753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48 89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73 01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007ffc006e2568 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000010
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000000000 RCX: 00007ff155af753d
RDX: 00000000200000c0 RSI: 00000000c040583c RDI: 0000000000000003
RBP: 00000000ffffffff R08: 00000000004010c0 R09: 00000000004010c0
R10: 00000000004010c0 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0000000000400cb0
R13: 00007ffc006e2670 R14: 0000000000000000 R15: 0000000000000000
</TASK>

The root cause here is that xchk_stats_merge_one walks off the end of
the xchk_scrub_stats.cs_stats array because it has been fed a garbage
value in sm->sm_type. That occurs because I put the xchk_stats_merge
in the wrong place -- it should have been after the last xchk_teardown
call on our way out of xfs_scrub_metadata because we only call the
teardown function if we called the setup function, and we don't call the
setup functions if the inputs are obviously garbage.

Thanks to Harshit for triaging the bug reports and bringing this to my
attention.

Fixes: d7a74cad8f45 ("xfs: track usage statistics of online fsck")
Reported-by: Harshit Mogalapalli <harshit.m.mogalapalli@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff e0319282 Mon Sep 11 09:39:06 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: only call xchk_stats_merge after validating scrub inputs

Harshit Mogalapalli slogged through several reports from our internal
syzbot instance and observed that they all had a common stack trace:

BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in __raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
BUG: KASAN: user-memory-access in _raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
Write of size 4 at addr 0000001dd87ee280 by task syz-executor365/1543

CPU: 2 PID: 1543 Comm: syz-executor365 Not tainted 6.5.0-syzk #1
Hardware name: Red Hat KVM, BIOS 1.13.0-2.module+el8.3.0+7860+a7792d29 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
<TASK>
__dump_stack lib/dump_stack.c:88 [inline]
dump_stack_lvl+0x83/0xb0 lib/dump_stack.c:106
print_report+0x3f8/0x620 mm/kasan/report.c:478
kasan_report+0xb0/0xe0 mm/kasan/report.c:588
check_region_inline mm/kasan/generic.c:181 [inline]
kasan_check_range+0x139/0x1e0 mm/kasan/generic.c:187
instrument_atomic_read_write include/linux/instrumented.h:96 [inline]
atomic_try_cmpxchg_acquire include/linux/atomic/atomic-instrumented.h:1294 [inline]
queued_spin_lock include/asm-generic/qspinlock.h:111 [inline]
do_raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:187 [inline]
__raw_spin_lock include/linux/spinlock_api_smp.h:134 [inline]
_raw_spin_lock+0x76/0xe0 kernel/locking/spinlock.c:154
spin_lock include/linux/spinlock.h:351 [inline]
xchk_stats_merge_one.isra.1+0x39/0x650 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:191
xchk_stats_merge+0x5f/0xe0 fs/xfs/scrub/stats.c:225
xfs_scrub_metadata+0x252/0x14e0 fs/xfs/scrub/scrub.c:599
xfs_ioc_scrub_metadata+0xc8/0x160 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1646
xfs_file_ioctl+0x3fd/0x1870 fs/xfs/xfs_ioctl.c:1955
vfs_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:51 [inline]
__do_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:871 [inline]
__se_sys_ioctl fs/ioctl.c:857 [inline]
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x199/0x220 fs/ioctl.c:857
do_syscall_x64 arch/x86/entry/common.c:50 [inline]
do_syscall_64+0x3e/0x90 arch/x86/entry/common.c:80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x6e/0xd8
RIP: 0033:0x7ff155af753d
Code: 00 c3 66 2e 0f 1f 84 00 00 00 00 00 90 f3 0f 1e fa 48 89 f8 48 89 f7 48 89 d6 48 89 ca 4d 89 c2 4d 89 c8 4c 8b 4c 24 08 0f 05 <48> 3d 01 f0 ff ff 73 01 c3 48 8b 0d 1b 79 2c 00 f7 d8 64 89 01 48
RSP: 002b:00007ffc006e2568 EFLAGS: 00000246 ORIG_RAX: 0000000000000010
RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 0000000000000000 RCX: 00007ff155af753d
RDX: 00000000200000c0 RSI: 00000000c040583c RDI: 0000000000000003
RBP: 00000000ffffffff R08: 00000000004010c0 R09: 00000000004010c0
R10: 00000000004010c0 R11: 0000000000000246 R12: 0000000000400cb0
R13: 00007ffc006e2670 R14: 0000000000000000 R15: 0000000000000000
</TASK>

The root cause here is that xchk_stats_merge_one walks off the end of
the xchk_scrub_stats.cs_stats array because it has been fed a garbage
value in sm->sm_type. That occurs because I put the xchk_stats_merge
in the wrong place -- it should have been after the last xchk_teardown
call on our way out of xfs_scrub_metadata because we only call the
teardown function if we called the setup function, and we don't call the
setup functions if the inputs are obviously garbage.

Thanks to Harshit for triaging the bug reports and bringing this to my
attention.

Fixes: d7a74cad8f45 ("xfs: track usage statistics of online fsck")
Reported-by: Harshit Mogalapalli <harshit.m.mogalapalli@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
H A Dagheader_repair.cdiff 0f08af0f Fri Dec 15 11:03:30 MST 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: move the per-AG datatype bitmaps to separate files

Move struct xagb_bitmap to its own pair of C and header files per
request of Christoph.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
diff a634c0a6 Thu Aug 10 08:48:11 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: fix agf_fllast when repairing an empty AGFL

xfs/139 with parent pointers enabled occasionally pops up a corruption
message when online fsck force-rebuild repairs an AGFL:

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_agf_verify+0x11e/0x220 [xfs], xfs_agf block 0x9e0001
XFS (sde): Unmount and run xfs_repair
XFS (sde): First 128 bytes of corrupted metadata buffer:
00000000: 58 41 47 46 00 00 00 01 00 00 00 4f 00 00 40 00 XAGF.......O..@.
00000010: 00 00 00 01 00 00 00 02 00 00 00 05 00 00 00 01 ................
00000020: 00 00 00 01 00 00 00 01 00 00 00 00 ff ff ff ff ................
00000030: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 05 00 00 00 05 00 00 00 00 ................
00000040: 91 2e 6f b1 ed 61 4b 4d 8c 9b 6e 87 08 bb f6 36 ..o..aKM..n....6
00000050: 00 00 00 01 00 00 00 01 00 00 00 06 00 00 00 01 ................
00000060: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
00000070: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................

The root cause of this failure is that prior to the repair, there were
zero blocks in the AGFL. This scenario is set up by the test case, since
it formats with 64MB AGs and tries to ENOSPC the whole filesystem. In
this case of flcount==0, we reset fllast to -1U, which then trips the
write verifier's check that fllast is less than xfs_agfl_size().

Correct this code to set fllast to the last possible slot in the AGFL
when flcount is zero, which mirrors the behavior of xfs_repair phase5
when it has to create a totally empty AGFL.

Fixes: 0e93d3f43ec7 ("xfs: repair the AGFL")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff a634c0a6 Thu Aug 10 08:48:11 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: fix agf_fllast when repairing an empty AGFL

xfs/139 with parent pointers enabled occasionally pops up a corruption
message when online fsck force-rebuild repairs an AGFL:

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_agf_verify+0x11e/0x220 [xfs], xfs_agf block 0x9e0001
XFS (sde): Unmount and run xfs_repair
XFS (sde): First 128 bytes of corrupted metadata buffer:
00000000: 58 41 47 46 00 00 00 01 00 00 00 4f 00 00 40 00 XAGF.......O..@.
00000010: 00 00 00 01 00 00 00 02 00 00 00 05 00 00 00 01 ................
00000020: 00 00 00 01 00 00 00 01 00 00 00 00 ff ff ff ff ................
00000030: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 05 00 00 00 05 00 00 00 00 ................
00000040: 91 2e 6f b1 ed 61 4b 4d 8c 9b 6e 87 08 bb f6 36 ..o..aKM..n....6
00000050: 00 00 00 01 00 00 00 01 00 00 00 06 00 00 00 01 ................
00000060: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
00000070: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................

The root cause of this failure is that prior to the repair, there were
zero blocks in the AGFL. This scenario is set up by the test case, since
it formats with 64MB AGs and tries to ENOSPC the whole filesystem. In
this case of flcount==0, we reset fllast to -1U, which then trips the
write verifier's check that fllast is less than xfs_agfl_size().

Correct this code to set fllast to the last possible slot in the AGFL
when flcount is zero, which mirrors the behavior of xfs_repair phase5
when it has to create a totally empty AGFL.

Fixes: 0e93d3f43ec7 ("xfs: repair the AGFL")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff a634c0a6 Thu Aug 10 08:48:11 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: fix agf_fllast when repairing an empty AGFL

xfs/139 with parent pointers enabled occasionally pops up a corruption
message when online fsck force-rebuild repairs an AGFL:

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_agf_verify+0x11e/0x220 [xfs], xfs_agf block 0x9e0001
XFS (sde): Unmount and run xfs_repair
XFS (sde): First 128 bytes of corrupted metadata buffer:
00000000: 58 41 47 46 00 00 00 01 00 00 00 4f 00 00 40 00 XAGF.......O..@.
00000010: 00 00 00 01 00 00 00 02 00 00 00 05 00 00 00 01 ................
00000020: 00 00 00 01 00 00 00 01 00 00 00 00 ff ff ff ff ................
00000030: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 05 00 00 00 05 00 00 00 00 ................
00000040: 91 2e 6f b1 ed 61 4b 4d 8c 9b 6e 87 08 bb f6 36 ..o..aKM..n....6
00000050: 00 00 00 01 00 00 00 01 00 00 00 06 00 00 00 01 ................
00000060: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
00000070: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................

The root cause of this failure is that prior to the repair, there were
zero blocks in the AGFL. This scenario is set up by the test case, since
it formats with 64MB AGs and tries to ENOSPC the whole filesystem. In
this case of flcount==0, we reset fllast to -1U, which then trips the
write verifier's check that fllast is less than xfs_agfl_size().

Correct this code to set fllast to the last possible slot in the AGFL
when flcount is zero, which mirrors the behavior of xfs_repair phase5
when it has to create a totally empty AGFL.

Fixes: 0e93d3f43ec7 ("xfs: repair the AGFL")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff a634c0a6 Thu Aug 10 08:48:11 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: fix agf_fllast when repairing an empty AGFL

xfs/139 with parent pointers enabled occasionally pops up a corruption
message when online fsck force-rebuild repairs an AGFL:

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_agf_verify+0x11e/0x220 [xfs], xfs_agf block 0x9e0001
XFS (sde): Unmount and run xfs_repair
XFS (sde): First 128 bytes of corrupted metadata buffer:
00000000: 58 41 47 46 00 00 00 01 00 00 00 4f 00 00 40 00 XAGF.......O..@.
00000010: 00 00 00 01 00 00 00 02 00 00 00 05 00 00 00 01 ................
00000020: 00 00 00 01 00 00 00 01 00 00 00 00 ff ff ff ff ................
00000030: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 05 00 00 00 05 00 00 00 00 ................
00000040: 91 2e 6f b1 ed 61 4b 4d 8c 9b 6e 87 08 bb f6 36 ..o..aKM..n....6
00000050: 00 00 00 01 00 00 00 01 00 00 00 06 00 00 00 01 ................
00000060: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
00000070: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................

The root cause of this failure is that prior to the repair, there were
zero blocks in the AGFL. This scenario is set up by the test case, since
it formats with 64MB AGs and tries to ENOSPC the whole filesystem. In
this case of flcount==0, we reset fllast to -1U, which then trips the
write verifier's check that fllast is less than xfs_agfl_size().

Correct this code to set fllast to the last possible slot in the AGFL
when flcount is zero, which mirrors the behavior of xfs_repair phase5
when it has to create a totally empty AGFL.

Fixes: 0e93d3f43ec7 ("xfs: repair the AGFL")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff a634c0a6 Thu Aug 10 08:48:11 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: fix agf_fllast when repairing an empty AGFL

xfs/139 with parent pointers enabled occasionally pops up a corruption
message when online fsck force-rebuild repairs an AGFL:

XFS (sde): Metadata corruption detected at xfs_agf_verify+0x11e/0x220 [xfs], xfs_agf block 0x9e0001
XFS (sde): Unmount and run xfs_repair
XFS (sde): First 128 bytes of corrupted metadata buffer:
00000000: 58 41 47 46 00 00 00 01 00 00 00 4f 00 00 40 00 XAGF.......O..@.
00000010: 00 00 00 01 00 00 00 02 00 00 00 05 00 00 00 01 ................
00000020: 00 00 00 01 00 00 00 01 00 00 00 00 ff ff ff ff ................
00000030: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 05 00 00 00 05 00 00 00 00 ................
00000040: 91 2e 6f b1 ed 61 4b 4d 8c 9b 6e 87 08 bb f6 36 ..o..aKM..n....6
00000050: 00 00 00 01 00 00 00 01 00 00 00 06 00 00 00 01 ................
00000060: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
00000070: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................

The root cause of this failure is that prior to the repair, there were
zero blocks in the AGFL. This scenario is set up by the test case, since
it formats with 64MB AGs and tries to ENOSPC the whole filesystem. In
this case of flcount==0, we reset fllast to -1U, which then trips the
write verifier's check that fllast is less than xfs_agfl_size().

Correct this code to set fllast to the last possible slot in the AGFL
when flcount is zero, which mirrors the behavior of xfs_repair phase5
when it has to create a totally empty AGFL.

Fixes: 0e93d3f43ec7 ("xfs: repair the AGFL")
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff ebd9027d Wed Aug 18 19:46:55 MDT 2021 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert xfs_sb_version_has checks to use mount features

This is a conversion of the remaining xfs_sb_version_has..(sbp)
checks to use xfs_has_..(mp) feature checks.

This was largely done with a vim replacement macro that did:

:0,$s/xfs_sb_version_has\(.*\)&\(.*\)->m_sb/xfs_has_\1\2/g<CR>

A couple of other variants were also used, and the rest touched up
by hand.

$ size -t fs/xfs/built-in.a
text data bss dec hex filename
before 1127533 311352 484 1439369 15f689 (TOTALS)
after 1125360 311352 484 1437196 15ee0c (TOTALS)

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
diff 0e93d3f4 Thu Aug 09 23:43:02 MDT 2018 Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com> xfs: repair the AGFL

Repair the AGFL from the rmap data.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Foster <bfoster@redhat.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
/linux-master/fs/xfs/
H A Dxfs_xattr.cdiff 0c95c025 Wed Feb 01 06:14:55 MST 2023 Christian Brauner <brauner@kernel.org> fs: drop unused posix acl handlers

Remove struct posix_acl_{access,default}_handler for all filesystems
that don't depend on the xattr handler in their inode->i_op->listxattr()
method in any way. There's nothing more to do than to simply remove the
handler. It's been effectively unused ever since we introduced the new
posix acl api.

Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
Signed-off-by: Christian Brauner (Microsoft) <brauner@kernel.org>
diff f4288f01 Sun Jun 05 19:51:22 MDT 2022 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: fix TOCTOU race involving the new logged xattrs control knob

I found a race involving the larp control knob, aka the debugging knob
that lets developers enable logging of extended attribute updates:

Thread 1 Thread 2

echo 0 > /sys/fs/xfs/debug/larp
setxattr(REPLACE)
xfs_has_larp (returns false)
xfs_attr_set

echo 1 > /sys/fs/xfs/debug/larp

xfs_attr_defer_replace
xfs_attr_init_replace_state
xfs_has_larp (returns true)
xfs_attr_init_remove_state

<oops, wrong DAS state!>

This isn't a particularly severe problem right now because xattr logging
is only enabled when CONFIG_XFS_DEBUG=y, and developers *should* know
what they're doing.

