• Linus Torvalds's avatar
    printk: fix syslog() overflowing user buffer · e4178d80
    Linus Torvalds authored
    This is not a buffer overflow in the traditional sense: we don't
    overflow any *kernel* buffers, but we do mis-count the amount of data we
    copy back to user space for the SYSLOG_ACTION_READ_ALL case.
    
    In particular, if the user buffer is too small to hold everything, and
    *if* there is a continuation line at just the right place, we can end up
    giving the user more data than he asked for.
    
    The reason is that we first count up the number of bytes all the log
    records contains, then we walk the records again until we've skipped the
    records at the beginning that won't fit, and then we walk the rest of
    the records and copy them to the user space buffer.
    
    And in between that "skip the initial records that won't fit" and the
    "copy the records that *will* fit to user space", we reset the 'prev'
    variable that contained the record information for the last record not
    copied.  That meant that when we started copying to user space, we now
    had a different character count than what we had originally calculated
    in the first record walk-through.
    
    The fix is to simply not clear the 'prev' flags value (in both cases
    where we had the same logic: syslog_print_all and kmsg_dump_get_buffer:
    the latter is used for pstore-like dumping)
    Reported-and-tested-by: default avatarDebabrata Banerjee <dbanerje@akamai.com>
    Acked-by: default avatarKay Sievers <kay@vrfy.org>
    Cc: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
    Cc: Jeff Mahoney <jeffm@suse.com>
    Signed-off-by: default avatarLinus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
    e4178d80
printk.c 72.1 KB