linux-sg2042/drivers/misc/lkdtm/fortify.c

148 lines
3.9 KiB
C

// SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
/*
* Copyright (c) 2020 Francis Laniel <laniel_francis@privacyrequired.com>
*
* Add tests related to fortified functions in this file.
*/
#include "lkdtm.h"
#include <linux/string.h>
#include <linux/slab.h>
static volatile int fortify_scratch_space;
static void lkdtm_FORTIFIED_OBJECT(void)
{
struct target {
char a[10];
} target[2] = {};
/*
* Using volatile prevents the compiler from determining the value of
* 'size' at compile time. Without that, we would get a compile error
* rather than a runtime error.
*/
volatile int size = 11;
pr_info("trying to read past the end of a struct\n");
/* Store result to global to prevent the code from being eliminated */
fortify_scratch_space = memcmp(&target[0], &target[1], size);
pr_err("FAIL: fortify did not block an object overread!\n");
pr_expected_config(CONFIG_FORTIFY_SOURCE);
}
static void lkdtm_FORTIFIED_SUBOBJECT(void)
{
struct target {
char a[10];
char b[10];
} target;
volatile int size = 20;
char *src;
src = kmalloc(size, GFP_KERNEL);
strscpy(src, "over ten bytes", size);
size = strlen(src) + 1;
pr_info("trying to strncpy past the end of a member of a struct\n");
/*
* strncpy(target.a, src, 20); will hit a compile error because the
* compiler knows at build time that target.a < 20 bytes. Use a
* volatile to force a runtime error.
*/
strncpy(target.a, src, size);
/* Store result to global to prevent the code from being eliminated */
fortify_scratch_space = target.a[3];
pr_err("FAIL: fortify did not block an sub-object overrun!\n");
pr_expected_config(CONFIG_FORTIFY_SOURCE);
kfree(src);
}
/*
* Calls fortified strscpy to test that it returns the same result as vanilla
* strscpy and generate a panic because there is a write overflow (i.e. src
* length is greater than dst length).
*/
static void lkdtm_FORTIFIED_STRSCPY(void)
{
char *src;
char dst[5];
struct {
union {
char big[10];
char src[5];
};
} weird = { .big = "hello!" };
char weird_dst[sizeof(weird.src) + 1];
src = kstrdup("foobar", GFP_KERNEL);
if (src == NULL)
return;
/* Vanilla strscpy returns -E2BIG if size is 0. */
if (strscpy(dst, src, 0) != -E2BIG)
pr_warn("FAIL: strscpy() of 0 length did not return -E2BIG\n");
/* Vanilla strscpy returns -E2BIG if src is truncated. */
if (strscpy(dst, src, sizeof(dst)) != -E2BIG)
pr_warn("FAIL: strscpy() did not return -E2BIG while src is truncated\n");
/* After above call, dst must contain "foob" because src was truncated. */
if (strncmp(dst, "foob", sizeof(dst)) != 0)
pr_warn("FAIL: after strscpy() dst does not contain \"foob\" but \"%s\"\n",
dst);
/* Shrink src so the strscpy() below succeeds. */
src[3] = '\0';
/*
* Vanilla strscpy returns number of character copied if everything goes
* well.
*/
if (strscpy(dst, src, sizeof(dst)) != 3)
pr_warn("FAIL: strscpy() did not return 3 while src was copied entirely truncated\n");
/* After above call, dst must contain "foo" because src was copied. */
if (strncmp(dst, "foo", sizeof(dst)) != 0)
pr_warn("FAIL: after strscpy() dst does not contain \"foo\" but \"%s\"\n",
dst);
/* Test when src is embedded inside a union. */
strscpy(weird_dst, weird.src, sizeof(weird_dst));
if (strcmp(weird_dst, "hello") != 0)
pr_warn("FAIL: after strscpy() weird_dst does not contain \"hello\" but \"%s\"\n",
weird_dst);
/* Restore src to its initial value. */
src[3] = 'b';
/*
* Use strlen here so size cannot be known at compile time and there is
* a runtime write overflow.
*/
strscpy(dst, src, strlen(src));
pr_err("FAIL: strscpy() overflow not detected!\n");
pr_expected_config(CONFIG_FORTIFY_SOURCE);
kfree(src);
}
static struct crashtype crashtypes[] = {
CRASHTYPE(FORTIFIED_OBJECT),
CRASHTYPE(FORTIFIED_SUBOBJECT),
CRASHTYPE(FORTIFIED_STRSCPY),
};
struct crashtype_category fortify_crashtypes = {
.crashtypes = crashtypes,
.len = ARRAY_SIZE(crashtypes),
};