[PATCH] staging: ks7010: Do not use GFP_KERNEL in atomic context

Dan Carpenter dan.carpenter at oracle.com
Tue Aug 11 10:17:47 UTC 2020


On Sun, Aug 09, 2020 at 01:18:46PM +0200, Christophe JAILLET wrote:
> A possible call chain is as follow:
>   ks_wlan_start_xmit                    (ks_wlan_net.c)
>     --> hostif_data_request             (ks_hostif.c)
>       --> michael_mic                   (ks_hostif.c)
> 
> 'ks_wlan_start_xmit()' is a '.ndo_start_xmit()' function (see
> net_device_ops structure). Such calls are guarded by the __netif_tx_lock
> spinlock. So memory allocation must be atomic.
> 
> So, use GFP_ATOMIC instead of GFP_KERNEL 'in michael_mic()'
> 
> Fixes: ???
> Signed-off-by: Christophe JAILLET <christophe.jaillet at wanadoo.fr>
> ---
> This is completely speculative. I don't know if the call chain given above
> if possible in RL application.
> So review carefully :)
> 
> If the fix is correct, it is also more the starting point of a bigger
> change, because in 'michael_mic()' there is a call to
> 'crypto_alloc_shash()' and this function uses GFP_KERNEL internally (in
> 'crypto_create_tfm()')
> Should this need to be changed, I don't know how 'ks_hostif.c' should be
> fixed. Changing allocation in 'crypto/api.c' looks like an overkill.
> 
> In other word, I think that my patch is wrong, but don't know what else to
> propose :).

Your patch is correct but you're also right that it's incomplete.

If you look at drivers/staging/rtl8192e/rtllib_crypt_tkip.c then they
declare the shash on stack instead of using crypto_alloc_shash().
	SHASH_DESC_ON_STACK(desc, tfm_michael);

That's probably what we should do here as well.  Although I don't know
this code very well at all...  This is probably the sort of change where
it would be good to have someone test it.

regards,
dan carpenter



More information about the devel mailing list