On Thu, Nov 11, 2021 at 04:55:35PM +0100, Philippe Mathieu-Daudé wrote: > On 11/11/21 16:43, Philippe Mathieu-Daudé wrote: > > On 11/11/21 16:36, Jamie Iles wrote: > >> Hi Philippe, > >> > >> On Thu, Nov 11, 2021 at 03:55:48PM +0100, Philippe Mathieu-Daudé wrote: > >>> Hi Jamie, > >>> > >>> On 11/11/21 15:11, Jamie Iles wrote: > >>>> On Linux, read() will only ever read a maximum of 0x7ffff000 bytes > >>>> regardless of what is asked. If the file is larger than 0x7ffff000 > >>>> bytes the read will need to be broken up into multiple chunks. > >>>> > >>>> Cc: Luc Michel <lmic...@kalray.eu> > >>>> Signed-off-by: Jamie Iles <ja...@nuviainc.com> > >>>> --- > >>>> hw/core/loader.c | 40 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++------ > >>>> 1 file changed, 34 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-) > >>>> > >>>> diff --git a/hw/core/loader.c b/hw/core/loader.c > >>>> index 348bbf535bd9..16ca9b99cf0f 100644 > >>>> --- a/hw/core/loader.c > >>>> +++ b/hw/core/loader.c > >>>> @@ -80,6 +80,34 @@ int64_t get_image_size(const char *filename) > >>>> return size; > >>>> } > >>>> > >>>> +static ssize_t read_large(int fd, void *dst, size_t len) > >>>> +{ > >>>> + /* > >>>> + * man 2 read says: > >>>> + * > >>>> + * On Linux, read() (and similar system calls) will transfer at most > >>>> + * 0x7ffff000 (2,147,479,552) bytes, returning the number of bytes > >>> > >>> Could you mention MAX_RW_COUNT from linux/fs.h? > >>> > >>>> + * actually transferred. (This is true on both 32-bit and 64-bit > >>>> + * systems.) > >>> > >>> Maybe "This is true for both ILP32 and LP64 data models used by Linux"? > >>> (because that would not be the case for the ILP64 model). > >>> > >>> Otherwise s/systems/Linux variants/? > >>> > >>>> + * > >>>> + * So read in chunks no larger than 0x7ffff000 bytes. > >>>> + */ > >>>> + size_t max_chunk_size = 0x7ffff000; > >>> > >>> We can declare it static const. > >> > >> Ack, can fix all of those up. > >> > >>>> + size_t offset = 0; > >>>> + > >>>> + while (offset < len) { > >>>> + size_t chunk_len = MIN(max_chunk_size, len - offset); > >>>> + ssize_t br = read(fd, dst + offset, chunk_len); > >>>> + > >>>> + if (br < 0) { > >>>> + return br; > >>>> + } > >>>> + offset += br; > >>>> + } > >>>> + > >>>> + return (ssize_t)len; > >>>> +} > >>> > >>> I see other read()/pread() calls: > >>> > >>> hw/9pfs/9p-local.c:472: tsize = read(fd, (void *)buf, bufsz); > >>> hw/vfio/common.c:269: if (pread(vbasedev->fd, &buf, size, > >>> region->fd_offset + addr) != size) { > >>> ... > >>> > >>> Maybe the read_large() belongs to "sysemu/os-xxx.h"? > >> > >> I think util/osdep.c would be a good fit for this. To make sure we're > > > > Yes. > > > >> on the same page though are you proposing converting all pread/read > >> calls to a qemu variant or auditing for ones that could potentially take > >> a larger size? > > > > Yes, I took some time wondering beside loading blob in guest memory, > > what would be the other issues you might encounter. I couldn't find > > many cases. Eventually hw/vfio/. I haven't audit much, only noticed > > hw/9pfs/9p-local.c and qga/commands-*.c (not sure if relevant), but > > since we want to fix this, I'd rather try to fix it globally. > > Actually what you suggest is simpler, add qemu_read() / qemu_pread() > in util/osdep.c, convert all uses without caring about any audit.
Okay, this hasn't worked out too badly - I'll do the same for write/pwrite too and then switch all of the callers over with a coccinelle patch so it'll be a fairly large diff but simple. We could elect to keep any calls with a compile-time constant length with the unwrapped variants but I think that's probably more confusing in the long-run. Thanks, Jamie