However, the eventual intent is that callers should be able to ask for
the assistance of the log in persisting xattr updates. This capability
might not be required for /all/ callers, which means that dynamic
control must work correctly. Once an xattr update has decided whether
or not to use logged xattrs, it needs to stay in that mode until the end
of the operation regardless of what subsequent parallel operations might
do.

Therefore, it is an error to continue sampling xfs_globals.larp once
xfs_attr_change has made a decision about larp, and it was not correct
for me to have told Allison that ->create_intent functions can sample
the global log incompat feature bitfield to decide to elide a log item.

Instead, create a new op flag for the xfs_da_args structure, and convert
all other callers of xfs_has_larp and xfs_sb_version_haslogxattrs within
the attr update state machine to look for the operations flag.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Allison Henderson <allison.henderson@oracle.com>
diff 0eb81a5f Wed Feb 26 18:30:29 MST 2020 Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de> xfs: merge xfs_attr_remove into xfs_attr_set

The Linux xattr and acl APIs use a single call for set and remove.
Modify the high-level XFS API to match that and let xfs_attr_set handle
removing attributes as well. With a little bit of reordering this
removes a lot of code.

Signed-off-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Chandan Rajendra <chandanrlinux@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 3b50086f Wed Feb 13 12:15:17 MST 2019 Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com> xfs: don't overflow xattr listent buffer

For VFS listxattr calls, xfs_xattr_put_listent calls
__xfs_xattr_put_listent twice if it sees an attribute
"trusted.SGI_ACL_FILE": once for that name, and again for
"system.posix_acl_access". Unfortunately, if we happen to run out of
buffer space while emitting the first name, we set count to -1 (so that
we can feed ERANGE to the caller). The second invocation doesn't check that
the context parameters make sense and overwrites the byte before the
buffer, triggering a KASAN report:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: slab-out-of-bounds in strncpy+0xb3/0xd0
Write of size 1 at addr ffff88807fbd317f by task syz/1113

CPU: 3 PID: 1113 Comm: syz Not tainted 5.0.0-rc6-xfsx #rc6
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.10.2-1ubuntu1 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
dump_stack+0xcc/0x180
print_address_description+0x6c/0x23c
kasan_report.cold.3+0x1c/0x35
strncpy+0xb3/0xd0
__xfs_xattr_put_listent+0x1a9/0x2c0 [xfs]
xfs_attr_list_int_ilocked+0x11af/0x1800 [xfs]
xfs_attr_list_int+0x20c/0x2e0 [xfs]
xfs_vn_listxattr+0x225/0x320 [xfs]
listxattr+0x11f/0x1b0
path_listxattr+0xbd/0x130
do_syscall_64+0x139/0x560

While we're at it we add an assert to the other put_listent to avoid
this sort of thing ever happening to the attrlist_by_handle code.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
diff 3b50086f Wed Feb 13 12:15:17 MST 2019 Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com> xfs: don't overflow xattr listent buffer

For VFS listxattr calls, xfs_xattr_put_listent calls
__xfs_xattr_put_listent twice if it sees an attribute
"trusted.SGI_ACL_FILE": once for that name, and again for
"system.posix_acl_access". Unfortunately, if we happen to run out of
buffer space while emitting the first name, we set count to -1 (so that
we can feed ERANGE to the caller). The second invocation doesn't check that
the context parameters make sense and overwrites the byte before the
buffer, triggering a KASAN report:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: slab-out-of-bounds in strncpy+0xb3/0xd0
Write of size 1 at addr ffff88807fbd317f by task syz/1113

CPU: 3 PID: 1113 Comm: syz Not tainted 5.0.0-rc6-xfsx #rc6
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.10.2-1ubuntu1 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
dump_stack+0xcc/0x180
print_address_description+0x6c/0x23c
kasan_report.cold.3+0x1c/0x35
strncpy+0xb3/0xd0
__xfs_xattr_put_listent+0x1a9/0x2c0 [xfs]
xfs_attr_list_int_ilocked+0x11af/0x1800 [xfs]
xfs_attr_list_int+0x20c/0x2e0 [xfs]
xfs_vn_listxattr+0x225/0x320 [xfs]
listxattr+0x11f/0x1b0
path_listxattr+0xbd/0x130
do_syscall_64+0x139/0x560

While we're at it we add an assert to the other put_listent to avoid
this sort of thing ever happening to the attrlist_by_handle code.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
diff 3b50086f Wed Feb 13 12:15:17 MST 2019 Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com> xfs: don't overflow xattr listent buffer

For VFS listxattr calls, xfs_xattr_put_listent calls
__xfs_xattr_put_listent twice if it sees an attribute
"trusted.SGI_ACL_FILE": once for that name, and again for
"system.posix_acl_access". Unfortunately, if we happen to run out of
buffer space while emitting the first name, we set count to -1 (so that
we can feed ERANGE to the caller). The second invocation doesn't check that
the context parameters make sense and overwrites the byte before the
buffer, triggering a KASAN report:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: slab-out-of-bounds in strncpy+0xb3/0xd0
Write of size 1 at addr ffff88807fbd317f by task syz/1113

CPU: 3 PID: 1113 Comm: syz Not tainted 5.0.0-rc6-xfsx #rc6
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.10.2-1ubuntu1 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
dump_stack+0xcc/0x180
print_address_description+0x6c/0x23c
kasan_report.cold.3+0x1c/0x35
strncpy+0xb3/0xd0
__xfs_xattr_put_listent+0x1a9/0x2c0 [xfs]
xfs_attr_list_int_ilocked+0x11af/0x1800 [xfs]
xfs_attr_list_int+0x20c/0x2e0 [xfs]
xfs_vn_listxattr+0x225/0x320 [xfs]
listxattr+0x11f/0x1b0
path_listxattr+0xbd/0x130
do_syscall_64+0x139/0x560

While we're at it we add an assert to the other put_listent to avoid
this sort of thing ever happening to the attrlist_by_handle code.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
diff 3b50086f Wed Feb 13 12:15:17 MST 2019 Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com> xfs: don't overflow xattr listent buffer

For VFS listxattr calls, xfs_xattr_put_listent calls
__xfs_xattr_put_listent twice if it sees an attribute
"trusted.SGI_ACL_FILE": once for that name, and again for
"system.posix_acl_access". Unfortunately, if we happen to run out of
buffer space while emitting the first name, we set count to -1 (so that
we can feed ERANGE to the caller). The second invocation doesn't check that
the context parameters make sense and overwrites the byte before the
buffer, triggering a KASAN report:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: slab-out-of-bounds in strncpy+0xb3/0xd0
Write of size 1 at addr ffff88807fbd317f by task syz/1113

CPU: 3 PID: 1113 Comm: syz Not tainted 5.0.0-rc6-xfsx #rc6
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.10.2-1ubuntu1 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
dump_stack+0xcc/0x180
print_address_description+0x6c/0x23c
kasan_report.cold.3+0x1c/0x35
strncpy+0xb3/0xd0
__xfs_xattr_put_listent+0x1a9/0x2c0 [xfs]
xfs_attr_list_int_ilocked+0x11af/0x1800 [xfs]
xfs_attr_list_int+0x20c/0x2e0 [xfs]
xfs_vn_listxattr+0x225/0x320 [xfs]
listxattr+0x11f/0x1b0
path_listxattr+0xbd/0x130
do_syscall_64+0x139/0x560

While we're at it we add an assert to the other put_listent to avoid
this sort of thing ever happening to the attrlist_by_handle code.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
diff 3b50086f Wed Feb 13 12:15:17 MST 2019 Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com> xfs: don't overflow xattr listent buffer

For VFS listxattr calls, xfs_xattr_put_listent calls
__xfs_xattr_put_listent twice if it sees an attribute
"trusted.SGI_ACL_FILE": once for that name, and again for
"system.posix_acl_access". Unfortunately, if we happen to run out of
buffer space while emitting the first name, we set count to -1 (so that
we can feed ERANGE to the caller). The second invocation doesn't check that
the context parameters make sense and overwrites the byte before the
buffer, triggering a KASAN report:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: slab-out-of-bounds in strncpy+0xb3/0xd0
Write of size 1 at addr ffff88807fbd317f by task syz/1113

CPU: 3 PID: 1113 Comm: syz Not tainted 5.0.0-rc6-xfsx #rc6
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.10.2-1ubuntu1 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
dump_stack+0xcc/0x180
print_address_description+0x6c/0x23c
kasan_report.cold.3+0x1c/0x35
strncpy+0xb3/0xd0
__xfs_xattr_put_listent+0x1a9/0x2c0 [xfs]
xfs_attr_list_int_ilocked+0x11af/0x1800 [xfs]
xfs_attr_list_int+0x20c/0x2e0 [xfs]
xfs_vn_listxattr+0x225/0x320 [xfs]
listxattr+0x11f/0x1b0
path_listxattr+0xbd/0x130
do_syscall_64+0x139/0x560

While we're at it we add an assert to the other put_listent to avoid
this sort of thing ever happening to the attrlist_by_handle code.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
diff 3b50086f Wed Feb 13 12:15:17 MST 2019 Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com> xfs: don't overflow xattr listent buffer

For VFS listxattr calls, xfs_xattr_put_listent calls
__xfs_xattr_put_listent twice if it sees an attribute
"trusted.SGI_ACL_FILE": once for that name, and again for
"system.posix_acl_access". Unfortunately, if we happen to run out of
buffer space while emitting the first name, we set count to -1 (so that
we can feed ERANGE to the caller). The second invocation doesn't check that
the context parameters make sense and overwrites the byte before the
buffer, triggering a KASAN report:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: slab-out-of-bounds in strncpy+0xb3/0xd0
Write of size 1 at addr ffff88807fbd317f by task syz/1113

CPU: 3 PID: 1113 Comm: syz Not tainted 5.0.0-rc6-xfsx #rc6
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.10.2-1ubuntu1 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
dump_stack+0xcc/0x180
print_address_description+0x6c/0x23c
kasan_report.cold.3+0x1c/0x35
strncpy+0xb3/0xd0
__xfs_xattr_put_listent+0x1a9/0x2c0 [xfs]
xfs_attr_list_int_ilocked+0x11af/0x1800 [xfs]
xfs_attr_list_int+0x20c/0x2e0 [xfs]
xfs_vn_listxattr+0x225/0x320 [xfs]
listxattr+0x11f/0x1b0
path_listxattr+0xbd/0x130
do_syscall_64+0x139/0x560

While we're at it we add an assert to the other put_listent to avoid
this sort of thing ever happening to the attrlist_by_handle code.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
diff 3b50086f Wed Feb 13 12:15:17 MST 2019 Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com> xfs: don't overflow xattr listent buffer

For VFS listxattr calls, xfs_xattr_put_listent calls
__xfs_xattr_put_listent twice if it sees an attribute
"trusted.SGI_ACL_FILE": once for that name, and again for
"system.posix_acl_access". Unfortunately, if we happen to run out of
buffer space while emitting the first name, we set count to -1 (so that
we can feed ERANGE to the caller). The second invocation doesn't check that
the context parameters make sense and overwrites the byte before the
buffer, triggering a KASAN report:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: slab-out-of-bounds in strncpy+0xb3/0xd0
Write of size 1 at addr ffff88807fbd317f by task syz/1113

CPU: 3 PID: 1113 Comm: syz Not tainted 5.0.0-rc6-xfsx #rc6
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.10.2-1ubuntu1 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
dump_stack+0xcc/0x180
print_address_description+0x6c/0x23c
kasan_report.cold.3+0x1c/0x35
strncpy+0xb3/0xd0
__xfs_xattr_put_listent+0x1a9/0x2c0 [xfs]
xfs_attr_list_int_ilocked+0x11af/0x1800 [xfs]
xfs_attr_list_int+0x20c/0x2e0 [xfs]
xfs_vn_listxattr+0x225/0x320 [xfs]
listxattr+0x11f/0x1b0
path_listxattr+0xbd/0x130
do_syscall_64+0x139/0x560

While we're at it we add an assert to the other put_listent to avoid
this sort of thing ever happening to the attrlist_by_handle code.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
diff 3b50086f Wed Feb 13 12:15:17 MST 2019 Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com> xfs: don't overflow xattr listent buffer

For VFS listxattr calls, xfs_xattr_put_listent calls
__xfs_xattr_put_listent twice if it sees an attribute
"trusted.SGI_ACL_FILE": once for that name, and again for
"system.posix_acl_access". Unfortunately, if we happen to run out of
buffer space while emitting the first name, we set count to -1 (so that
we can feed ERANGE to the caller). The second invocation doesn't check that
the context parameters make sense and overwrites the byte before the
buffer, triggering a KASAN report:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: slab-out-of-bounds in strncpy+0xb3/0xd0
Write of size 1 at addr ffff88807fbd317f by task syz/1113

CPU: 3 PID: 1113 Comm: syz Not tainted 5.0.0-rc6-xfsx #rc6
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.10.2-1ubuntu1 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
dump_stack+0xcc/0x180
print_address_description+0x6c/0x23c
kasan_report.cold.3+0x1c/0x35
strncpy+0xb3/0xd0
__xfs_xattr_put_listent+0x1a9/0x2c0 [xfs]
xfs_attr_list_int_ilocked+0x11af/0x1800 [xfs]
xfs_attr_list_int+0x20c/0x2e0 [xfs]
xfs_vn_listxattr+0x225/0x320 [xfs]
listxattr+0x11f/0x1b0
path_listxattr+0xbd/0x130
do_syscall_64+0x139/0x560

While we're at it we add an assert to the other put_listent to avoid
this sort of thing ever happening to the attrlist_by_handle code.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
diff 3b50086f Wed Feb 13 12:15:17 MST 2019 Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com> xfs: don't overflow xattr listent buffer

For VFS listxattr calls, xfs_xattr_put_listent calls
__xfs_xattr_put_listent twice if it sees an attribute
"trusted.SGI_ACL_FILE": once for that name, and again for
"system.posix_acl_access". Unfortunately, if we happen to run out of
buffer space while emitting the first name, we set count to -1 (so that
we can feed ERANGE to the caller). The second invocation doesn't check that
the context parameters make sense and overwrites the byte before the
buffer, triggering a KASAN report:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: slab-out-of-bounds in strncpy+0xb3/0xd0
Write of size 1 at addr ffff88807fbd317f by task syz/1113

CPU: 3 PID: 1113 Comm: syz Not tainted 5.0.0-rc6-xfsx #rc6
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.10.2-1ubuntu1 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
dump_stack+0xcc/0x180
print_address_description+0x6c/0x23c
kasan_report.cold.3+0x1c/0x35
strncpy+0xb3/0xd0
__xfs_xattr_put_listent+0x1a9/0x2c0 [xfs]
xfs_attr_list_int_ilocked+0x11af/0x1800 [xfs]
xfs_attr_list_int+0x20c/0x2e0 [xfs]
xfs_vn_listxattr+0x225/0x320 [xfs]
listxattr+0x11f/0x1b0
path_listxattr+0xbd/0x130
do_syscall_64+0x139/0x560

While we're at it we add an assert to the other put_listent to avoid
this sort of thing ever happening to the attrlist_by_handle code.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
diff 3b50086f Wed Feb 13 12:15:17 MST 2019 Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com> xfs: don't overflow xattr listent buffer

For VFS listxattr calls, xfs_xattr_put_listent calls
__xfs_xattr_put_listent twice if it sees an attribute
"trusted.SGI_ACL_FILE": once for that name, and again for
"system.posix_acl_access". Unfortunately, if we happen to run out of
buffer space while emitting the first name, we set count to -1 (so that
we can feed ERANGE to the caller). The second invocation doesn't check that
the context parameters make sense and overwrites the byte before the
buffer, triggering a KASAN report:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: slab-out-of-bounds in strncpy+0xb3/0xd0
Write of size 1 at addr ffff88807fbd317f by task syz/1113

