diff options
author | Jason A. Donenfeld <Jason@zx2c4.com> | 2022-12-30 23:07:25 +0100 |
---|---|---|
committer | Michael S. Tsirkin <mst@redhat.com> | 2023-01-28 06:21:29 -0500 |
commit | eac7a7791bb6d719233deed750034042318ffd56 (patch) | |
tree | 49e50ee2eb0eedf208ef7b7ebcff5ff988c19e68 /hw | |
parent | 8a7c606016d283a1716290c657f6f45bc7c4d817 (diff) | |
download | qemu-eac7a7791bb6d719233deed750034042318ffd56.zip qemu-eac7a7791bb6d719233deed750034042318ffd56.tar.gz qemu-eac7a7791bb6d719233deed750034042318ffd56.tar.bz2 |
x86: don't let decompressed kernel image clobber setup_data
The setup_data links are appended to the compressed kernel image. Since
the kernel image is typically loaded at 0x100000, setup_data lives at
`0x100000 + compressed_size`, which does not get relocated during the
kernel's boot process.
The kernel typically decompresses the image starting at address
0x1000000 (note: there's one more zero there than the compressed image
above). This usually is fine for most kernels.
However, if the compressed image is actually quite large, then
setup_data will live at a `0x100000 + compressed_size` that extends into
the decompressed zone at 0x1000000. In other words, if compressed_size
is larger than `0x1000000 - 0x100000`, then the decompression step will
clobber setup_data, resulting in crashes.
Visually, what happens now is that QEMU appends setup_data to the kernel
image:
kernel image setup_data
|--------------------------||----------------|
0x100000 0x100000+l1 0x100000+l1+l2
The problem is that this decompresses to 0x1000000 (one more zero). So
if l1 is > (0x1000000-0x100000), then this winds up looking like:
kernel image setup_data
|--------------------------||----------------|
0x100000 0x100000+l1 0x100000+l1+l2
d e c o m p r e s s e d k e r n e l
|-------------------------------------------------------------|
0x1000000 0x1000000+l3
The decompressed kernel seemingly overwriting the compressed kernel
image isn't a problem, because that gets relocated to a higher address
early on in the boot process, at the end of startup_64. setup_data,
however, stays in the same place, since those links are self referential
and nothing fixes them up. So the decompressed kernel clobbers it.
Fix this by appending setup_data to the cmdline blob rather than the
kernel image blob, which remains at a lower address that won't get
clobbered.
This could have been done by overwriting the initrd blob instead, but
that poses big difficulties, such as no longer being able to use memory
mapped files for initrd, hurting performance, and, more importantly, the
initrd address calculation is hard coded in qboot, and it always grows
down rather than up, which means lots of brittle semantics would have to
be changed around, incurring more complexity. In contrast, using cmdline
is simple and doesn't interfere with anything.
The microvm machine has a gross hack where it fiddles with fw_cfg data
after the fact. So this hack is updated to account for this appending,
by reserving some bytes.
