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authorRoland McGrath <roland@redhat.com>2009-09-08 19:49:40 -0700
committerJames Morris <jmorris@namei.org>2009-09-10 20:11:12 +1000
commit9f0ab4a3f0fdb1ff404d150618ace2fa069bb2e1 (patch)
tree513bd54b92aad6ba44173e11e85a3203c26583fb /security
parentTPM: Fixup boot probe timeout for tpm_tis driver (diff)
downloadlinux-dev-9f0ab4a3f0fdb1ff404d150618ace2fa069bb2e1.tar.xz
linux-dev-9f0ab4a3f0fdb1ff404d150618ace2fa069bb2e1.zip
binfmt_elf: fix PT_INTERP bss handling
In fs/binfmt_elf.c, load_elf_interp() calls padzero() for .bss even if the PT_LOAD has no PROT_WRITE and no .bss. This generates EFAULT. Here is a small test case. (Yes, there are other, useful PT_INTERP which have only .text and no .data/.bss.) ----- ptinterp.S _start: .globl _start nop int3 ----- $ gcc -m32 -nostartfiles -nostdlib -o ptinterp ptinterp.S $ gcc -m32 -Wl,--dynamic-linker=ptinterp -o hello hello.c $ ./hello Segmentation fault # during execve() itself After applying the patch: $ ./hello Trace trap # user-mode execution after execve() finishes If the ELF headers are actually self-inconsistent, then dying is fine. But having no PROT_WRITE segment is perfectly normal and correct if there is no segment with p_memsz > p_filesz (i.e. bss). John Reiser suggested checking for PROT_WRITE in the bss logic. I think it makes most sense to simply apply the bss logic only when there is bss. This patch looks less trivial than it is due to some reindentation. It just moves the "if (last_bss > elf_bss) {" test up to include the partial-page bss logic as well as the more-pages bss logic. Reported-by: John Reiser <jreiser@bitwagon.com> Signed-off-by: Roland McGrath <roland@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: James Morris <jmorris@namei.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'security')
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