CPU: 3 PID: 1113 Comm: syz Not tainted 5.0.0-rc6-xfsx #rc6
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.10.2-1ubuntu1 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
dump_stack+0xcc/0x180
print_address_description+0x6c/0x23c
kasan_report.cold.3+0x1c/0x35
strncpy+0xb3/0xd0
__xfs_xattr_put_listent+0x1a9/0x2c0 [xfs]
xfs_attr_list_int_ilocked+0x11af/0x1800 [xfs]
xfs_attr_list_int+0x20c/0x2e0 [xfs]
xfs_vn_listxattr+0x225/0x320 [xfs]
listxattr+0x11f/0x1b0
path_listxattr+0xbd/0x130
do_syscall_64+0x139/0x560

While we're at it we add an assert to the other put_listent to avoid
this sort of thing ever happening to the attrlist_by_handle code.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
diff 3b50086f Wed Feb 13 12:15:17 MST 2019 Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com> xfs: don't overflow xattr listent buffer

For VFS listxattr calls, xfs_xattr_put_listent calls
__xfs_xattr_put_listent twice if it sees an attribute
"trusted.SGI_ACL_FILE": once for that name, and again for
"system.posix_acl_access". Unfortunately, if we happen to run out of
buffer space while emitting the first name, we set count to -1 (so that
we can feed ERANGE to the caller). The second invocation doesn't check that
the context parameters make sense and overwrites the byte before the
buffer, triggering a KASAN report:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: slab-out-of-bounds in strncpy+0xb3/0xd0
Write of size 1 at addr ffff88807fbd317f by task syz/1113

CPU: 3 PID: 1113 Comm: syz Not tainted 5.0.0-rc6-xfsx #rc6
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.10.2-1ubuntu1 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
dump_stack+0xcc/0x180
print_address_description+0x6c/0x23c
kasan_report.cold.3+0x1c/0x35
strncpy+0xb3/0xd0
__xfs_xattr_put_listent+0x1a9/0x2c0 [xfs]
xfs_attr_list_int_ilocked+0x11af/0x1800 [xfs]
xfs_attr_list_int+0x20c/0x2e0 [xfs]
xfs_vn_listxattr+0x225/0x320 [xfs]
listxattr+0x11f/0x1b0
path_listxattr+0xbd/0x130
do_syscall_64+0x139/0x560

While we're at it we add an assert to the other put_listent to avoid
this sort of thing ever happening to the attrlist_by_handle code.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
diff 3b50086f Wed Feb 13 12:15:17 MST 2019 Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com> xfs: don't overflow xattr listent buffer

For VFS listxattr calls, xfs_xattr_put_listent calls
__xfs_xattr_put_listent twice if it sees an attribute
"trusted.SGI_ACL_FILE": once for that name, and again for
"system.posix_acl_access". Unfortunately, if we happen to run out of
buffer space while emitting the first name, we set count to -1 (so that
we can feed ERANGE to the caller). The second invocation doesn't check that
the context parameters make sense and overwrites the byte before the
buffer, triggering a KASAN report:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: slab-out-of-bounds in strncpy+0xb3/0xd0
Write of size 1 at addr ffff88807fbd317f by task syz/1113

CPU: 3 PID: 1113 Comm: syz Not tainted 5.0.0-rc6-xfsx #rc6
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.10.2-1ubuntu1 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
dump_stack+0xcc/0x180
print_address_description+0x6c/0x23c
kasan_report.cold.3+0x1c/0x35
strncpy+0xb3/0xd0
__xfs_xattr_put_listent+0x1a9/0x2c0 [xfs]
xfs_attr_list_int_ilocked+0x11af/0x1800 [xfs]
xfs_attr_list_int+0x20c/0x2e0 [xfs]
xfs_vn_listxattr+0x225/0x320 [xfs]
listxattr+0x11f/0x1b0
path_listxattr+0xbd/0x130
do_syscall_64+0x139/0x560

While we're at it we add an assert to the other put_listent to avoid
this sort of thing ever happening to the attrlist_by_handle code.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
diff 3b50086f Wed Feb 13 12:15:17 MST 2019 Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com> xfs: don't overflow xattr listent buffer

For VFS listxattr calls, xfs_xattr_put_listent calls
__xfs_xattr_put_listent twice if it sees an attribute
"trusted.SGI_ACL_FILE": once for that name, and again for
"system.posix_acl_access". Unfortunately, if we happen to run out of
buffer space while emitting the first name, we set count to -1 (so that
we can feed ERANGE to the caller). The second invocation doesn't check that
the context parameters make sense and overwrites the byte before the
buffer, triggering a KASAN report:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: slab-out-of-bounds in strncpy+0xb3/0xd0
Write of size 1 at addr ffff88807fbd317f by task syz/1113

CPU: 3 PID: 1113 Comm: syz Not tainted 5.0.0-rc6-xfsx #rc6
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.10.2-1ubuntu1 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
dump_stack+0xcc/0x180
print_address_description+0x6c/0x23c
kasan_report.cold.3+0x1c/0x35
strncpy+0xb3/0xd0
__xfs_xattr_put_listent+0x1a9/0x2c0 [xfs]
xfs_attr_list_int_ilocked+0x11af/0x1800 [xfs]
xfs_attr_list_int+0x20c/0x2e0 [xfs]
xfs_vn_listxattr+0x225/0x320 [xfs]
listxattr+0x11f/0x1b0
path_listxattr+0xbd/0x130
do_syscall_64+0x139/0x560

While we're at it we add an assert to the other put_listent to avoid
this sort of thing ever happening to the attrlist_by_handle code.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
diff 3b50086f Wed Feb 13 12:15:17 MST 2019 Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com> xfs: don't overflow xattr listent buffer

For VFS listxattr calls, xfs_xattr_put_listent calls
__xfs_xattr_put_listent twice if it sees an attribute
"trusted.SGI_ACL_FILE": once for that name, and again for
"system.posix_acl_access". Unfortunately, if we happen to run out of
buffer space while emitting the first name, we set count to -1 (so that
we can feed ERANGE to the caller). The second invocation doesn't check that
the context parameters make sense and overwrites the byte before the
buffer, triggering a KASAN report:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: slab-out-of-bounds in strncpy+0xb3/0xd0
Write of size 1 at addr ffff88807fbd317f by task syz/1113

CPU: 3 PID: 1113 Comm: syz Not tainted 5.0.0-rc6-xfsx #rc6
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.10.2-1ubuntu1 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
dump_stack+0xcc/0x180
print_address_description+0x6c/0x23c
kasan_report.cold.3+0x1c/0x35
strncpy+0xb3/0xd0
__xfs_xattr_put_listent+0x1a9/0x2c0 [xfs]
xfs_attr_list_int_ilocked+0x11af/0x1800 [xfs]
xfs_attr_list_int+0x20c/0x2e0 [xfs]
xfs_vn_listxattr+0x225/0x320 [xfs]
listxattr+0x11f/0x1b0
path_listxattr+0xbd/0x130
do_syscall_64+0x139/0x560

While we're at it we add an assert to the other put_listent to avoid
this sort of thing ever happening to the attrlist_by_handle code.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
diff 3b50086f Wed Feb 13 12:15:17 MST 2019 Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com> xfs: don't overflow xattr listent buffer

For VFS listxattr calls, xfs_xattr_put_listent calls
__xfs_xattr_put_listent twice if it sees an attribute
"trusted.SGI_ACL_FILE": once for that name, and again for
"system.posix_acl_access". Unfortunately, if we happen to run out of
buffer space while emitting the first name, we set count to -1 (so that
we can feed ERANGE to the caller). The second invocation doesn't check that
the context parameters make sense and overwrites the byte before the
buffer, triggering a KASAN report:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: slab-out-of-bounds in strncpy+0xb3/0xd0
Write of size 1 at addr ffff88807fbd317f by task syz/1113

CPU: 3 PID: 1113 Comm: syz Not tainted 5.0.0-rc6-xfsx #rc6
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.10.2-1ubuntu1 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
dump_stack+0xcc/0x180
print_address_description+0x6c/0x23c
kasan_report.cold.3+0x1c/0x35
strncpy+0xb3/0xd0
__xfs_xattr_put_listent+0x1a9/0x2c0 [xfs]
xfs_attr_list_int_ilocked+0x11af/0x1800 [xfs]
xfs_attr_list_int+0x20c/0x2e0 [xfs]
xfs_vn_listxattr+0x225/0x320 [xfs]
listxattr+0x11f/0x1b0
path_listxattr+0xbd/0x130
do_syscall_64+0x139/0x560

While we're at it we add an assert to the other put_listent to avoid
this sort of thing ever happening to the attrlist_by_handle code.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
diff 3b50086f Wed Feb 13 12:15:17 MST 2019 Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com> xfs: don't overflow xattr listent buffer

For VFS listxattr calls, xfs_xattr_put_listent calls
__xfs_xattr_put_listent twice if it sees an attribute
"trusted.SGI_ACL_FILE": once for that name, and again for
"system.posix_acl_access". Unfortunately, if we happen to run out of
buffer space while emitting the first name, we set count to -1 (so that
we can feed ERANGE to the caller). The second invocation doesn't check that
the context parameters make sense and overwrites the byte before the
buffer, triggering a KASAN report:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: slab-out-of-bounds in strncpy+0xb3/0xd0
Write of size 1 at addr ffff88807fbd317f by task syz/1113

CPU: 3 PID: 1113 Comm: syz Not tainted 5.0.0-rc6-xfsx #rc6
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.10.2-1ubuntu1 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
dump_stack+0xcc/0x180
print_address_description+0x6c/0x23c
kasan_report.cold.3+0x1c/0x35
strncpy+0xb3/0xd0
__xfs_xattr_put_listent+0x1a9/0x2c0 [xfs]
xfs_attr_list_int_ilocked+0x11af/0x1800 [xfs]
xfs_attr_list_int+0x20c/0x2e0 [xfs]
xfs_vn_listxattr+0x225/0x320 [xfs]
listxattr+0x11f/0x1b0
path_listxattr+0xbd/0x130
do_syscall_64+0x139/0x560

While we're at it we add an assert to the other put_listent to avoid
this sort of thing ever happening to the attrlist_by_handle code.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
diff 3b50086f Wed Feb 13 12:15:17 MST 2019 Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com> xfs: don't overflow xattr listent buffer

For VFS listxattr calls, xfs_xattr_put_listent calls
__xfs_xattr_put_listent twice if it sees an attribute
"trusted.SGI_ACL_FILE": once for that name, and again for
"system.posix_acl_access". Unfortunately, if we happen to run out of
buffer space while emitting the first name, we set count to -1 (so that
we can feed ERANGE to the caller). The second invocation doesn't check that
the context parameters make sense and overwrites the byte before the
buffer, triggering a KASAN report:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: slab-out-of-bounds in strncpy+0xb3/0xd0
Write of size 1 at addr ffff88807fbd317f by task syz/1113

CPU: 3 PID: 1113 Comm: syz Not tainted 5.0.0-rc6-xfsx #rc6
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.10.2-1ubuntu1 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
dump_stack+0xcc/0x180
print_address_description+0x6c/0x23c
kasan_report.cold.3+0x1c/0x35
strncpy+0xb3/0xd0
__xfs_xattr_put_listent+0x1a9/0x2c0 [xfs]
xfs_attr_list_int_ilocked+0x11af/0x1800 [xfs]
xfs_attr_list_int+0x20c/0x2e0 [xfs]
xfs_vn_listxattr+0x225/0x320 [xfs]
listxattr+0x11f/0x1b0
path_listxattr+0xbd/0x130
do_syscall_64+0x139/0x560

While we're at it we add an assert to the other put_listent to avoid
this sort of thing ever happening to the attrlist_by_handle code.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
diff 3b50086f Wed Feb 13 12:15:17 MST 2019 Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com> xfs: don't overflow xattr listent buffer

For VFS listxattr calls, xfs_xattr_put_listent calls
__xfs_xattr_put_listent twice if it sees an attribute
"trusted.SGI_ACL_FILE": once for that name, and again for
"system.posix_acl_access". Unfortunately, if we happen to run out of
buffer space while emitting the first name, we set count to -1 (so that
we can feed ERANGE to the caller). The second invocation doesn't check that
the context parameters make sense and overwrites the byte before the
buffer, triggering a KASAN report:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: slab-out-of-bounds in strncpy+0xb3/0xd0
Write of size 1 at addr ffff88807fbd317f by task syz/1113

CPU: 3 PID: 1113 Comm: syz Not tainted 5.0.0-rc6-xfsx #rc6
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.10.2-1ubuntu1 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
dump_stack+0xcc/0x180
print_address_description+0x6c/0x23c
kasan_report.cold.3+0x1c/0x35
strncpy+0xb3/0xd0
__xfs_xattr_put_listent+0x1a9/0x2c0 [xfs]
xfs_attr_list_int_ilocked+0x11af/0x1800 [xfs]
xfs_attr_list_int+0x20c/0x2e0 [xfs]
xfs_vn_listxattr+0x225/0x320 [xfs]
listxattr+0x11f/0x1b0
path_listxattr+0xbd/0x130
do_syscall_64+0x139/0x560

While we're at it we add an assert to the other put_listent to avoid
this sort of thing ever happening to the attrlist_by_handle code.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
diff 3b50086f Wed Feb 13 12:15:17 MST 2019 Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com> xfs: don't overflow xattr listent buffer

For VFS listxattr calls, xfs_xattr_put_listent calls
__xfs_xattr_put_listent twice if it sees an attribute
"trusted.SGI_ACL_FILE": once for that name, and again for
"system.posix_acl_access". Unfortunately, if we happen to run out of
buffer space while emitting the first name, we set count to -1 (so that
we can feed ERANGE to the caller). The second invocation doesn't check that
the context parameters make sense and overwrites the byte before the
buffer, triggering a KASAN report:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: slab-out-of-bounds in strncpy+0xb3/0xd0
Write of size 1 at addr ffff88807fbd317f by task syz/1113

CPU: 3 PID: 1113 Comm: syz Not tainted 5.0.0-rc6-xfsx #rc6
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.10.2-1ubuntu1 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
dump_stack+0xcc/0x180
print_address_description+0x6c/0x23c
kasan_report.cold.3+0x1c/0x35
strncpy+0xb3/0xd0
__xfs_xattr_put_listent+0x1a9/0x2c0 [xfs]
xfs_attr_list_int_ilocked+0x11af/0x1800 [xfs]
xfs_attr_list_int+0x20c/0x2e0 [xfs]
xfs_vn_listxattr+0x225/0x320 [xfs]
listxattr+0x11f/0x1b0
path_listxattr+0xbd/0x130
do_syscall_64+0x139/0x560

While we're at it we add an assert to the other put_listent to avoid
this sort of thing ever happening to the attrlist_by_handle code.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
diff 3b50086f Wed Feb 13 12:15:17 MST 2019 Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com> xfs: don't overflow xattr listent buffer

For VFS listxattr calls, xfs_xattr_put_listent calls
__xfs_xattr_put_listent twice if it sees an attribute
"trusted.SGI_ACL_FILE": once for that name, and again for
"system.posix_acl_access". Unfortunately, if we happen to run out of
buffer space while emitting the first name, we set count to -1 (so that
we can feed ERANGE to the caller). The second invocation doesn't check that
the context parameters make sense and overwrites the byte before the
buffer, triggering a KASAN report:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: slab-out-of-bounds in strncpy+0xb3/0xd0
Write of size 1 at addr ffff88807fbd317f by task syz/1113

CPU: 3 PID: 1113 Comm: syz Not tainted 5.0.0-rc6-xfsx #rc6
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.10.2-1ubuntu1 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
dump_stack+0xcc/0x180
print_address_description+0x6c/0x23c
kasan_report.cold.3+0x1c/0x35
strncpy+0xb3/0xd0
__xfs_xattr_put_listent+0x1a9/0x2c0 [xfs]
xfs_attr_list_int_ilocked+0x11af/0x1800 [xfs]
xfs_attr_list_int+0x20c/0x2e0 [xfs]
xfs_vn_listxattr+0x225/0x320 [xfs]
listxattr+0x11f/0x1b0
path_listxattr+0xbd/0x130
do_syscall_64+0x139/0x560

