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Lars-Peter Clausen authored
When allocating a new line handle or event a file is allocated that it is associated to. The file is attached to a file descriptor of the current process and the file descriptor is returned to userspace using copy_to_user(). If this copy operation fails the line handle or event allocation is aborted, all acquired resources are freed and an error is returned. But the file struct is not freed and left attached to the userspace application and even though the file descriptor number was not copied it is trivial to guess. If a userspace application performs a IOCTL on such a left over file descriptor it will trigger a use-after-free and if the file descriptor is closed (latest when the application exits) a double-free is triggered. anon_inode_getfd() performs 3 tasks, allocate a file struct, allocate a file descriptor for the current process and install the file struct in the file descriptor. As soon as the file struct is installed in the file descriptor it is accessible by userspace (even if the IOCTL itself hasn't completed yet), this means uninstalling the fd on the error path is not an option, since userspace might already got a reference to the file. Instead anon_inode_getfd() needs to be broken into its individual steps. The allocation of the file struct and file descriptor is done first, then the copy_to_user() is executed and only if it succeeds the file is installed. Since the file struct is reference counted it can not be just freed, but its reference needs to be dropped, which will also call the release() callback, which will free the state attached to the file. So in this case the normal error cleanup path should not be taken. Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org Fixes: d932cd49 ("gpio: free handles in fringe cases") Signed-off-by: Lars-Peter Clausen <lars@metafoo.de> Signed-off-by: Linus Walleij <linus.walleij@linaro.org>
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