[PATCH 6/6] staging: pi433: Rename enum modShaping in rf69_enum.h

Marcus Wolf marcus.wolf at smarthome-wolf.de
Mon Dec 4 19:41:14 UTC 2017



Am 04.12.2017 um 21:18 schrieb Dan Carpenter:
> On Mon, Dec 04, 2017 at 08:59:35PM +0200, Marcus Wolf wrote:
>>
>> Am 04.12.2017 um 12:33 schrieb Dan Carpenter:
>>> On Sun, Dec 03, 2017 at 04:17:26PM +0100, Simon Sandström wrote:
>>>> diff --git a/drivers/staging/pi433/pi433_if.h b/drivers/staging/pi433/pi433_if.h
>>>> index 34ff0d4807bd..bcfe29840889 100644
>>>> --- a/drivers/staging/pi433/pi433_if.h
>>>> +++ b/drivers/staging/pi433/pi433_if.h
>>>> @@ -63,7 +63,7 @@ struct pi433_tx_cfg {
>>>>    	__u16			bit_rate;
>>>>    	__u32			dev_frequency;
>>>>    	enum modulation		modulation;
>>>> -	enum modShaping		modShaping;
>>>> +	enum mod_shaping	mod_shaping;
>>>
>>> I looked at how mod_shaping is set and the only place is in the ioctl:
>>>
>>>      789          case PI433_IOC_WR_TX_CFG:
>>>      790                  if (copy_from_user(&instance->tx_cfg, argp,
>>>      791                                          sizeof(struct pi433_tx_cfg)))
>>>      792                          return -EFAULT;
>>>      793                  break;
>>>
>>> We just write over the whole config.  Including important things like
>>> rx_cfg.fixed_message_length.  There is no locking so when we do things
>>> like:
>>>
>>>      385          /* fixed or unlimited length? */
>>>      386          if (dev->rx_cfg.fixed_message_length != 0)
>>>      387          {
>>>      388                  if (dev->rx_cfg.fixed_message_length > dev->rx_buffer_size)
>>>                               ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
>>> check
>>>
>>>      389                  {
>>>      390                          retval = -1;
>>>      391                          goto abort;
>>>      392                  }
>>>      393                  bytes_total = dev->rx_cfg.fixed_message_length;
>>>                                         ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
>>> set this in the ioctl after the check but before this line and it looks
>>> like a security problem.
>>>
>>>      394                  dev_dbg(dev->dev,"rx: msg len set to %d by fixed length", bytes_total);
>>>      395          }
>>>
>>> Anyway, I guess this patch is fine.
>>>
>>> regards,
>>> dan carpenter
>>>
>>
>> Hi Dan,
>>
>> you are mixing rx and tx. The part from IOCTL is copied from the tx-part,
>> the lower part is dealing with rx.
>>
>> With rx there should be no problem, since IOCTL is blocked, as long as an rx
>> operation is going on.
>>
>> With tx, I also expect no problems, since instance->tx_cfg is never used to
>> configure the rf69. Everytime, you pass in new data via write() a copy of
>> tx_cfg is made. Transmission is done, using the copy of the tx_cfg, never by
>> using instance->tx_cfg.
>>
>> But maybe I didn't got your point and misunderstand your intention.
>>
> 
> No.  You're right.  I mixed up rx and tx.  But the ioctl interface still
> seems really horrible.  We generally frown on adding new ioctls at all,
> but in this case to just write over the whole struct with no locking
> seems really bad.
> 
> regards,
> dan carpenter
> 

In principle, you are right. But that's even a more macroscopic problem.

If someone sets a config, he needs for a telegram, and someone else 
comes in with another config, before the first one could fire his write,
shit will happen.
Same on RX-side: First one sets his config for receiving and will not 
get, what he wants, if someone else sets an other config, before he can 
fire his read.

If noone changes the config, until read() or write() was called, we are 
out of danger - even concerning the risk you mentioned.

An option to avoid that, could be, that every write and read transaction 
needs to pass in a complete config struct.
There were reasons, not to do so, but we could think of implementing it 
that was.

Are there other options for configuration, despite IOCTL?

Cheers,

Marcus
Cheers,

Marcus


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