While we're at it we add an assert to the other put_listent to avoid
this sort of thing ever happening to the attrlist_by_handle code.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
diff 3b50086f Wed Feb 13 12:15:17 MST 2019 Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com> xfs: don't overflow xattr listent buffer

For VFS listxattr calls, xfs_xattr_put_listent calls
__xfs_xattr_put_listent twice if it sees an attribute
"trusted.SGI_ACL_FILE": once for that name, and again for
"system.posix_acl_access". Unfortunately, if we happen to run out of
buffer space while emitting the first name, we set count to -1 (so that
we can feed ERANGE to the caller). The second invocation doesn't check that
the context parameters make sense and overwrites the byte before the
buffer, triggering a KASAN report:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: slab-out-of-bounds in strncpy+0xb3/0xd0
Write of size 1 at addr ffff88807fbd317f by task syz/1113

CPU: 3 PID: 1113 Comm: syz Not tainted 5.0.0-rc6-xfsx #rc6
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.10.2-1ubuntu1 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
dump_stack+0xcc/0x180
print_address_description+0x6c/0x23c
kasan_report.cold.3+0x1c/0x35
strncpy+0xb3/0xd0
__xfs_xattr_put_listent+0x1a9/0x2c0 [xfs]
xfs_attr_list_int_ilocked+0x11af/0x1800 [xfs]
xfs_attr_list_int+0x20c/0x2e0 [xfs]
xfs_vn_listxattr+0x225/0x320 [xfs]
listxattr+0x11f/0x1b0
path_listxattr+0xbd/0x130
do_syscall_64+0x139/0x560

While we're at it we add an assert to the other put_listent to avoid
this sort of thing ever happening to the attrlist_by_handle code.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
diff 3b50086f Wed Feb 13 12:15:17 MST 2019 Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com> xfs: don't overflow xattr listent buffer

For VFS listxattr calls, xfs_xattr_put_listent calls
__xfs_xattr_put_listent twice if it sees an attribute
"trusted.SGI_ACL_FILE": once for that name, and again for
"system.posix_acl_access". Unfortunately, if we happen to run out of
buffer space while emitting the first name, we set count to -1 (so that
we can feed ERANGE to the caller). The second invocation doesn't check that
the context parameters make sense and overwrites the byte before the
buffer, triggering a KASAN report:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: slab-out-of-bounds in strncpy+0xb3/0xd0
Write of size 1 at addr ffff88807fbd317f by task syz/1113

CPU: 3 PID: 1113 Comm: syz Not tainted 5.0.0-rc6-xfsx #rc6
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.10.2-1ubuntu1 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
dump_stack+0xcc/0x180
print_address_description+0x6c/0x23c
kasan_report.cold.3+0x1c/0x35
strncpy+0xb3/0xd0
__xfs_xattr_put_listent+0x1a9/0x2c0 [xfs]
xfs_attr_list_int_ilocked+0x11af/0x1800 [xfs]
xfs_attr_list_int+0x20c/0x2e0 [xfs]
xfs_vn_listxattr+0x225/0x320 [xfs]
listxattr+0x11f/0x1b0
path_listxattr+0xbd/0x130
do_syscall_64+0x139/0x560

While we're at it we add an assert to the other put_listent to avoid
this sort of thing ever happening to the attrlist_by_handle code.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
diff 3b50086f Wed Feb 13 12:15:17 MST 2019 Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com> xfs: don't overflow xattr listent buffer

For VFS listxattr calls, xfs_xattr_put_listent calls
__xfs_xattr_put_listent twice if it sees an attribute
"trusted.SGI_ACL_FILE": once for that name, and again for
"system.posix_acl_access". Unfortunately, if we happen to run out of
buffer space while emitting the first name, we set count to -1 (so that
we can feed ERANGE to the caller). The second invocation doesn't check that
the context parameters make sense and overwrites the byte before the
buffer, triggering a KASAN report:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: slab-out-of-bounds in strncpy+0xb3/0xd0
Write of size 1 at addr ffff88807fbd317f by task syz/1113

CPU: 3 PID: 1113 Comm: syz Not tainted 5.0.0-rc6-xfsx #rc6
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.10.2-1ubuntu1 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
dump_stack+0xcc/0x180
print_address_description+0x6c/0x23c
kasan_report.cold.3+0x1c/0x35
strncpy+0xb3/0xd0
__xfs_xattr_put_listent+0x1a9/0x2c0 [xfs]
xfs_attr_list_int_ilocked+0x11af/0x1800 [xfs]
xfs_attr_list_int+0x20c/0x2e0 [xfs]
xfs_vn_listxattr+0x225/0x320 [xfs]
listxattr+0x11f/0x1b0
path_listxattr+0xbd/0x130
do_syscall_64+0x139/0x560

While we're at it we add an assert to the other put_listent to avoid
this sort of thing ever happening to the attrlist_by_handle code.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
diff 3b50086f Wed Feb 13 12:15:17 MST 2019 Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com> xfs: don't overflow xattr listent buffer

For VFS listxattr calls, xfs_xattr_put_listent calls
__xfs_xattr_put_listent twice if it sees an attribute
"trusted.SGI_ACL_FILE": once for that name, and again for
"system.posix_acl_access". Unfortunately, if we happen to run out of
buffer space while emitting the first name, we set count to -1 (so that
we can feed ERANGE to the caller). The second invocation doesn't check that
the context parameters make sense and overwrites the byte before the
buffer, triggering a KASAN report:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: slab-out-of-bounds in strncpy+0xb3/0xd0
Write of size 1 at addr ffff88807fbd317f by task syz/1113

CPU: 3 PID: 1113 Comm: syz Not tainted 5.0.0-rc6-xfsx #rc6
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.10.2-1ubuntu1 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
dump_stack+0xcc/0x180
print_address_description+0x6c/0x23c
kasan_report.cold.3+0x1c/0x35
strncpy+0xb3/0xd0
__xfs_xattr_put_listent+0x1a9/0x2c0 [xfs]
xfs_attr_list_int_ilocked+0x11af/0x1800 [xfs]
xfs_attr_list_int+0x20c/0x2e0 [xfs]
xfs_vn_listxattr+0x225/0x320 [xfs]
listxattr+0x11f/0x1b0
path_listxattr+0xbd/0x130
do_syscall_64+0x139/0x560

While we're at it we add an assert to the other put_listent to avoid
this sort of thing ever happening to the attrlist_by_handle code.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
diff 3b50086f Wed Feb 13 12:15:17 MST 2019 Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com> xfs: don't overflow xattr listent buffer

For VFS listxattr calls, xfs_xattr_put_listent calls
__xfs_xattr_put_listent twice if it sees an attribute
"trusted.SGI_ACL_FILE": once for that name, and again for
"system.posix_acl_access". Unfortunately, if we happen to run out of
buffer space while emitting the first name, we set count to -1 (so that
we can feed ERANGE to the caller). The second invocation doesn't check that
the context parameters make sense and overwrites the byte before the
buffer, triggering a KASAN report:

==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: slab-out-of-bounds in strncpy+0xb3/0xd0
Write of size 1 at addr ffff88807fbd317f by task syz/1113

CPU: 3 PID: 1113 Comm: syz Not tainted 5.0.0-rc6-xfsx #rc6
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS 1.10.2-1ubuntu1 04/01/2014
Call Trace:
dump_stack+0xcc/0x180
print_address_description+0x6c/0x23c
kasan_report.cold.3+0x1c/0x35
strncpy+0xb3/0xd0
__xfs_xattr_put_listent+0x1a9/0x2c0 [xfs]
xfs_attr_list_int_ilocked+0x11af/0x1800 [xfs]
xfs_attr_list_int+0x20c/0x2e0 [xfs]
xfs_vn_listxattr+0x225/0x320 [xfs]
listxattr+0x11f/0x1b0
path_listxattr+0xbd/0x130
do_syscall_64+0x139/0x560

While we're at it we add an assert to the other put_listent to avoid
this sort of thing ever happening to the attrlist_by_handle code.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
H A Dxfs_icache.hdiff 0d296634 Thu Aug 10 08:48:12 MDT 2023 Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org> xfs: hide xfs_inode_is_allocated in scrub common code

This function is only used by online fsck, so let's move it there.
In the next patch, we'll fix it to work properly and to require that the
caller hold the AGI buffer locked. No major changes aside from
adjusting the signature a bit.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
H A Dxfs_quota.hdiff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 7f884dc1 Sun May 31 15:15:37 MDT 2015 Brian Foster <bfoster@redhat.com> xfs: fix quota block reservation leak when tp allocates and frees blocks

Al Viro reports that generic/231 fails frequently on XFS and bisected
the problem to the following commit:

5d11fb4b xfs: rework zero range to prevent invalid i_size updates

... which is just the first commit that happens to cause fsx to
reproduce the problem. fsx reproduces via zero range calls. The
aforementioned commit overhauls zero range to use hole punch and
fallocate. As it turns out, the problem is reproducible on demand using
basic hole punch as follows:

$ mkfs.xfs -f -m crc=1,finobt=1 <dev>
$ mount <dev> /mnt -o uquota
$ xfs_io -f -c "falloc 0 50m" /mnt/file
$ for i in $(seq 1 20); do xfs_io -c "fpunch ${i}m 32k" /mnt/file; done
$ rm -f /mnt/file
$ repquota -us /mnt
...
User used soft hard grace used soft hard grace
----------------------------------------------------------------------
root -- 32K 0K 0K 3 0 0

A file is allocated with a single 50m extent. The extent count increases
via hole punches until the bmap converts to btree format. The file is
removed but quota reports 32k of space usage for the user. This
reservation is effectively leaked for the lifetime of the mount.

The reason this occurs is because the quota block reservation tracking
is confused when a transaction happens to free and allocate blocks at
the same time. Consider the following sequence of events:

- tp is allocated from xfs_free_file_space() and reserves several blocks
for btree management. Blocks are reserved against the dquot and marked
as such in the transaction (qtrx->qt_blk_res).
- 8 blocks are accounted free when the 32k range is punched out.
xfs_trans_mod_dquot() is called with XFS_TRANS_DQ_BCOUNT and sets
->qt_bcount_delta to -8.
- Subsequently, a block is allocated against the same transaction by
xfs_bmap_extents_to_btree() for btree conversion. A call to
xfs_trans_mod_dquot() increases qt_blk_res_used to 1 and qt_bcount_delta
to -7.
- The transaction is dup'd and committed by xfs_bmap_finish().
xfs_trans_dup_dqinfo() sets the first transaction up such that it has a
matching qt_blk_res and qt_blk_res_used of 1. The remaining unused
reservation is transferred to the duplicate tp.

When the transactions are committed, the dquots are fixed up in
xfs_trans_apply_dquot_deltas() according to one of two methods:

1.) If the transaction holds a block reservation (->qt_blk_res != 0),
_only_ the unused portion reservation is unaccounted from the dquot.
Note that the tp duplication behavior of xfs_bmap_finish() makes it such
that qt_blk_res is typically 0 for tp's with unused reservation.
2.) Otherwise, the dquot is fixed up based on the block delta
(->qt_bcount_delta) created by the transaction.

Therefore, if a transaction has a negative qt_bcount_delta and positive
qt_blk_res_used, the former set of blocks that have been removed from
the file are never factored out of the in-core dquot reservation.
Instead, *_apply_dquot_deltas() sees 1 block used out of a 1 block
reservation and believes there is nothing to fix up. The on-disk
d_bcount is updated independently from qt_bcount_delta, and thus is
correct (and allows the quota usage to correct on remount).

To deal with this situation, we effectively want the "used reservation"
part of the transaction to be consistent with any freed blocks with
respect to quota tracking. For example, if 8 blocks are freed, the
subsequent single block allocation does not need to consume the initial
reservation made by the tp. Instead, it simply borrows one from the
previously freed. One possible implementation of such borrowing is to
avoid the blks_res_used increment when bcount_delta is negative. This
alone is flawed logic in that it only handles the case where blocks are
freed before allocated, however.

Rather than add more complexity to manage synchronization between
bcount_delta and blks_res_used, kill the latter entirely. blk_res_used
is only updated in one place and always in sync with delta_bcount.
Therefore, the net block reservation consumption of the transaction is
always available from bcount_delta. Calculate the reservation
consumption on the fly where necessary based on whether the tp has a
reservation and results in a positive net block delta on the inode.

Reported-by: Al Viro <viro@ZenIV.linux.org.uk>
Signed-off-by: Brian Foster <bfoster@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
diff 7f884dc1 Sun May 31 15:15:37 MDT 2015 Brian Foster <bfoster@redhat.com> xfs: fix quota block reservation leak when tp allocates and frees blocks

Al Viro reports that generic/231 fails frequently on XFS and bisected
the problem to the following commit:

5d11fb4b xfs: rework zero range to prevent invalid i_size updates

... which is just the first commit that happens to cause fsx to
reproduce the problem. fsx reproduces via zero range calls. The
aforementioned commit overhauls zero range to use hole punch and
fallocate. As it turns out, the problem is reproducible on demand using
basic hole punch as follows:

$ mkfs.xfs -f -m crc=1,finobt=1 <dev>
$ mount <dev> /mnt -o uquota
$ xfs_io -f -c "falloc 0 50m" /mnt/file
$ for i in $(seq 1 20); do xfs_io -c "fpunch ${i}m 32k" /mnt/file; done
$ rm -f /mnt/file
$ repquota -us /mnt
...
User used soft hard grace used soft hard grace
----------------------------------------------------------------------
root -- 32K 0K 0K 3 0 0

A file is allocated with a single 50m extent. The extent count increases
via hole punches until the bmap converts to btree format. The file is
removed but quota reports 32k of space usage for the user. This
reservation is effectively leaked for the lifetime of the mount.

The reason this occurs is because the quota block reservation tracking
is confused when a transaction happens to free and allocate blocks at
the same time. Consider the following sequence of events:

- tp is allocated from xfs_free_file_space() and reserves several blocks
for btree management. Blocks are reserved against the dquot and marked
as such in the transaction (qtrx->qt_blk_res).
- 8 blocks are accounted free when the 32k range is punched out.
xfs_trans_mod_dquot() is called with XFS_TRANS_DQ_BCOUNT and sets
->qt_bcount_delta to -8.
- Subsequently, a block is allocated against the same transaction by
xfs_bmap_extents_to_btree() for btree conversion. A call to
xfs_trans_mod_dquot() increases qt_blk_res_used to 1 and qt_bcount_delta
to -7.
- The transaction is dup'd and committed by xfs_bmap_finish().
xfs_trans_dup_dqinfo() sets the first transaction up such that it has a
matching qt_blk_res and qt_blk_res_used of 1. The remaining unused
reservation is transferred to the duplicate tp.

When the transactions are committed, the dquots are fixed up in
xfs_trans_apply_dquot_deltas() according to one of two methods:

1.) If the transaction holds a block reservation (->qt_blk_res != 0),
_only_ the unused portion reservation is unaccounted from the dquot.
Note that the tp duplication behavior of xfs_bmap_finish() makes it such
that qt_blk_res is typically 0 for tp's with unused reservation.
2.) Otherwise, the dquot is fixed up based on the block delta
(->qt_bcount_delta) created by the transaction.

Therefore, if a transaction has a negative qt_bcount_delta and positive
qt_blk_res_used, the former set of blocks that have been removed from
the file are never factored out of the in-core dquot reservation.
Instead, *_apply_dquot_deltas() sees 1 block used out of a 1 block
reservation and believes there is nothing to fix up. The on-disk
d_bcount is updated independently from qt_bcount_delta, and thus is
correct (and allows the quota usage to correct on remount).

