• Douglas Anderson's avatar
    ASoC: mediatek: mt8186: Fix use-after-free in driver remove path · a93d2afd
    Douglas Anderson authored
    When devm runs function in the "remove" path for a device it runs them
    in the reverse order. That means that if you have parts of your driver
    that aren't using devm or are using "roll your own" devm w/
    devm_add_action_or_reset() you need to keep that in mind.
    
    The mt8186 audio driver didn't quite get this right. Specifically, in
    mt8186_init_clock() it called mt8186_audsys_clk_register() and then
    went on to call a bunch of other devm function. The caller of
    mt8186_init_clock() used devm_add_action_or_reset() to call
    mt8186_deinit_clock() but, because of the intervening devm functions,
    the order was wrong.
    
    Specifically at probe time, the order was:
    1. mt8186_audsys_clk_register()
    2. afe_priv->clk = devm_kcalloc(...)
    3. afe_priv->clk[i] = devm_clk_get(...)
    
    At remove time, the order (which should have been 3, 2, 1) was:
    1. mt8186_audsys_clk_unregister()
    3. Free all of afe_priv->clk[i]
    2. Free afe_priv->clk
    
    The above seemed to be causing a use-after-free. Luckily, it's easy to
    fix this by simply using devm more correctly. Let's move the
    devm_add_action_or_reset() to the right place. In addition to fixing
    the use-after-free, code inspection shows that this fixes a leak
    (missing call to mt8186_audsys_clk_unregister()) that would have
    happened if any of the syscon_regmap_lookup_by_phandle() calls in
    mt8186_init_clock() had failed.
    
    Fixes: 55b423d5 ("ASoC: mediatek: mt8186: support audio clock control in platform driver")
    Signed-off-by: Douglas Anderson <dianders@chromium.org
    Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20230511092437.1.I31cceffc8c45bb1af16eb613e197b3df92cdc19e@changeid
    Signed-off-by: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org
    a93d2afd
mt8186-afe-pcm.c 92 KB