We've got a bug report indicating a kernel panic at booting on an x86-32 system, and it turned out to be the invalid resource assigned after PCI resource reallocation. __find_resource() first aligns the resource start address and resets the end address with start+size-1 accordingly, then checks whether it's contained. Here the end address may overflow the integer, although resource_contains() still returns true because the function validates only start and end address. So this ends up with returning an invalid resource (start > end).
There was already an attempt to cover such a problem in the commit 47ea91b4052d ("Resource: fix wrong resource window calculation"), but this case is an overseen one. This patch adds the validity check in resource_contains() to see whether the given resource has a valid range for avoiding the integer overflow problem. Bugzilla: http://bugzilla.opensuse.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1086739 Fixes: 23c570a67448 ("resource: ability to resize an allocated resource") Reported-and-tested-by: Michael Henders <hende...@shaw.ca> Reviewed-by: Ram Pai <linux...@us.ibm.com> Cc: <sta...@vger.kernel.org> Signed-off-by: Takashi Iwai <ti...@suse.de> --- Andrew, could you pick this? It's still in a wild west... Thanks! v1->v2: check in resource_contains() instead of in __find_resource() include/linux/ioport.h | 3 +++ 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+) diff --git a/include/linux/ioport.h b/include/linux/ioport.h index da0ebaec25f0..466d7be046eb 100644 --- a/include/linux/ioport.h +++ b/include/linux/ioport.h @@ -212,6 +212,9 @@ static inline bool resource_contains(struct resource *r1, struct resource *r2) return false; if (r1->flags & IORESOURCE_UNSET || r2->flags & IORESOURCE_UNSET) return false; + /* sanity check whether it's a valid resource range */ + if (r2->end < r2->start) + return false; return r1->start <= r2->start && r1->end >= r2->end; } -- 2.16.3