To deal with this situation, we effectively want the "used reservation"
part of the transaction to be consistent with any freed blocks with
respect to quota tracking. For example, if 8 blocks are freed, the
subsequent single block allocation does not need to consume the initial
reservation made by the tp. Instead, it simply borrows one from the
previously freed. One possible implementation of such borrowing is to
avoid the blks_res_used increment when bcount_delta is negative. This
alone is flawed logic in that it only handles the case where blocks are
freed before allocated, however.

Rather than add more complexity to manage synchronization between
bcount_delta and blks_res_used, kill the latter entirely. blk_res_used
is only updated in one place and always in sync with delta_bcount.
Therefore, the net block reservation consumption of the transaction is
always available from bcount_delta. Calculate the reservation
consumption on the fly where necessary based on whether the tp has a
reservation and results in a positive net block delta on the inode.

Reported-by: Al Viro <viro@ZenIV.linux.org.uk>
Signed-off-by: Brian Foster <bfoster@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
diff 7f884dc1 Sun May 31 15:15:37 MDT 2015 Brian Foster <bfoster@redhat.com> xfs: fix quota block reservation leak when tp allocates and frees blocks

Al Viro reports that generic/231 fails frequently on XFS and bisected
the problem to the following commit:

5d11fb4b xfs: rework zero range to prevent invalid i_size updates

... which is just the first commit that happens to cause fsx to
reproduce the problem. fsx reproduces via zero range calls. The
aforementioned commit overhauls zero range to use hole punch and
fallocate. As it turns out, the problem is reproducible on demand using
basic hole punch as follows:

$ mkfs.xfs -f -m crc=1,finobt=1 <dev>
$ mount <dev> /mnt -o uquota
$ xfs_io -f -c "falloc 0 50m" /mnt/file
$ for i in $(seq 1 20); do xfs_io -c "fpunch ${i}m 32k" /mnt/file; done
$ rm -f /mnt/file
$ repquota -us /mnt
...
User used soft hard grace used soft hard grace
----------------------------------------------------------------------
root -- 32K 0K 0K 3 0 0

A file is allocated with a single 50m extent. The extent count increases
via hole punches until the bmap converts to btree format. The file is
removed but quota reports 32k of space usage for the user. This
reservation is effectively leaked for the lifetime of the mount.

The reason this occurs is because the quota block reservation tracking
is confused when a transaction happens to free and allocate blocks at
the same time. Consider the following sequence of events:

- tp is allocated from xfs_free_file_space() and reserves several blocks
for btree management. Blocks are reserved against the dquot and marked
as such in the transaction (qtrx->qt_blk_res).
- 8 blocks are accounted free when the 32k range is punched out.
xfs_trans_mod_dquot() is called with XFS_TRANS_DQ_BCOUNT and sets
->qt_bcount_delta to -8.
- Subsequently, a block is allocated against the same transaction by
xfs_bmap_extents_to_btree() for btree conversion. A call to
xfs_trans_mod_dquot() increases qt_blk_res_used to 1 and qt_bcount_delta
to -7.
- The transaction is dup'd and committed by xfs_bmap_finish().
xfs_trans_dup_dqinfo() sets the first transaction up such that it has a
matching qt_blk_res and qt_blk_res_used of 1. The remaining unused
reservation is transferred to the duplicate tp.

When the transactions are committed, the dquots are fixed up in
xfs_trans_apply_dquot_deltas() according to one of two methods:

1.) If the transaction holds a block reservation (->qt_blk_res != 0),
_only_ the unused portion reservation is unaccounted from the dquot.
Note that the tp duplication behavior of xfs_bmap_finish() makes it such
that qt_blk_res is typically 0 for tp's with unused reservation.
2.) Otherwise, the dquot is fixed up based on the block delta
(->qt_bcount_delta) created by the transaction.

Therefore, if a transaction has a negative qt_bcount_delta and positive
qt_blk_res_used, the former set of blocks that have been removed from
the file are never factored out of the in-core dquot reservation.
Instead, *_apply_dquot_deltas() sees 1 block used out of a 1 block
reservation and believes there is nothing to fix up. The on-disk
d_bcount is updated independently from qt_bcount_delta, and thus is
correct (and allows the quota usage to correct on remount).

To deal with this situation, we effectively want the "used reservation"
part of the transaction to be consistent with any freed blocks with
respect to quota tracking. For example, if 8 blocks are freed, the
subsequent single block allocation does not need to consume the initial
reservation made by the tp. Instead, it simply borrows one from the
previously freed. One possible implementation of such borrowing is to
avoid the blks_res_used increment when bcount_delta is negative. This
alone is flawed logic in that it only handles the case where blocks are
freed before allocated, however.

Rather than add more complexity to manage synchronization between
bcount_delta and blks_res_used, kill the latter entirely. blk_res_used
is only updated in one place and always in sync with delta_bcount.
Therefore, the net block reservation consumption of the transaction is
always available from bcount_delta. Calculate the reservation
consumption on the fly where necessary based on whether the tp has a
reservation and results in a positive net block delta on the inode.

Reported-by: Al Viro <viro@ZenIV.linux.org.uk>
Signed-off-by: Brian Foster <bfoster@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
diff 7f884dc1 Sun May 31 15:15:37 MDT 2015 Brian Foster <bfoster@redhat.com> xfs: fix quota block reservation leak when tp allocates and frees blocks

Al Viro reports that generic/231 fails frequently on XFS and bisected
the problem to the following commit:

5d11fb4b xfs: rework zero range to prevent invalid i_size updates

... which is just the first commit that happens to cause fsx to
reproduce the problem. fsx reproduces via zero range calls. The
aforementioned commit overhauls zero range to use hole punch and
fallocate. As it turns out, the problem is reproducible on demand using
basic hole punch as follows:

$ mkfs.xfs -f -m crc=1,finobt=1 <dev>
$ mount <dev> /mnt -o uquota
$ xfs_io -f -c "falloc 0 50m" /mnt/file
$ for i in $(seq 1 20); do xfs_io -c "fpunch ${i}m 32k" /mnt/file; done
$ rm -f /mnt/file
$ repquota -us /mnt
...
User used soft hard grace used soft hard grace
----------------------------------------------------------------------
root -- 32K 0K 0K 3 0 0

A file is allocated with a single 50m extent. The extent count increases
via hole punches until the bmap converts to btree format. The file is
removed but quota reports 32k of space usage for the user. This
reservation is effectively leaked for the lifetime of the mount.

The reason this occurs is because the quota block reservation tracking
is confused when a transaction happens to free and allocate blocks at
the same time. Consider the following sequence of events:

- tp is allocated from xfs_free_file_space() and reserves several blocks
for btree management. Blocks are reserved against the dquot and marked
as such in the transaction (qtrx->qt_blk_res).
- 8 blocks are accounted free when the 32k range is punched out.
xfs_trans_mod_dquot() is called with XFS_TRANS_DQ_BCOUNT and sets
->qt_bcount_delta to -8.
- Subsequently, a block is allocated against the same transaction by
xfs_bmap_extents_to_btree() for btree conversion. A call to
xfs_trans_mod_dquot() increases qt_blk_res_used to 1 and qt_bcount_delta
to -7.
- The transaction is dup'd and committed by xfs_bmap_finish().
xfs_trans_dup_dqinfo() sets the first transaction up such that it has a
matching qt_blk_res and qt_blk_res_used of 1. The remaining unused
reservation is transferred to the duplicate tp.

When the transactions are committed, the dquots are fixed up in
xfs_trans_apply_dquot_deltas() according to one of two methods:

1.) If the transaction holds a block reservation (->qt_blk_res != 0),
_only_ the unused portion reservation is unaccounted from the dquot.
Note that the tp duplication behavior of xfs_bmap_finish() makes it such
that qt_blk_res is typically 0 for tp's with unused reservation.
2.) Otherwise, the dquot is fixed up based on the block delta
(->qt_bcount_delta) created by the transaction.

Therefore, if a transaction has a negative qt_bcount_delta and positive
qt_blk_res_used, the former set of blocks that have been removed from
the file are never factored out of the in-core dquot reservation.
Instead, *_apply_dquot_deltas() sees 1 block used out of a 1 block
reservation and believes there is nothing to fix up. The on-disk
d_bcount is updated independently from qt_bcount_delta, and thus is
correct (and allows the quota usage to correct on remount).

To deal with this situation, we effectively want the "used reservation"
part of the transaction to be consistent with any freed blocks with
respect to quota tracking. For example, if 8 blocks are freed, the
subsequent single block allocation does not need to consume the initial
reservation made by the tp. Instead, it simply borrows one from the
previously freed. One possible implementation of such borrowing is to
avoid the blks_res_used increment when bcount_delta is negative. This
alone is flawed logic in that it only handles the case where blocks are
freed before allocated, however.

Rather than add more complexity to manage synchronization between
bcount_delta and blks_res_used, kill the latter entirely. blk_res_used
is only updated in one place and always in sync with delta_bcount.
Therefore, the net block reservation consumption of the transaction is
always available from bcount_delta. Calculate the reservation
consumption on the fly where necessary based on whether the tp has a
reservation and results in a positive net block delta on the inode.

Reported-by: Al Viro <viro@ZenIV.linux.org.uk>
Signed-off-by: Brian Foster <bfoster@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
diff 7f884dc1 Sun May 31 15:15:37 MDT 2015 Brian Foster <bfoster@redhat.com> xfs: fix quota block reservation leak when tp allocates and frees blocks

Al Viro reports that generic/231 fails frequently on XFS and bisected
the problem to the following commit:

5d11fb4b xfs: rework zero range to prevent invalid i_size updates

... which is just the first commit that happens to cause fsx to
reproduce the problem. fsx reproduces via zero range calls. The
aforementioned commit overhauls zero range to use hole punch and
fallocate. As it turns out, the problem is reproducible on demand using
basic hole punch as follows:

$ mkfs.xfs -f -m crc=1,finobt=1 <dev>
$ mount <dev> /mnt -o uquota
$ xfs_io -f -c "falloc 0 50m" /mnt/file
$ for i in $(seq 1 20); do xfs_io -c "fpunch ${i}m 32k" /mnt/file; done
$ rm -f /mnt/file
$ repquota -us /mnt
...
User used soft hard grace used soft hard grace
----------------------------------------------------------------------
root -- 32K 0K 0K 3 0 0

A file is allocated with a single 50m extent. The extent count increases
via hole punches until the bmap converts to btree format. The file is
removed but quota reports 32k of space usage for the user. This
reservation is effectively leaked for the lifetime of the mount.

The reason this occurs is because the quota block reservation tracking
is confused when a transaction happens to free and allocate blocks at
the same time. Consider the following sequence of events:

- tp is allocated from xfs_free_file_space() and reserves several blocks
for btree management. Blocks are reserved against the dquot and marked
as such in the transaction (qtrx->qt_blk_res).
- 8 blocks are accounted free when the 32k range is punched out.
xfs_trans_mod_dquot() is called with XFS_TRANS_DQ_BCOUNT and sets
->qt_bcount_delta to -8.
- Subsequently, a block is allocated against the same transaction by
xfs_bmap_extents_to_btree() for btree conversion. A call to
xfs_trans_mod_dquot() increases qt_blk_res_used to 1 and qt_bcount_delta
to -7.
- The transaction is dup'd and committed by xfs_bmap_finish().
xfs_trans_dup_dqinfo() sets the first transaction up such that it has a
matching qt_blk_res and qt_blk_res_used of 1. The remaining unused
reservation is transferred to the duplicate tp.

When the transactions are committed, the dquots are fixed up in
xfs_trans_apply_dquot_deltas() according to one of two methods:

1.) If the transaction holds a block reservation (->qt_blk_res != 0),
_only_ the unused portion reservation is unaccounted from the dquot.
Note that the tp duplication behavior of xfs_bmap_finish() makes it such
that qt_blk_res is typically 0 for tp's with unused reservation.
2.) Otherwise, the dquot is fixed up based on the block delta
(->qt_bcount_delta) created by the transaction.

Therefore, if a transaction has a negative qt_bcount_delta and positive
qt_blk_res_used, the former set of blocks that have been removed from
the file are never factored out of the in-core dquot reservation.
Instead, *_apply_dquot_deltas() sees 1 block used out of a 1 block
reservation and believes there is nothing to fix up. The on-disk
d_bcount is updated independently from qt_bcount_delta, and thus is
correct (and allows the quota usage to correct on remount).

To deal with this situation, we effectively want the "used reservation"
part of the transaction to be consistent with any freed blocks with
respect to quota tracking. For example, if 8 blocks are freed, the
subsequent single block allocation does not need to consume the initial
reservation made by the tp. Instead, it simply borrows one from the
previously freed. One possible implementation of such borrowing is to
avoid the blks_res_used increment when bcount_delta is negative. This
alone is flawed logic in that it only handles the case where blocks are
freed before allocated, however.

Rather than add more complexity to manage synchronization between
bcount_delta and blks_res_used, kill the latter entirely. blk_res_used
is only updated in one place and always in sync with delta_bcount.
Therefore, the net block reservation consumption of the transaction is
always available from bcount_delta. Calculate the reservation
consumption on the fly where necessary based on whether the tp has a
reservation and results in a positive net block delta on the inode.

Reported-by: Al Viro <viro@ZenIV.linux.org.uk>
Signed-off-by: Brian Foster <bfoster@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
diff 7f884dc1 Sun May 31 15:15:37 MDT 2015 Brian Foster <bfoster@redhat.com> xfs: fix quota block reservation leak when tp allocates and frees blocks

Al Viro reports that generic/231 fails frequently on XFS and bisected
the problem to the following commit:

5d11fb4b xfs: rework zero range to prevent invalid i_size updates

... which is just the first commit that happens to cause fsx to
reproduce the problem. fsx reproduces via zero range calls. The
aforementioned commit overhauls zero range to use hole punch and
fallocate. As it turns out, the problem is reproducible on demand using
basic hole punch as follows:

$ mkfs.xfs -f -m crc=1,finobt=1 <dev>
$ mount <dev> /mnt -o uquota
$ xfs_io -f -c "falloc 0 50m" /mnt/file
$ for i in $(seq 1 20); do xfs_io -c "fpunch ${i}m 32k" /mnt/file; done
$ rm -f /mnt/file
$ repquota -us /mnt
...
User used soft hard grace used soft hard grace
----------------------------------------------------------------------
root -- 32K 0K 0K 3 0 0

A file is allocated with a single 50m extent. The extent count increases
via hole punches until the bmap converts to btree format. The file is
removed but quota reports 32k of space usage for the user. This
reservation is effectively leaked for the lifetime of the mount.

The reason this occurs is because the quota block reservation tracking
is confused when a transaction happens to free and allocate blocks at
the same time. Consider the following sequence of events:

- tp is allocated from xfs_free_file_space() and reserves several blocks
for btree management. Blocks are reserved against the dquot and marked
as such in the transaction (qtrx->qt_blk_res).
- 8 blocks are accounted free when the 32k range is punched out.
xfs_trans_mod_dquot() is called with XFS_TRANS_DQ_BCOUNT and sets
->qt_bcount_delta to -8.
- Subsequently, a block is allocated against the same transaction by
xfs_bmap_extents_to_btree() for btree conversion. A call to
xfs_trans_mod_dquot() increases qt_blk_res_used to 1 and qt_bcount_delta
to -7.
- The transaction is dup'd and committed by xfs_bmap_finish().
xfs_trans_dup_dqinfo() sets the first transaction up such that it has a
matching qt_blk_res and qt_blk_res_used of 1. The remaining unused
reservation is transferred to the duplicate tp.

When the transactions are committed, the dquots are fixed up in
xfs_trans_apply_dquot_deltas() according to one of two methods:

1.) If the transaction holds a block reservation (->qt_blk_res != 0),
_only_ the unused portion reservation is unaccounted from the dquot.
Note that the tp duplication behavior of xfs_bmap_finish() makes it such
that qt_blk_res is typically 0 for tp's with unused reservation.
2.) Otherwise, the dquot is fixed up based on the block delta
(->qt_bcount_delta) created by the transaction.

