The kernel needs to validate that the contents of struct siginfo make
sense as siginfo is copied into the kernel, so that the proper union
members can be put in the appropriate locations. The field si_signo
is a fundamental part of that validation. As such changing the
contents of si_signo after the validation make no sense and can result
in nonsense values in the kernel.
As such simply fail if someone is silly enough to set si_signo out of
sync with the signal number passed to sigqueueinfo.
I don't expect a problem as glibc's sigqueue implementation sets
"si_signo = sig" and CRIU just returns to the kernel what the kernel
gave to it.
If there is some application that calls sigqueueinfo directly that has
a problem with this added sanity check we can revisit this when we see
what kind of crazy that application is doing.
Signed-off-by: "Eric W. Biederman" <ebiederm@xmission.com>
(task_pid_vnr(current) != pid))
return -EPERM;
- info->si_signo = sig;
+ if (info->si_signo != sig)
+ return -EINVAL;
/* POSIX.1b doesn't mention process groups. */
return kill_proc_info(sig, info, pid);
(task_pid_vnr(current) != pid))
return -EPERM;
- info->si_signo = sig;
+ if (info->si_signo != sig)
+ return -EINVAL;
return do_send_specific(tgid, pid, sig, info);
}