On Thu, 27 Jun 2024 11:13:14 +1000 David Gibson <david(a)gibson.dropbear.id.au> wrote:On Thu, Jun 27, 2024 at 01:45:35AM +0200, Stefano Brivio wrote:No, that was exactly my point: return values are constrained by the kernel, but a static checker doesn't necessarily have to assume a kernel that's properly functioning. In general, static checkers do, especially if POSIX has a clear definition of a system call, and for what matters to us, they should. But here Coverity is ignoring that, and I'm not sure we should call it a false positive. It's kind of arbitrary really. I think Coverity in these cases just prefers to "blindly" apply CERT C INT32-C locally, which is not necessarily a bad choice, because "false positives" are not so much of a nuisance.Potential sum and subtraction overflows were reported by Coverity in a few places where we use size_t and ssize_t types. Strictly speaking, those are not false positives even if I don't see a way to trigger those: for instance, if we receive up to n bytes from a socket up, the return value from recv() is already constrained and can't overflow for the usage we make in tap_handler_passt().Actually, I think they are false positives. In a bunch of cases the reasoning for that does rely on assuming the kernel will never return a value greater than the buffer size for read(), write() or similar.So possibly just ASSERT()ing that would suffice.In some cases yes, but as we have built-ins in gcc and Clang that aim at keeping the cost of the checks down by, quoting gcc documentation, using "hardware instructions to implement these built-in functions where possible", and they already implement the operation, open-coding our own checks for assertions looks redundant and might result in slower code.Sure. But, especially as package maintainer, in this case I prefer to have a useless check than carrying suppressions around.In any case, take care of those by adding two functions that explicitly check for overflows in sums and subtractions of long signed values, and using them. Signed-off-by: Stefano Brivio <sbrivio(a)redhat.com> --- lineread.c | 5 +++-- tap.c | 21 +++++++++++++++------ util.c | 7 +++++-- util.h | 46 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++- 4 files changed, 68 insertions(+), 11 deletions(-) diff --git a/lineread.c b/lineread.c index 0387f4a..12f2d24 100644 --- a/lineread.c +++ b/lineread.c @@ -17,6 +17,7 @@ #include <string.h> #include <stdbool.h> #include <unistd.h> +#include <errno.h> #include "lineread.h" #include "util.h" @@ -102,8 +103,8 @@ ssize_t lineread_get(struct lineread *lr, char **line) if (rc == 0) eof = true; - else - lr->count += rc;From the construction of the read, lr->count + rc can never exceed LINEREAD_BUFFER_SIZE - lr->next_line, so this can't overflow.Same here.+ else if (saddl_overflow(lr->count, rc, &lr->count)) + return -ERANGE; } *line = lr->buf + lr->next_line; diff --git a/tap.c b/tap.c index ec994a2..7f8c26d 100644 --- a/tap.c +++ b/tap.c @@ -1031,7 +1031,11 @@ redo: */ if (l2len > n) { rem = recv(c->fd_tap, p + n, l2len - n, 0); - if ((n += rem) != l2len)Similarly, rem <= l2len - n, and therefore n + rem <= l2len.Same here.+ + if (saddl_overflow(n, rem, &n)) + return; + + if (n != l2len) return; } @@ -1046,7 +1050,9 @@ redo: next: p += l2len; - n -= l2len;We already checked that l2len <= n, so this one can't overflow either.Not sure why Coverity can't see that itself, though :/. Possibly it doesn't understand gotos well enough to see that the only goto next is after that check.It sees that, that's the path it takes in reporting a potential overflow here. I think here, again, it's just blindly requesting INT32-C from CERT C rules, locally.Same here.