Fixup-by: Michael S. Tsirkin <mst@redhat.com>
Cc: x86@kernel.org
Cc: Philippe Mathieu-Daudé <philmd@linaro.org>
Cc: H. Peter Anvin <hpa@zytor.com>
Cc: Borislav Petkov <bp@alien8.de>
Cc: Eric Biggers <ebiggers@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Jason A. Donenfeld <Jason@zx2c4.com>
Message-Id: <20221230220725.618763-1-Jason@zx2c4.com>
Message-ID: <20230128061015-mutt-send-email-mst@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Michael S. Tsirkin <mst@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael S. Tsirkin <mst@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Eric Biggers <ebiggers@google.com>
Tested-by: Mathias Krause <minipli@grsecurity.net>
Diffstat (limited to 'hw')
-rw-r--r-- | hw/i386/microvm.c | 15 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | hw/i386/x86.c | 52 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | hw/nvram/fw_cfg.c | 9 |
3 files changed, 47 insertions, 29 deletions
diff --git a/hw/i386/microvm.c b/hw/i386/microvm.c index 170a331..29f30dd 100644 --- a/hw/i386/microvm.c +++ b/hw/i386/microvm.c @@ -378,7 +378,8 @@ static void microvm_fix_kernel_cmdline(MachineState *machine) MicrovmMachineState *mms = MICROVM_MACHINE(machine); BusState *bus; BusChild *kid; - char *cmdline; + char *cmdline, *existing_cmdline; + size_t len; /* * Find MMIO transports with attached devices, and add them to the kernel @@ -387,7 +388,8 @@ static void microvm_fix_kernel_cmdline(MachineState *machine) * Yes, this is a hack, but one that heavily improves the UX without * introducing any significant issues. */ - cmdline = g_strdup(machine->kernel_cmdline); + existing_cmdline = fw_cfg_read_bytes_ptr(x86ms->fw_cfg, FW_CFG_CMDLINE_DATA); + cmdline = g_strdup(existing_cmdline); bus = sysbus_get_default(); QTAILQ_FOREACH(kid, &bus->children, sibling) { DeviceState *dev = kid->child; @@ -411,9 +413,12 @@ static void microvm_fix_kernel_cmdline(MachineState *machine) } } - fw_cfg_modify_i32(x86ms->fw_cfg, FW_CFG_CMDLINE_SIZE, strlen(cmdline) + 1); - fw_cfg_modify_string(x86ms->fw_cfg, FW_CFG_CMDLINE_DATA, cmdline); - + len = strlen(cmdline); + if (len > VIRTIO_CMDLINE_TOTAL_MAX_LEN + strlen(existing_cmdline)) { + fprintf(stderr, "qemu: virtio mmio cmdline too large, skipping\n"); + } else { + memcpy(existing_cmdline, cmdline, len + 1); + } g_free(cmdline); } diff --git a/hw/i386/x86.c b/hw/i386/x86.c index 78cc131..eaff422 100644 --- a/hw/i386/x86.c +++ b/hw/i386/x86.c @@ -50,6 +50,7 @@ #include "hw/intc/i8259.h" #include "hw/rtc/mc146818rtc.h" #include "target/i386/sev.h" +#include "hw/i386/microvm.h" #include "hw/acpi/cpu_hotplug.h" #include "hw/irq.h" @@ -813,12 +814,18 @@ void x86_load_linux(X86MachineState *x86ms, const char *kernel_filename = machine->kernel_filename; const char *initrd_filename = machine->initrd_filename; const char *dtb_filename = machine->dtb; - const char *kernel_cmdline = machine->kernel_cmdline; + char *kernel_cmdline; SevKernelLoaderContext sev_load_ctx = {}; enum { RNG_SEED_LENGTH = 32 }; - /* Align to 16 bytes as a paranoia measure */ - cmdline_size = (strlen(kernel_cmdline) + 16) & ~15; + /* + * Add the NUL terminator, some padding for the microvm cmdline fiddling + * hack, and then align to 16 bytes as a paranoia measure + */ + cmdline_size = (strlen(machine->kernel_cmdline) + 1 + + VIRTIO_CMDLINE_TOTAL_MAX_LEN + 16) & ~15; + /* Make a copy, since we might append arbitrary bytes to it later. */ + kernel_cmdline = g_strndup(machine->kernel_cmdline, cmdline_size); /* load the kernel header */ f = fopen(kernel_filename, "rb"); @@ -959,12 +966,6 @@ void x86_load_linux(X86MachineState *x86ms, initrd_max = x86ms->below_4g_mem_size - acpi_data_size - 1; } - fw_cfg_add_i32(fw_cfg, FW_CFG_CMDLINE_ADDR, cmdline_addr); - fw_cfg_add_i32(fw_cfg, FW_CFG_CMDLINE_SIZE, strlen(kernel_cmdline) + 1); - fw_cfg_add_string(fw_cfg, FW_CFG_CMDLINE_DATA, kernel_cmdline); - sev_load_ctx.cmdline_data = (char *)kernel_cmdline; - sev_load_ctx.cmdline_size = strlen(kernel_cmdline) + 1; - if (protocol >= 0x202) { stl_p(header + 0x228, cmdline_addr); } else { @@ -1091,27 +1092,24 @@ void x86_load_linux(X86MachineState *x86ms, exit(1); } - setup_data_offset = QEMU_ALIGN_UP(kernel_size, 16); - kernel_size = setup_data_offset + sizeof(SetupData) + dtb_size; - kernel = g_realloc(kernel, kernel_size); - - - setup_data = (SetupData *)(kernel + setup_data_offset); + setup_data_offset = cmdline_size; + cmdline_size += sizeof(SetupData) + dtb_size; + kernel_cmdline = g_realloc(kernel_cmdline, cmdline_size); + setup_data = (void *)kernel_cmdline + setup_data_offset; setup_data->next = cpu_to_le64(first_setup_data); - first_setup_data = prot_addr + setup_data_offset; + first_setup_data = cmdline_addr + setup_data_offset; setup_data->type = cpu_to_le32(SETUP_DTB); setup_data->len = cpu_to_le32(dtb_size); - load_image_size(dtb_filename, setup_data->data, dtb_size); } - if (!legacy_no_rng_seed) { - setup_data_offset = QEMU_ALIGN_UP(kernel_size, 16); - kernel_size = setup_data_offset + sizeof(SetupData) + RNG_SEED_LENGTH; - kernel = g_realloc(kernel, kernel_size); - setup_data = (SetupData *)(kernel + setup_data_offset); + if (!legacy_no_rng_seed && protocol >= 0x209) { + setup_data_offset = cmdline_size; + cmdline_size += sizeof(SetupData) + RNG_SEED_LENGTH; + kernel_cmdline = g_realloc(kernel_cmdline, cmdline_size); + setup_data = (void *)kernel_cmdline + setup_data_offset; setup_data->next = cpu_to_le64(first_setup_data); - first_setup_data = prot_addr + setup_data_offset; + first_setup_data = cmdline_addr + setup_data_offset; setup_data->type = cpu_to_le32(SETUP_RNG_SEED); setup_data->len = cpu_to_le32(RNG_SEED_LENGTH); qemu_guest_getrandom_nofail(setup_data->data, RNG_SEED_LENGTH); @@ -1122,6 +1120,12 @@ void x86_load_linux(X86MachineState *x86ms, fw_cfg_add_bytes(fw_cfg, FW_CFG_KERNEL_DATA, kernel, kernel_size); } + fw_cfg_add_i32(fw_cfg, FW_CFG_CMDLINE_ADDR, cmdline_addr); + fw_cfg_add_i32(fw_cfg, FW_CFG_CMDLINE_SIZE, cmdline_size); + fw_cfg_add_bytes(fw_cfg, FW_CFG_CMDLINE_DATA, kernel_cmdline, cmdline_size); + sev_load_ctx.cmdline_data = (char *)kernel_cmdline; + sev_load_ctx.cmdline_size = cmdline_size; + fw_cfg_add_i32(fw_cfg, FW_CFG_KERNEL_ADDR, prot_addr); fw_cfg_add_i32(fw_cfg, FW_CFG_KERNEL_SIZE, kernel_size); sev_load_ctx.kernel_data = (char *)kernel; @@ -1134,7 +1138,7 @@ void x86_load_linux(X86MachineState *x86ms, * kernel on the other side of the fw_cfg interface matches the hash of the * file the user passed in. */ - if (!sev_enabled()) { + if (!sev_enabled() && first_setup_data) { SetupDataFixup *fixup = g_malloc(sizeof(*fixup)); memcpy(setup, header, MIN(sizeof(header), setup_size)); diff --git a/hw/nvram/fw_cfg.c b/hw/nvram/fw_cfg.c index a00881b..432754e 100644 --- a/hw/nvram/fw_cfg.c +++ b/hw/nvram/fw_cfg.c @@ -741,6 +741,15 @@ void fw_cfg_add_bytes(FWCfgState *s, uint16_t key, void *data, size_t len) fw_cfg_add_bytes_callback(s, key, NULL, NULL, NULL, data, len, true); } +void *fw_cfg_read_bytes_ptr(FWCfgState *s, uint16_t key) +{ + int arch = !!(key & FW_CFG_ARCH_LOCAL); + + key &= FW_CFG_ENTRY_MASK; + assert(key < fw_cfg_max_entry(s)); + return s->entries[arch][key].data; +} + void fw_cfg_add_string(FWCfgState *s, uint16_t key, const char *value) { size_t sz = strlen(value) + 1; |