Therefore, if a transaction has a negative qt_bcount_delta and positive
qt_blk_res_used, the former set of blocks that have been removed from
the file are never factored out of the in-core dquot reservation.
Instead, *_apply_dquot_deltas() sees 1 block used out of a 1 block
reservation and believes there is nothing to fix up. The on-disk
d_bcount is updated independently from qt_bcount_delta, and thus is
correct (and allows the quota usage to correct on remount).

To deal with this situation, we effectively want the "used reservation"
part of the transaction to be consistent with any freed blocks with
respect to quota tracking. For example, if 8 blocks are freed, the
subsequent single block allocation does not need to consume the initial
reservation made by the tp. Instead, it simply borrows one from the
previously freed. One possible implementation of such borrowing is to
avoid the blks_res_used increment when bcount_delta is negative. This
alone is flawed logic in that it only handles the case where blocks are
freed before allocated, however.

Rather than add more complexity to manage synchronization between
bcount_delta and blks_res_used, kill the latter entirely. blk_res_used
is only updated in one place and always in sync with delta_bcount.
Therefore, the net block reservation consumption of the transaction is
always available from bcount_delta. Calculate the reservation
consumption on the fly where necessary based on whether the tp has a
reservation and results in a positive net block delta on the inode.

Reported-by: Al Viro <viro@ZenIV.linux.org.uk>
Signed-off-by: Brian Foster <bfoster@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
diff 7f884dc1 Sun May 31 15:15:37 MDT 2015 Brian Foster <bfoster@redhat.com> xfs: fix quota block reservation leak when tp allocates and frees blocks

Al Viro reports that generic/231 fails frequently on XFS and bisected
the problem to the following commit:

5d11fb4b xfs: rework zero range to prevent invalid i_size updates

... which is just the first commit that happens to cause fsx to
reproduce the problem. fsx reproduces via zero range calls. The
aforementioned commit overhauls zero range to use hole punch and
fallocate. As it turns out, the problem is reproducible on demand using
basic hole punch as follows:

$ mkfs.xfs -f -m crc=1,finobt=1 <dev>
$ mount <dev> /mnt -o uquota
$ xfs_io -f -c "falloc 0 50m" /mnt/file
$ for i in $(seq 1 20); do xfs_io -c "fpunch ${i}m 32k" /mnt/file; done
$ rm -f /mnt/file
$ repquota -us /mnt
...
User used soft hard grace used soft hard grace
----------------------------------------------------------------------
root -- 32K 0K 0K 3 0 0

A file is allocated with a single 50m extent. The extent count increases
via hole punches until the bmap converts to btree format. The file is
removed but quota reports 32k of space usage for the user. This
reservation is effectively leaked for the lifetime of the mount.

The reason this occurs is because the quota block reservation tracking
is confused when a transaction happens to free and allocate blocks at
the same time. Consider the following sequence of events:

- tp is allocated from xfs_free_file_space() and reserves several blocks
for btree management. Blocks are reserved against the dquot and marked
as such in the transaction (qtrx->qt_blk_res).
- 8 blocks are accounted free when the 32k range is punched out.
xfs_trans_mod_dquot() is called with XFS_TRANS_DQ_BCOUNT and sets
->qt_bcount_delta to -8.
- Subsequently, a block is allocated against the same transaction by
xfs_bmap_extents_to_btree() for btree conversion. A call to
xfs_trans_mod_dquot() increases qt_blk_res_used to 1 and qt_bcount_delta
to -7.
- The transaction is dup'd and committed by xfs_bmap_finish().
xfs_trans_dup_dqinfo() sets the first transaction up such that it has a
matching qt_blk_res and qt_blk_res_used of 1. The remaining unused
reservation is transferred to the duplicate tp.

When the transactions are committed, the dquots are fixed up in
xfs_trans_apply_dquot_deltas() according to one of two methods:

1.) If the transaction holds a block reservation (->qt_blk_res != 0),
_only_ the unused portion reservation is unaccounted from the dquot.
Note that the tp duplication behavior of xfs_bmap_finish() makes it such
that qt_blk_res is typically 0 for tp's with unused reservation.
2.) Otherwise, the dquot is fixed up based on the block delta
(->qt_bcount_delta) created by the transaction.

Therefore, if a transaction has a negative qt_bcount_delta and positive
qt_blk_res_used, the former set of blocks that have been removed from
the file are never factored out of the in-core dquot reservation.
Instead, *_apply_dquot_deltas() sees 1 block used out of a 1 block
reservation and believes there is nothing to fix up. The on-disk
d_bcount is updated independently from qt_bcount_delta, and thus is
correct (and allows the quota usage to correct on remount).

To deal with this situation, we effectively want the "used reservation"
part of the transaction to be consistent with any freed blocks with
respect to quota tracking. For example, if 8 blocks are freed, the
subsequent single block allocation does not need to consume the initial
reservation made by the tp. Instead, it simply borrows one from the
previously freed. One possible implementation of such borrowing is to
avoid the blks_res_used increment when bcount_delta is negative. This
alone is flawed logic in that it only handles the case where blocks are
freed before allocated, however.

Rather than add more complexity to manage synchronization between
bcount_delta and blks_res_used, kill the latter entirely. blk_res_used
is only updated in one place and always in sync with delta_bcount.
Therefore, the net block reservation consumption of the transaction is
always available from bcount_delta. Calculate the reservation
consumption on the fly where necessary based on whether the tp has a
reservation and results in a positive net block delta on the inode.

Reported-by: Al Viro <viro@ZenIV.linux.org.uk>
Signed-off-by: Brian Foster <bfoster@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
H A Dxfs_error.cdiff cf4f4c12 Tue Oct 18 15:38:14 MDT 2022 Zeng Heng <zengheng4@huawei.com> xfs: fix memory leak in xfs_errortag_init

When `xfs_sysfs_init` returns failed, `mp->m_errortag` needs to free.
Otherwise kmemleak would report memory leak after mounting xfs image:

unreferenced object 0xffff888101364900 (size 192):
comm "mount", pid 13099, jiffies 4294915218 (age 335.207s)
hex dump (first 32 bytes):
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
backtrace:
[<00000000f08ad25c>] __kmalloc+0x41/0x1b0
[<00000000dca9aeb6>] kmem_alloc+0xfd/0x430
[<0000000040361882>] xfs_errortag_init+0x20/0x110
[<00000000b384a0f6>] xfs_mountfs+0x6ea/0x1a30
[<000000003774395d>] xfs_fs_fill_super+0xe10/0x1a80
[<000000009cf07b6c>] get_tree_bdev+0x3e7/0x700
[<00000000046b5426>] vfs_get_tree+0x8e/0x2e0
[<00000000952ec082>] path_mount+0xf8c/0x1990
[<00000000beb1f838>] do_mount+0xee/0x110
[<000000000e9c41bb>] __x64_sys_mount+0x14b/0x1f0
[<00000000f7bb938e>] do_syscall_64+0x3b/0x90
[<000000003fcd67a9>] entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x63/0xcd

Fixes: c68401011522 ("xfs: expose errortag knobs via sysfs")
Signed-off-by: Zeng Heng <zengheng4@huawei.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
diff cf4f4c12 Tue Oct 18 15:38:14 MDT 2022 Zeng Heng <zengheng4@huawei.com> xfs: fix memory leak in xfs_errortag_init

When `xfs_sysfs_init` returns failed, `mp->m_errortag` needs to free.
Otherwise kmemleak would report memory leak after mounting xfs image:

unreferenced object 0xffff888101364900 (size 192):
comm "mount", pid 13099, jiffies 4294915218 (age 335.207s)
hex dump (first 32 bytes):
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
backtrace:
[<00000000f08ad25c>] __kmalloc+0x41/0x1b0
[<00000000dca9aeb6>] kmem_alloc+0xfd/0x430
[<0000000040361882>] xfs_errortag_init+0x20/0x110
[<00000000b384a0f6>] xfs_mountfs+0x6ea/0x1a30
[<000000003774395d>] xfs_fs_fill_super+0xe10/0x1a80
[<000000009cf07b6c>] get_tree_bdev+0x3e7/0x700
[<00000000046b5426>] vfs_get_tree+0x8e/0x2e0
[<00000000952ec082>] path_mount+0xf8c/0x1990
[<00000000beb1f838>] do_mount+0xee/0x110
[<000000000e9c41bb>] __x64_sys_mount+0x14b/0x1f0
[<00000000f7bb938e>] do_syscall_64+0x3b/0x90
[<000000003fcd67a9>] entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x63/0xcd

Fixes: c68401011522 ("xfs: expose errortag knobs via sysfs")
Signed-off-by: Zeng Heng <zengheng4@huawei.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
diff cf4f4c12 Tue Oct 18 15:38:14 MDT 2022 Zeng Heng <zengheng4@huawei.com> xfs: fix memory leak in xfs_errortag_init

When `xfs_sysfs_init` returns failed, `mp->m_errortag` needs to free.
Otherwise kmemleak would report memory leak after mounting xfs image:

unreferenced object 0xffff888101364900 (size 192):
comm "mount", pid 13099, jiffies 4294915218 (age 335.207s)
hex dump (first 32 bytes):
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
backtrace:
[<00000000f08ad25c>] __kmalloc+0x41/0x1b0
[<00000000dca9aeb6>] kmem_alloc+0xfd/0x430
[<0000000040361882>] xfs_errortag_init+0x20/0x110
[<00000000b384a0f6>] xfs_mountfs+0x6ea/0x1a30
[<000000003774395d>] xfs_fs_fill_super+0xe10/0x1a80
[<000000009cf07b6c>] get_tree_bdev+0x3e7/0x700
[<00000000046b5426>] vfs_get_tree+0x8e/0x2e0
[<00000000952ec082>] path_mount+0xf8c/0x1990
[<00000000beb1f838>] do_mount+0xee/0x110
[<000000000e9c41bb>] __x64_sys_mount+0x14b/0x1f0
[<00000000f7bb938e>] do_syscall_64+0x3b/0x90
[<000000003fcd67a9>] entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x63/0xcd

Fixes: c68401011522 ("xfs: expose errortag knobs via sysfs")
Signed-off-by: Zeng Heng <zengheng4@huawei.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
diff cf4f4c12 Tue Oct 18 15:38:14 MDT 2022 Zeng Heng <zengheng4@huawei.com> xfs: fix memory leak in xfs_errortag_init

When `xfs_sysfs_init` returns failed, `mp->m_errortag` needs to free.
Otherwise kmemleak would report memory leak after mounting xfs image:

unreferenced object 0xffff888101364900 (size 192):
comm "mount", pid 13099, jiffies 4294915218 (age 335.207s)
hex dump (first 32 bytes):
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
backtrace:
[<00000000f08ad25c>] __kmalloc+0x41/0x1b0
[<00000000dca9aeb6>] kmem_alloc+0xfd/0x430
[<0000000040361882>] xfs_errortag_init+0x20/0x110
[<00000000b384a0f6>] xfs_mountfs+0x6ea/0x1a30
[<000000003774395d>] xfs_fs_fill_super+0xe10/0x1a80
[<000000009cf07b6c>] get_tree_bdev+0x3e7/0x700
[<00000000046b5426>] vfs_get_tree+0x8e/0x2e0
[<00000000952ec082>] path_mount+0xf8c/0x1990
[<00000000beb1f838>] do_mount+0xee/0x110
[<000000000e9c41bb>] __x64_sys_mount+0x14b/0x1f0
[<00000000f7bb938e>] do_syscall_64+0x3b/0x90
[<000000003fcd67a9>] entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x63/0xcd

Fixes: c68401011522 ("xfs: expose errortag knobs via sysfs")
Signed-off-by: Zeng Heng <zengheng4@huawei.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
diff cf4f4c12 Tue Oct 18 15:38:14 MDT 2022 Zeng Heng <zengheng4@huawei.com> xfs: fix memory leak in xfs_errortag_init

When `xfs_sysfs_init` returns failed, `mp->m_errortag` needs to free.
Otherwise kmemleak would report memory leak after mounting xfs image:

unreferenced object 0xffff888101364900 (size 192):
comm "mount", pid 13099, jiffies 4294915218 (age 335.207s)
hex dump (first 32 bytes):
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
backtrace:
[<00000000f08ad25c>] __kmalloc+0x41/0x1b0
[<00000000dca9aeb6>] kmem_alloc+0xfd/0x430
[<0000000040361882>] xfs_errortag_init+0x20/0x110
[<00000000b384a0f6>] xfs_mountfs+0x6ea/0x1a30
[<000000003774395d>] xfs_fs_fill_super+0xe10/0x1a80
[<000000009cf07b6c>] get_tree_bdev+0x3e7/0x700
[<00000000046b5426>] vfs_get_tree+0x8e/0x2e0
[<00000000952ec082>] path_mount+0xf8c/0x1990
[<00000000beb1f838>] do_mount+0xee/0x110
[<000000000e9c41bb>] __x64_sys_mount+0x14b/0x1f0
[<00000000f7bb938e>] do_syscall_64+0x3b/0x90
[<000000003fcd67a9>] entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x63/0xcd

Fixes: c68401011522 ("xfs: expose errortag knobs via sysfs")
Signed-off-by: Zeng Heng <zengheng4@huawei.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
diff cf4f4c12 Tue Oct 18 15:38:14 MDT 2022 Zeng Heng <zengheng4@huawei.com> xfs: fix memory leak in xfs_errortag_init

When `xfs_sysfs_init` returns failed, `mp->m_errortag` needs to free.
Otherwise kmemleak would report memory leak after mounting xfs image:

unreferenced object 0xffff888101364900 (size 192):
comm "mount", pid 13099, jiffies 4294915218 (age 335.207s)
hex dump (first 32 bytes):
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
backtrace:
[<00000000f08ad25c>] __kmalloc+0x41/0x1b0
[<00000000dca9aeb6>] kmem_alloc+0xfd/0x430
[<0000000040361882>] xfs_errortag_init+0x20/0x110
[<00000000b384a0f6>] xfs_mountfs+0x6ea/0x1a30
[<000000003774395d>] xfs_fs_fill_super+0xe10/0x1a80
[<000000009cf07b6c>] get_tree_bdev+0x3e7/0x700
[<00000000046b5426>] vfs_get_tree+0x8e/0x2e0
[<00000000952ec082>] path_mount+0xf8c/0x1990
[<00000000beb1f838>] do_mount+0xee/0x110
[<000000000e9c41bb>] __x64_sys_mount+0x14b/0x1f0
[<00000000f7bb938e>] do_syscall_64+0x3b/0x90
[<000000003fcd67a9>] entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x63/0xcd

Fixes: c68401011522 ("xfs: expose errortag knobs via sysfs")
Signed-off-by: Zeng Heng <zengheng4@huawei.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
diff cf4f4c12 Tue Oct 18 15:38:14 MDT 2022 Zeng Heng <zengheng4@huawei.com> xfs: fix memory leak in xfs_errortag_init

When `xfs_sysfs_init` returns failed, `mp->m_errortag` needs to free.
Otherwise kmemleak would report memory leak after mounting xfs image:

unreferenced object 0xffff888101364900 (size 192):
comm "mount", pid 13099, jiffies 4294915218 (age 335.207s)
hex dump (first 32 bytes):
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
backtrace:
[<00000000f08ad25c>] __kmalloc+0x41/0x1b0
[<00000000dca9aeb6>] kmem_alloc+0xfd/0x430
[<0000000040361882>] xfs_errortag_init+0x20/0x110
[<00000000b384a0f6>] xfs_mountfs+0x6ea/0x1a30
[<000000003774395d>] xfs_fs_fill_super+0xe10/0x1a80
[<000000009cf07b6c>] get_tree_bdev+0x3e7/0x700
[<00000000046b5426>] vfs_get_tree+0x8e/0x2e0
[<00000000952ec082>] path_mount+0xf8c/0x1990
[<00000000beb1f838>] do_mount+0xee/0x110
[<000000000e9c41bb>] __x64_sys_mount+0x14b/0x1f0
[<00000000f7bb938e>] do_syscall_64+0x3b/0x90
[<000000003fcd67a9>] entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x63/0xcd

