Commit 70794724 authored by Hans Verkuil's avatar Hans Verkuil Committed by Mauro Carvalho Chehab

media: videobuf2-vmalloc: get_userptr: buffers are always writable

In vb2_vmalloc_get_userptr() the framevector is created with the
'write' argument set to false when vb2_create_framevec() is called
for OUTPUT buffers. So the pages are marked as read-only.

However, userspace will write to these buffers since it will fill
in the data to output. Since get_userptr is only called if the userptr
of the queued buffer has changed since the last time that same buffer
was queued, this will fail when the buffer contents is updated and the
buffer is queued again.

E.g., userspace fills buffer 1 with the output video and queues it.
The first time get_userptr is called and the pages are grabbed and
pinned in memory and marked read-only. The second time buffer 1 is
filled with different video data and queued again. Since the userptr
hasn't changed the get_userptr() callback isn't called again. Since
the pages were marked as read-only the new contents isn't updated.

Just always call vb2_create_framevec() with FOLL_WRITE to always
allow writing to the buffers.

Using USERPTR streaming with OUTPUT devices is almost never done. And
when it is done it is via v4l2-compliance and a driver like vim2m. But
since v4l2-compliance doesn't actually inspect the capture buffer and
compare it to the original output buffer, this issue was never noticed.

But the vicodec driver actually needs to parse the bitstream in the
OUTPUT buffers and any errors there will be immediately noticed. So
this time v4l2-compliance failed the USERPTR streaming test.
Signed-off-by: default avatarHans Verkuil <hverkuil-cisco@xs4all.nl>
Signed-off-by: default avatarMauro Carvalho Chehab <mchehab+samsung@kernel.org>
parent 878344de
......@@ -475,8 +475,7 @@ static void *vb2_dc_get_userptr(struct device *dev, unsigned long vaddr,
buf->dma_dir = dma_dir;
offset = lower_32_bits(offset_in_page(vaddr));
vec = vb2_create_framevec(vaddr, size, dma_dir == DMA_FROM_DEVICE ||
dma_dir == DMA_BIDIRECTIONAL);
vec = vb2_create_framevec(vaddr, size);
if (IS_ERR(vec)) {
ret = PTR_ERR(vec);
goto fail_buf;
......
......@@ -239,8 +239,7 @@ static void *vb2_dma_sg_get_userptr(struct device *dev, unsigned long vaddr,
buf->offset = vaddr & ~PAGE_MASK;
buf->size = size;
buf->dma_sgt = &buf->sg_table;
vec = vb2_create_framevec(vaddr, size, dma_dir == DMA_FROM_DEVICE ||
dma_dir == DMA_BIDIRECTIONAL);
vec = vb2_create_framevec(vaddr, size);
if (IS_ERR(vec))
goto userptr_fail_pfnvec;
buf->vec = vec;
......
......@@ -26,7 +26,6 @@
* vb2_create_framevec() - map virtual addresses to pfns
* @start: Virtual user address where we start mapping
* @length: Length of a range to map
* @write: Should we map for writing into the area
*
* This function allocates and fills in a vector with pfns corresponding to
* virtual address range passed in arguments. If pfns have corresponding pages,
......@@ -35,17 +34,13 @@
* failure. Returned vector needs to be freed via vb2_destroy_pfnvec().
*/
struct frame_vector *vb2_create_framevec(unsigned long start,
unsigned long length,
bool write)
unsigned long length)
{
int ret;
unsigned long first, last;
unsigned long nr;
struct frame_vector *vec;
unsigned int flags = FOLL_FORCE;
if (write)
flags |= FOLL_WRITE;
unsigned int flags = FOLL_FORCE | FOLL_WRITE;
first = start >> PAGE_SHIFT;
last = (start + length - 1) >> PAGE_SHIFT;
......
......@@ -87,8 +87,7 @@ static void *vb2_vmalloc_get_userptr(struct device *dev, unsigned long vaddr,
buf->dma_dir = dma_dir;
offset = vaddr & ~PAGE_MASK;
buf->size = size;
vec = vb2_create_framevec(vaddr, size, dma_dir == DMA_FROM_DEVICE ||
dma_dir == DMA_BIDIRECTIONAL);
vec = vb2_create_framevec(vaddr, size);
if (IS_ERR(vec)) {
ret = PTR_ERR(vec);
goto fail_pfnvec_create;
......
......@@ -34,8 +34,7 @@ struct vb2_vmarea_handler {
extern const struct vm_operations_struct vb2_common_vm_ops;
struct frame_vector *vb2_create_framevec(unsigned long start,
unsigned long length,
bool write);
unsigned long length);
void vb2_destroy_framevec(struct frame_vector *vec);
#endif
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