+ + if (ssubl_overflow(n, l2len, &n)) + return; } tap_handler(c, now); @@ -1077,17 +1083,20 @@ redo: tap_flush_pools(); restart: while ((len = read(c->fd_tap, pkt_buf + n, TAP_BUF_BYTES - n)) > 0) { - if (len < (ssize_t)sizeof(struct ethhdr) || len > (ssize_t)ETH_MAX_MTU) { - n += len;Here n+len can't exceed TAP_BUF_BYTES, so again, no overflow.Same here.+ if (saddl_overflow(n, len, &n)) + return; + continue; } - tap_add_packet(c, len, pkt_buf + n); - if ((n += len) == TAP_BUF_BYTES)Same here.I'm fairly sure I tried that and it looked rather bulky, because I couldn't use __builtin_uaddl_overflow() if I recall correctly, I can try again.+ if (saddl_overflow(n, len, &n)) + return; + + if (n == TAP_BUF_BYTES) break; } diff --git a/util.c b/util.c index dd2e57f..a72d6c5 100644 --- a/util.c +++ b/util.c @@ -567,7 +567,7 @@ int do_clone(int (*fn)(void *), char *stack_area, size_t stack_size, int flags, * * #syscalls write writev */ -int write_remainder(int fd, const struct iovec *iov, int iovcnt, size_t skip) +int write_remainder(int fd, const struct iovec *iov, int iovcnt, ssize_t skip)I don't love this change, since negative skip values make no sense.{ int i; size_t offset; @@ -585,7 +585,10 @@ int write_remainder(int fd, const struct iovec *iov, int iovcnt, size_t skip) if (rc < 0) return -1; - skip += rc;Ok, here it's not a false positive. I believe this really could overflow if you had an iov where the sum of the iov_len exceeded a size_t.+ if (saddl_overflow(skip, rc, &skip)) { + errno = -ERANGE; + return -1; + }If you leave skip an unsigned, you've already checked for negative rc, so this is essentially an unsigned add. Checking for overflow on an unsigned addition is simpler than the logic of saddl_overflow().Right, yes, ssize_t can be long or int, even though I'm fairly sure it's always long on all the architectures we are able to build for. There's no integer overflow built-in for ssize_t, but I'll probably need to add a macro conditional for the whole thing anyway, based on the type of ssize_t.} return 0; diff --git a/util.h b/util.h index eebb027..497d2fd 100644 --- a/util.h +++ b/util.h @@ -161,7 +161,7 @@ void pidfile_write(int fd, pid_t pid); int __daemon(int pidfile_fd, int devnull_fd); int fls(unsigned long x); int write_file(const char *path, const char *buf); -int write_remainder(int fd, const struct iovec *iov, int iovcnt, size_t skip); +int write_remainder(int fd, const struct iovec *iov, int iovcnt, ssize_t skip); /** * af_name() - Return name of an address family @@ -223,6 +223,50 @@ static inline bool mod_between(unsigned x, unsigned i, unsigned j, unsigned m) return mod_sub(x, i, m) < mod_sub(j, i, m); } +/** + * saddl_overflow() - Sum with overflow check for long signed values + * @a: First value + * @b: Second value + * @sum: Pointer to result of sum, if it doesn't overflow + * + * Return: true if the sum would overflow, false otherwise + */ +static inline bool saddl_overflow(long a, long b, long *sum)These take long, but you're often calling them with ssize_t. That's _probably_ the same thing, but not necessarily.Oops, fixed.+{ +#if __GNUC__ + return __builtin_saddl_overflow(a, b, sum); +#else + if ((a > 0 && a > LONG_MAX - b) || + (b < 0 && a < LONG_MIN - b)) + return true; + + *sum = a + b; + return false; +#endif +} + +/** + * saddl_overflow() - Subtraction with overflow check for long signed valuess/saddl_overflow/ssubl_overflow/-- Stefano+ * @a: Minuend + * @b: Subtrahend + * @sum: Pointer to result of subtraction, if it doesn't overflow + * + * Return: true if the subtraction would overflow, false otherwise + */ +static inline bool ssubl_overflow(long a, long b, long *diff) +{ +#if __GNUC__ + return __builtin_ssubl_overflow(a, b, diff); +#else + if ((b > 0 && a < LONG_MIN + b) || + (b < 0 && a > LONG_MAX + b)) + return true; + + *diff = a - b; + return false; +#endif +} + /* * Workarounds for https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/58992 *