Fixes: c68401011522 ("xfs: expose errortag knobs via sysfs")
Signed-off-by: Zeng Heng <zengheng4@huawei.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
diff cf4f4c12 Tue Oct 18 15:38:14 MDT 2022 Zeng Heng <zengheng4@huawei.com> xfs: fix memory leak in xfs_errortag_init

When `xfs_sysfs_init` returns failed, `mp->m_errortag` needs to free.
Otherwise kmemleak would report memory leak after mounting xfs image:

unreferenced object 0xffff888101364900 (size 192):
comm "mount", pid 13099, jiffies 4294915218 (age 335.207s)
hex dump (first 32 bytes):
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
backtrace:
[<00000000f08ad25c>] __kmalloc+0x41/0x1b0
[<00000000dca9aeb6>] kmem_alloc+0xfd/0x430
[<0000000040361882>] xfs_errortag_init+0x20/0x110
[<00000000b384a0f6>] xfs_mountfs+0x6ea/0x1a30
[<000000003774395d>] xfs_fs_fill_super+0xe10/0x1a80
[<000000009cf07b6c>] get_tree_bdev+0x3e7/0x700
[<00000000046b5426>] vfs_get_tree+0x8e/0x2e0
[<00000000952ec082>] path_mount+0xf8c/0x1990
[<00000000beb1f838>] do_mount+0xee/0x110
[<000000000e9c41bb>] __x64_sys_mount+0x14b/0x1f0
[<00000000f7bb938e>] do_syscall_64+0x3b/0x90
[<000000003fcd67a9>] entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x63/0xcd

Fixes: c68401011522 ("xfs: expose errortag knobs via sysfs")
Signed-off-by: Zeng Heng <zengheng4@huawei.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
diff cf4f4c12 Tue Oct 18 15:38:14 MDT 2022 Zeng Heng <zengheng4@huawei.com> xfs: fix memory leak in xfs_errortag_init

When `xfs_sysfs_init` returns failed, `mp->m_errortag` needs to free.
Otherwise kmemleak would report memory leak after mounting xfs image:

unreferenced object 0xffff888101364900 (size 192):
comm "mount", pid 13099, jiffies 4294915218 (age 335.207s)
hex dump (first 32 bytes):
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
backtrace:
[<00000000f08ad25c>] __kmalloc+0x41/0x1b0
[<00000000dca9aeb6>] kmem_alloc+0xfd/0x430
[<0000000040361882>] xfs_errortag_init+0x20/0x110
[<00000000b384a0f6>] xfs_mountfs+0x6ea/0x1a30
[<000000003774395d>] xfs_fs_fill_super+0xe10/0x1a80
[<000000009cf07b6c>] get_tree_bdev+0x3e7/0x700
[<00000000046b5426>] vfs_get_tree+0x8e/0x2e0
[<00000000952ec082>] path_mount+0xf8c/0x1990
[<00000000beb1f838>] do_mount+0xee/0x110
[<000000000e9c41bb>] __x64_sys_mount+0x14b/0x1f0
[<00000000f7bb938e>] do_syscall_64+0x3b/0x90
[<000000003fcd67a9>] entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x63/0xcd

Fixes: c68401011522 ("xfs: expose errortag knobs via sysfs")
Signed-off-by: Zeng Heng <zengheng4@huawei.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
diff cf4f4c12 Tue Oct 18 15:38:14 MDT 2022 Zeng Heng <zengheng4@huawei.com> xfs: fix memory leak in xfs_errortag_init

When `xfs_sysfs_init` returns failed, `mp->m_errortag` needs to free.
Otherwise kmemleak would report memory leak after mounting xfs image:

unreferenced object 0xffff888101364900 (size 192):
comm "mount", pid 13099, jiffies 4294915218 (age 335.207s)
hex dump (first 32 bytes):
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
backtrace:
[<00000000f08ad25c>] __kmalloc+0x41/0x1b0
[<00000000dca9aeb6>] kmem_alloc+0xfd/0x430
[<0000000040361882>] xfs_errortag_init+0x20/0x110
[<00000000b384a0f6>] xfs_mountfs+0x6ea/0x1a30
[<000000003774395d>] xfs_fs_fill_super+0xe10/0x1a80
[<000000009cf07b6c>] get_tree_bdev+0x3e7/0x700
[<00000000046b5426>] vfs_get_tree+0x8e/0x2e0
[<00000000952ec082>] path_mount+0xf8c/0x1990
[<00000000beb1f838>] do_mount+0xee/0x110
[<000000000e9c41bb>] __x64_sys_mount+0x14b/0x1f0
[<00000000f7bb938e>] do_syscall_64+0x3b/0x90
[<000000003fcd67a9>] entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x63/0xcd

Fixes: c68401011522 ("xfs: expose errortag knobs via sysfs")
Signed-off-by: Zeng Heng <zengheng4@huawei.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
diff cf4f4c12 Tue Oct 18 15:38:14 MDT 2022 Zeng Heng <zengheng4@huawei.com> xfs: fix memory leak in xfs_errortag_init

When `xfs_sysfs_init` returns failed, `mp->m_errortag` needs to free.
Otherwise kmemleak would report memory leak after mounting xfs image:

unreferenced object 0xffff888101364900 (size 192):
comm "mount", pid 13099, jiffies 4294915218 (age 335.207s)
hex dump (first 32 bytes):
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
backtrace:
[<00000000f08ad25c>] __kmalloc+0x41/0x1b0
[<00000000dca9aeb6>] kmem_alloc+0xfd/0x430
[<0000000040361882>] xfs_errortag_init+0x20/0x110
[<00000000b384a0f6>] xfs_mountfs+0x6ea/0x1a30
[<000000003774395d>] xfs_fs_fill_super+0xe10/0x1a80
[<000000009cf07b6c>] get_tree_bdev+0x3e7/0x700
[<00000000046b5426>] vfs_get_tree+0x8e/0x2e0
[<00000000952ec082>] path_mount+0xf8c/0x1990
[<00000000beb1f838>] do_mount+0xee/0x110
[<000000000e9c41bb>] __x64_sys_mount+0x14b/0x1f0
[<00000000f7bb938e>] do_syscall_64+0x3b/0x90
[<000000003fcd67a9>] entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x63/0xcd

Fixes: c68401011522 ("xfs: expose errortag knobs via sysfs")
Signed-off-by: Zeng Heng <zengheng4@huawei.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
diff cf4f4c12 Tue Oct 18 15:38:14 MDT 2022 Zeng Heng <zengheng4@huawei.com> xfs: fix memory leak in xfs_errortag_init

When `xfs_sysfs_init` returns failed, `mp->m_errortag` needs to free.
Otherwise kmemleak would report memory leak after mounting xfs image:

unreferenced object 0xffff888101364900 (size 192):
comm "mount", pid 13099, jiffies 4294915218 (age 335.207s)
hex dump (first 32 bytes):
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
backtrace:
[<00000000f08ad25c>] __kmalloc+0x41/0x1b0
[<00000000dca9aeb6>] kmem_alloc+0xfd/0x430
[<0000000040361882>] xfs_errortag_init+0x20/0x110
[<00000000b384a0f6>] xfs_mountfs+0x6ea/0x1a30
[<000000003774395d>] xfs_fs_fill_super+0xe10/0x1a80
[<000000009cf07b6c>] get_tree_bdev+0x3e7/0x700
[<00000000046b5426>] vfs_get_tree+0x8e/0x2e0
[<00000000952ec082>] path_mount+0xf8c/0x1990
[<00000000beb1f838>] do_mount+0xee/0x110
[<000000000e9c41bb>] __x64_sys_mount+0x14b/0x1f0
[<00000000f7bb938e>] do_syscall_64+0x3b/0x90
[<000000003fcd67a9>] entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x63/0xcd

Fixes: c68401011522 ("xfs: expose errortag knobs via sysfs")
Signed-off-by: Zeng Heng <zengheng4@huawei.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
diff cf4f4c12 Tue Oct 18 15:38:14 MDT 2022 Zeng Heng <zengheng4@huawei.com> xfs: fix memory leak in xfs_errortag_init

When `xfs_sysfs_init` returns failed, `mp->m_errortag` needs to free.
Otherwise kmemleak would report memory leak after mounting xfs image:

unreferenced object 0xffff888101364900 (size 192):
comm "mount", pid 13099, jiffies 4294915218 (age 335.207s)
hex dump (first 32 bytes):
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
backtrace:
[<00000000f08ad25c>] __kmalloc+0x41/0x1b0
[<00000000dca9aeb6>] kmem_alloc+0xfd/0x430
[<0000000040361882>] xfs_errortag_init+0x20/0x110
[<00000000b384a0f6>] xfs_mountfs+0x6ea/0x1a30
[<000000003774395d>] xfs_fs_fill_super+0xe10/0x1a80
[<000000009cf07b6c>] get_tree_bdev+0x3e7/0x700
[<00000000046b5426>] vfs_get_tree+0x8e/0x2e0
[<00000000952ec082>] path_mount+0xf8c/0x1990
[<00000000beb1f838>] do_mount+0xee/0x110
[<000000000e9c41bb>] __x64_sys_mount+0x14b/0x1f0
[<00000000f7bb938e>] do_syscall_64+0x3b/0x90
[<000000003fcd67a9>] entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x63/0xcd

Fixes: c68401011522 ("xfs: expose errortag knobs via sysfs")
Signed-off-by: Zeng Heng <zengheng4@huawei.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
diff cf4f4c12 Tue Oct 18 15:38:14 MDT 2022 Zeng Heng <zengheng4@huawei.com> xfs: fix memory leak in xfs_errortag_init

When `xfs_sysfs_init` returns failed, `mp->m_errortag` needs to free.
Otherwise kmemleak would report memory leak after mounting xfs image:

unreferenced object 0xffff888101364900 (size 192):
comm "mount", pid 13099, jiffies 4294915218 (age 335.207s)
hex dump (first 32 bytes):
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
backtrace:
[<00000000f08ad25c>] __kmalloc+0x41/0x1b0
[<00000000dca9aeb6>] kmem_alloc+0xfd/0x430
[<0000000040361882>] xfs_errortag_init+0x20/0x110
[<00000000b384a0f6>] xfs_mountfs+0x6ea/0x1a30
[<000000003774395d>] xfs_fs_fill_super+0xe10/0x1a80
[<000000009cf07b6c>] get_tree_bdev+0x3e7/0x700
[<00000000046b5426>] vfs_get_tree+0x8e/0x2e0
[<00000000952ec082>] path_mount+0xf8c/0x1990
[<00000000beb1f838>] do_mount+0xee/0x110
[<000000000e9c41bb>] __x64_sys_mount+0x14b/0x1f0
[<00000000f7bb938e>] do_syscall_64+0x3b/0x90
[<000000003fcd67a9>] entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x63/0xcd

Fixes: c68401011522 ("xfs: expose errortag knobs via sysfs")
Signed-off-by: Zeng Heng <zengheng4@huawei.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
diff cf4f4c12 Tue Oct 18 15:38:14 MDT 2022 Zeng Heng <zengheng4@huawei.com> xfs: fix memory leak in xfs_errortag_init

When `xfs_sysfs_init` returns failed, `mp->m_errortag` needs to free.
Otherwise kmemleak would report memory leak after mounting xfs image:

unreferenced object 0xffff888101364900 (size 192):
comm "mount", pid 13099, jiffies 4294915218 (age 335.207s)
hex dump (first 32 bytes):
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
backtrace:
[<00000000f08ad25c>] __kmalloc+0x41/0x1b0
[<00000000dca9aeb6>] kmem_alloc+0xfd/0x430
[<0000000040361882>] xfs_errortag_init+0x20/0x110
[<00000000b384a0f6>] xfs_mountfs+0x6ea/0x1a30
[<000000003774395d>] xfs_fs_fill_super+0xe10/0x1a80
[<000000009cf07b6c>] get_tree_bdev+0x3e7/0x700
[<00000000046b5426>] vfs_get_tree+0x8e/0x2e0
[<00000000952ec082>] path_mount+0xf8c/0x1990
[<00000000beb1f838>] do_mount+0xee/0x110
[<000000000e9c41bb>] __x64_sys_mount+0x14b/0x1f0
[<00000000f7bb938e>] do_syscall_64+0x3b/0x90
[<000000003fcd67a9>] entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x63/0xcd

Fixes: c68401011522 ("xfs: expose errortag knobs via sysfs")
Signed-off-by: Zeng Heng <zengheng4@huawei.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
diff cf4f4c12 Tue Oct 18 15:38:14 MDT 2022 Zeng Heng <zengheng4@huawei.com> xfs: fix memory leak in xfs_errortag_init

When `xfs_sysfs_init` returns failed, `mp->m_errortag` needs to free.
Otherwise kmemleak would report memory leak after mounting xfs image:

unreferenced object 0xffff888101364900 (size 192):
comm "mount", pid 13099, jiffies 4294915218 (age 335.207s)
hex dump (first 32 bytes):
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
backtrace:
[<00000000f08ad25c>] __kmalloc+0x41/0x1b0
[<00000000dca9aeb6>] kmem_alloc+0xfd/0x430
[<0000000040361882>] xfs_errortag_init+0x20/0x110
[<00000000b384a0f6>] xfs_mountfs+0x6ea/0x1a30
[<000000003774395d>] xfs_fs_fill_super+0xe10/0x1a80
[<000000009cf07b6c>] get_tree_bdev+0x3e7/0x700
[<00000000046b5426>] vfs_get_tree+0x8e/0x2e0
[<00000000952ec082>] path_mount+0xf8c/0x1990
[<00000000beb1f838>] do_mount+0xee/0x110
[<000000000e9c41bb>] __x64_sys_mount+0x14b/0x1f0
[<00000000f7bb938e>] do_syscall_64+0x3b/0x90
[<000000003fcd67a9>] entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x63/0xcd

Fixes: c68401011522 ("xfs: expose errortag knobs via sysfs")
Signed-off-by: Zeng Heng <zengheng4@huawei.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
diff cf4f4c12 Tue Oct 18 15:38:14 MDT 2022 Zeng Heng <zengheng4@huawei.com> xfs: fix memory leak in xfs_errortag_init

When `xfs_sysfs_init` returns failed, `mp->m_errortag` needs to free.
Otherwise kmemleak would report memory leak after mounting xfs image:

unreferenced object 0xffff888101364900 (size 192):
comm "mount", pid 13099, jiffies 4294915218 (age 335.207s)
hex dump (first 32 bytes):
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
backtrace:
[<00000000f08ad25c>] __kmalloc+0x41/0x1b0
[<00000000dca9aeb6>] kmem_alloc+0xfd/0x430
[<0000000040361882>] xfs_errortag_init+0x20/0x110
[<00000000b384a0f6>] xfs_mountfs+0x6ea/0x1a30
[<000000003774395d>] xfs_fs_fill_super+0xe10/0x1a80
[<000000009cf07b6c>] get_tree_bdev+0x3e7/0x700
[<00000000046b5426>] vfs_get_tree+0x8e/0x2e0
[<00000000952ec082>] path_mount+0xf8c/0x1990
[<00000000beb1f838>] do_mount+0xee/0x110
[<000000000e9c41bb>] __x64_sys_mount+0x14b/0x1f0
[<00000000f7bb938e>] do_syscall_64+0x3b/0x90
[<000000003fcd67a9>] entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x63/0xcd

Fixes: c68401011522 ("xfs: expose errortag knobs via sysfs")
Signed-off-by: Zeng Heng <zengheng4@huawei.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
diff cf4f4c12 Tue Oct 18 15:38:14 MDT 2022 Zeng Heng <zengheng4@huawei.com> xfs: fix memory leak in xfs_errortag_init

