On Wed, May 03, 2017 at 10:19:44PM -0700, Stephen Hemminger wrote:
>On Wed, 3 May 2017 14:44:35 +1000
>Gavin Shan <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> +static int ethtool_get_ncsi_channels(struct net_device *dev,
>> + void __user *useraddr)
>
>Please don't use an opaque type for this. See how other ethtool
>operations take a struct.
>
After checking output from below command, all other ethtool operations
uses "void __user *" or "char __user *".
git grep static.*useraddr net/core/ethtool.c
>> +{
>> + struct ethtool_ncsi_channels *enc;
>> + short nr_channels;
>Should be __u16 or unsigned not short.
>
Nope, It's for signed number. User expects to get number of available
channels when negative number is passed in. When it's positive, it's
going to get the channels' information.
>> + ssize_t size = 0;
>> + int ret;
>> +
>> + if (!dev->ethtool_ops->get_ncsi_channels)
>> + return -EOPNOTSUPP;
>> +
>> + if (copy_from_user(&nr_channels, useraddr + sizeof(enc->cmd),
>> + sizeof(nr_channels)))
>> + return -EFAULT;
>> +
>> + size = sizeof(*enc);
>> + if (nr_channels > 0)
>> + size += nr_channels * sizeof(enc->id[0]);
>
>You have no upper bound on number of channels, and therefore an incorrectly
>application could grab an excessive amount of kernel memory.
>
Yeah, I'll limit it to 256 in next respin. 256 is the maximal number
of channels for one particular net device.
Cheers,
Gavin