From: Frediano Ziglio Date: Thu, 10 Oct 2013 14:39:37 +0000 (+0000) Subject: xen: Fix possible user space selector corruption X-Git-Tag: v3.12-rc6~18^2 X-Git-Url: http://review.tizen.org/git/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=7cde9b27e7b3a2e09d647bb4f6d94e842698d2d5;p=profile%2Fcommon%2Fkernel-common.git xen: Fix possible user space selector corruption Due to the way kernel is initialized under Xen is possible that the ring1 selector used by the kernel for the boot cpu end up to be copied to userspace leading to segmentation fault in the userspace. Xen code in the kernel initialize no-boot cpus with correct selectors (ds and es set to __USER_DS) but the boot one keep the ring1 (passed by Xen). On task context switch (switch_to) we assume that ds, es and cs already point to __USER_DS and __KERNEL_CSso these selector are not changed. If processor is an Intel that support sysenter instruction sysenter/sysexit is used so ds and es are not restored switching back from kernel to userspace. In the case the selectors point to a ring1 instead of __USER_DS the userspace code will crash on first memory access attempt (to be precise Xen on the emulated iret used to do sysexit will detect and set ds and es to zero which lead to GPF anyway). Now if an userspace process call kernel using sysenter and get rescheduled (for me it happen on a specific init calling wait4) could happen that the ring1 selector is set to ds and es. This is quite hard to detect cause after a while these selectors are fixed (__USER_DS seems sticky). Bisecting the code commit 7076aada1040de4ed79a5977dbabdb5e5ea5e249 appears to be the first one that have this issue. Signed-off-by: Frediano Ziglio Signed-off-by: Stefano Stabellini Reviewed-by: Andrew Cooper --- diff --git a/arch/x86/xen/smp.c b/arch/x86/xen/smp.c index d1e4777..31d0475 100644 --- a/arch/x86/xen/smp.c +++ b/arch/x86/xen/smp.c @@ -278,6 +278,15 @@ static void __init xen_smp_prepare_boot_cpu(void) old memory can be recycled */ make_lowmem_page_readwrite(xen_initial_gdt); +#ifdef CONFIG_X86_32 + /* + * Xen starts us with XEN_FLAT_RING1_DS, but linux code + * expects __USER_DS + */ + loadsegment(ds, __USER_DS); + loadsegment(es, __USER_DS); +#endif + xen_filter_cpu_maps(); xen_setup_vcpu_info_placement(); }