When `xfs_sysfs_init` returns failed, `mp->m_errortag` needs to free.
Otherwise kmemleak would report memory leak after mounting xfs image:

unreferenced object 0xffff888101364900 (size 192):
comm "mount", pid 13099, jiffies 4294915218 (age 335.207s)
hex dump (first 32 bytes):
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
backtrace:
[<00000000f08ad25c>] __kmalloc+0x41/0x1b0
[<00000000dca9aeb6>] kmem_alloc+0xfd/0x430
[<0000000040361882>] xfs_errortag_init+0x20/0x110
[<00000000b384a0f6>] xfs_mountfs+0x6ea/0x1a30
[<000000003774395d>] xfs_fs_fill_super+0xe10/0x1a80
[<000000009cf07b6c>] get_tree_bdev+0x3e7/0x700
[<00000000046b5426>] vfs_get_tree+0x8e/0x2e0
[<00000000952ec082>] path_mount+0xf8c/0x1990
[<00000000beb1f838>] do_mount+0xee/0x110
[<000000000e9c41bb>] __x64_sys_mount+0x14b/0x1f0
[<00000000f7bb938e>] do_syscall_64+0x3b/0x90
[<000000003fcd67a9>] entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x63/0xcd

Fixes: c68401011522 ("xfs: expose errortag knobs via sysfs")
Signed-off-by: Zeng Heng <zengheng4@huawei.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
diff cf4f4c12 Tue Oct 18 15:38:14 MDT 2022 Zeng Heng <zengheng4@huawei.com> xfs: fix memory leak in xfs_errortag_init

When `xfs_sysfs_init` returns failed, `mp->m_errortag` needs to free.
Otherwise kmemleak would report memory leak after mounting xfs image:

unreferenced object 0xffff888101364900 (size 192):
comm "mount", pid 13099, jiffies 4294915218 (age 335.207s)
hex dump (first 32 bytes):
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
backtrace:
[<00000000f08ad25c>] __kmalloc+0x41/0x1b0
[<00000000dca9aeb6>] kmem_alloc+0xfd/0x430
[<0000000040361882>] xfs_errortag_init+0x20/0x110
[<00000000b384a0f6>] xfs_mountfs+0x6ea/0x1a30
[<000000003774395d>] xfs_fs_fill_super+0xe10/0x1a80
[<000000009cf07b6c>] get_tree_bdev+0x3e7/0x700
[<00000000046b5426>] vfs_get_tree+0x8e/0x2e0
[<00000000952ec082>] path_mount+0xf8c/0x1990
[<00000000beb1f838>] do_mount+0xee/0x110
[<000000000e9c41bb>] __x64_sys_mount+0x14b/0x1f0
[<00000000f7bb938e>] do_syscall_64+0x3b/0x90
[<000000003fcd67a9>] entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x63/0xcd

Fixes: c68401011522 ("xfs: expose errortag knobs via sysfs")
Signed-off-by: Zeng Heng <zengheng4@huawei.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
diff cf4f4c12 Tue Oct 18 15:38:14 MDT 2022 Zeng Heng <zengheng4@huawei.com> xfs: fix memory leak in xfs_errortag_init

When `xfs_sysfs_init` returns failed, `mp->m_errortag` needs to free.
Otherwise kmemleak would report memory leak after mounting xfs image:

unreferenced object 0xffff888101364900 (size 192):
comm "mount", pid 13099, jiffies 4294915218 (age 335.207s)
hex dump (first 32 bytes):
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
backtrace:
[<00000000f08ad25c>] __kmalloc+0x41/0x1b0
[<00000000dca9aeb6>] kmem_alloc+0xfd/0x430
[<0000000040361882>] xfs_errortag_init+0x20/0x110
[<00000000b384a0f6>] xfs_mountfs+0x6ea/0x1a30
[<000000003774395d>] xfs_fs_fill_super+0xe10/0x1a80
[<000000009cf07b6c>] get_tree_bdev+0x3e7/0x700
[<00000000046b5426>] vfs_get_tree+0x8e/0x2e0
[<00000000952ec082>] path_mount+0xf8c/0x1990
[<00000000beb1f838>] do_mount+0xee/0x110
[<000000000e9c41bb>] __x64_sys_mount+0x14b/0x1f0
[<00000000f7bb938e>] do_syscall_64+0x3b/0x90
[<000000003fcd67a9>] entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x63/0xcd

Fixes: c68401011522 ("xfs: expose errortag knobs via sysfs")
Signed-off-by: Zeng Heng <zengheng4@huawei.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
diff cf4f4c12 Tue Oct 18 15:38:14 MDT 2022 Zeng Heng <zengheng4@huawei.com> xfs: fix memory leak in xfs_errortag_init

When `xfs_sysfs_init` returns failed, `mp->m_errortag` needs to free.
Otherwise kmemleak would report memory leak after mounting xfs image:

unreferenced object 0xffff888101364900 (size 192):
comm "mount", pid 13099, jiffies 4294915218 (age 335.207s)
hex dump (first 32 bytes):
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
backtrace:
[<00000000f08ad25c>] __kmalloc+0x41/0x1b0
[<00000000dca9aeb6>] kmem_alloc+0xfd/0x430
[<0000000040361882>] xfs_errortag_init+0x20/0x110
[<00000000b384a0f6>] xfs_mountfs+0x6ea/0x1a30
[<000000003774395d>] xfs_fs_fill_super+0xe10/0x1a80
[<000000009cf07b6c>] get_tree_bdev+0x3e7/0x700
[<00000000046b5426>] vfs_get_tree+0x8e/0x2e0
[<00000000952ec082>] path_mount+0xf8c/0x1990
[<00000000beb1f838>] do_mount+0xee/0x110
[<000000000e9c41bb>] __x64_sys_mount+0x14b/0x1f0
[<00000000f7bb938e>] do_syscall_64+0x3b/0x90
[<000000003fcd67a9>] entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x63/0xcd

Fixes: c68401011522 ("xfs: expose errortag knobs via sysfs")
Signed-off-by: Zeng Heng <zengheng4@huawei.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
diff cf4f4c12 Tue Oct 18 15:38:14 MDT 2022 Zeng Heng <zengheng4@huawei.com> xfs: fix memory leak in xfs_errortag_init

When `xfs_sysfs_init` returns failed, `mp->m_errortag` needs to free.
Otherwise kmemleak would report memory leak after mounting xfs image:

unreferenced object 0xffff888101364900 (size 192):
comm "mount", pid 13099, jiffies 4294915218 (age 335.207s)
hex dump (first 32 bytes):
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
backtrace:
[<00000000f08ad25c>] __kmalloc+0x41/0x1b0
[<00000000dca9aeb6>] kmem_alloc+0xfd/0x430
[<0000000040361882>] xfs_errortag_init+0x20/0x110
[<00000000b384a0f6>] xfs_mountfs+0x6ea/0x1a30
[<000000003774395d>] xfs_fs_fill_super+0xe10/0x1a80
[<000000009cf07b6c>] get_tree_bdev+0x3e7/0x700
[<00000000046b5426>] vfs_get_tree+0x8e/0x2e0
[<00000000952ec082>] path_mount+0xf8c/0x1990
[<00000000beb1f838>] do_mount+0xee/0x110
[<000000000e9c41bb>] __x64_sys_mount+0x14b/0x1f0
[<00000000f7bb938e>] do_syscall_64+0x3b/0x90
[<000000003fcd67a9>] entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x63/0xcd

Fixes: c68401011522 ("xfs: expose errortag knobs via sysfs")
Signed-off-by: Zeng Heng <zengheng4@huawei.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
diff cf4f4c12 Tue Oct 18 15:38:14 MDT 2022 Zeng Heng <zengheng4@huawei.com> xfs: fix memory leak in xfs_errortag_init

When `xfs_sysfs_init` returns failed, `mp->m_errortag` needs to free.
Otherwise kmemleak would report memory leak after mounting xfs image:

unreferenced object 0xffff888101364900 (size 192):
comm "mount", pid 13099, jiffies 4294915218 (age 335.207s)
hex dump (first 32 bytes):
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
backtrace:
[<00000000f08ad25c>] __kmalloc+0x41/0x1b0
[<00000000dca9aeb6>] kmem_alloc+0xfd/0x430
[<0000000040361882>] xfs_errortag_init+0x20/0x110
[<00000000b384a0f6>] xfs_mountfs+0x6ea/0x1a30
[<000000003774395d>] xfs_fs_fill_super+0xe10/0x1a80
[<000000009cf07b6c>] get_tree_bdev+0x3e7/0x700
[<00000000046b5426>] vfs_get_tree+0x8e/0x2e0
[<00000000952ec082>] path_mount+0xf8c/0x1990
[<00000000beb1f838>] do_mount+0xee/0x110
[<000000000e9c41bb>] __x64_sys_mount+0x14b/0x1f0
[<00000000f7bb938e>] do_syscall_64+0x3b/0x90
[<000000003fcd67a9>] entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x63/0xcd

Fixes: c68401011522 ("xfs: expose errortag knobs via sysfs")
Signed-off-by: Zeng Heng <zengheng4@huawei.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
diff cf4f4c12 Tue Oct 18 15:38:14 MDT 2022 Zeng Heng <zengheng4@huawei.com> xfs: fix memory leak in xfs_errortag_init

When `xfs_sysfs_init` returns failed, `mp->m_errortag` needs to free.
Otherwise kmemleak would report memory leak after mounting xfs image:

unreferenced object 0xffff888101364900 (size 192):
comm "mount", pid 13099, jiffies 4294915218 (age 335.207s)
hex dump (first 32 bytes):
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
backtrace:
[<00000000f08ad25c>] __kmalloc+0x41/0x1b0
[<00000000dca9aeb6>] kmem_alloc+0xfd/0x430
[<0000000040361882>] xfs_errortag_init+0x20/0x110
[<00000000b384a0f6>] xfs_mountfs+0x6ea/0x1a30
[<000000003774395d>] xfs_fs_fill_super+0xe10/0x1a80
[<000000009cf07b6c>] get_tree_bdev+0x3e7/0x700
[<00000000046b5426>] vfs_get_tree+0x8e/0x2e0
[<00000000952ec082>] path_mount+0xf8c/0x1990
[<00000000beb1f838>] do_mount+0xee/0x110
[<000000000e9c41bb>] __x64_sys_mount+0x14b/0x1f0
[<00000000f7bb938e>] do_syscall_64+0x3b/0x90
[<000000003fcd67a9>] entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x63/0xcd

Fixes: c68401011522 ("xfs: expose errortag knobs via sysfs")
Signed-off-by: Zeng Heng <zengheng4@huawei.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
diff cf4f4c12 Tue Oct 18 15:38:14 MDT 2022 Zeng Heng <zengheng4@huawei.com> xfs: fix memory leak in xfs_errortag_init

When `xfs_sysfs_init` returns failed, `mp->m_errortag` needs to free.
Otherwise kmemleak would report memory leak after mounting xfs image:

unreferenced object 0xffff888101364900 (size 192):
comm "mount", pid 13099, jiffies 4294915218 (age 335.207s)
hex dump (first 32 bytes):
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
backtrace:
[<00000000f08ad25c>] __kmalloc+0x41/0x1b0
[<00000000dca9aeb6>] kmem_alloc+0xfd/0x430
[<0000000040361882>] xfs_errortag_init+0x20/0x110
[<00000000b384a0f6>] xfs_mountfs+0x6ea/0x1a30
[<000000003774395d>] xfs_fs_fill_super+0xe10/0x1a80
[<000000009cf07b6c>] get_tree_bdev+0x3e7/0x700
[<00000000046b5426>] vfs_get_tree+0x8e/0x2e0
[<00000000952ec082>] path_mount+0xf8c/0x1990
[<00000000beb1f838>] do_mount+0xee/0x110
[<000000000e9c41bb>] __x64_sys_mount+0x14b/0x1f0
[<00000000f7bb938e>] do_syscall_64+0x3b/0x90
[<000000003fcd67a9>] entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x63/0xcd

Fixes: c68401011522 ("xfs: expose errortag knobs via sysfs")
Signed-off-by: Zeng Heng <zengheng4@huawei.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <djwong@kernel.org>
H A Dxfs_discard.cdiff 0b04b6b8 Thu Jul 19 01:26:31 MDT 2018 Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com> xfs: trivial xfs_btree_del_cursor cleanups

The error argument to xfs_btree_del_cursor already understands the
"nonzero for error" semantics, so remove pointless error testing in the
callers and pass it directly.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Foster <bfoster@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Carlos Maiolino <cmaiolino@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
H A Dxfs_trans_priv.hdiff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff eacb24e7 Wed Jun 03 21:47:43 MDT 2015 Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de> xfs: pass a boolean flag to xfs_trans_free_items

The flags value always was 0 or XFS_TRANS_ABORT. Switch to a bool
parameter to allow further cleanups.

Signed-off-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
Reviewed-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com>
H A Dxfs_dquot_item.cdiff 0b0fa1d1 Tue Jul 14 11:37:22 MDT 2020 Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com> xfs: stop using q_core.d_flags in the quota code

Use the incore dq_flags to figure out the dquot type. This is the first
step towards removing xfs_disk_dquot from the incore dquot.

Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Reviewed-by: Christoph Hellwig <hch@lst.de>
Reviewed-by: Chandan Babu R <chandanrlinux@gmail.com>
diff 707e0dda Mon Aug 26 01:06:22 MDT 2019 Tetsuo Handa <penguin-kernel@I-love.SAKURA.ne.jp> fs: xfs: Remove KM_NOSLEEP and KM_SLEEP.

Since no caller is using KM_NOSLEEP and no callee branches on KM_SLEEP,
we can remove KM_NOSLEEP and replace KM_SLEEP with 0.

Signed-off-by: Tetsuo Handa <penguin-kernel@I-love.SAKURA.ne.jp>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
H A Dxfs_buf_item.hdiff 0c7e5afb Mon Jun 29 15:48:46 MDT 2020 Dave Chinner <david@fromorbit.com> xfs: mark dquot buffers in cache

dquot buffers always have write IO callbacks, so by marking them
directly we can avoid needing to attach ->b_iodone functions to
them. This avoids an indirect call, and makes future modifications
much simpler.

This is largely a rearrangement of the code at this point - no IO
completion functionality changes at this point, just how the
code is run is modified.

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Brian Foster <bfoster@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
diff 0b61f8a4 Tue Jun 05 20:42:14 MDT 2018 Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com> xfs: convert to SPDX license tags

Remove the verbose license text from XFS files and replace them
with SPDX tags. This does not change the license of any of the code,
merely refers to the common, up-to-date license files in LICENSES/

This change was mostly scripted. fs/xfs/Makefile and
fs/xfs/libxfs/xfs_fs.h were modified by hand, the rest were detected
and modified by the following command:

for f in `git grep -l "GNU General" fs/xfs/` ; do
echo $f
cat $f | awk -f hdr.awk > $f.new
mv -f $f.new $f
done

And the hdr.awk script that did the modification (including
detecting the difference between GPL-2.0 and GPL-2.0+ licenses)
is as follows:

$ cat hdr.awk
BEGIN {
hdr = 1.0
tag = "GPL-2.0"
str = ""
}

/^ \* This program is free software/ {
hdr = 2.0;
next
}

/any later version./ {
tag = "GPL-2.0+"
next
}

/^ \*\// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
print "// SPDX-License-Identifier: " tag
print str
print $0
str=""
hdr = 0.0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \* / {
if (hdr > 1.0)
next
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
next
}

/^ \*/ {
if (hdr > 0.0)
next
print $0
next
}

// {
if (hdr > 0.0) {
if (str != "")
str = str "\n"
str = str $0
next
}
print $0
}

END { }
$

Signed-off-by: Dave Chinner <dchinner@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>

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