Re: [PATCH 1/3] ext4: avoid potential buffer over-read in parse_apply_sb_mount_options()

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On Thu, Sep 11, 2025 at 03:27:00PM -0700, Darrick J. Wong wrote:
> On Mon, Sep 08, 2025 at 11:15:48PM -0400, Theodore Ts'o via B4 Relay wrote:
> > From: Theodore Ts'o <tytso@xxxxxxx>
> > 
> > Unlike other strings in the ext4 superblock, we rely on tune2fs to
> > make sure s_mount_opts is NUL terminated.  Harden
> > parse_apply_sb_mount_options() by treating s_mount_opts as a potential
> > __nonstring.
> 
> Uh.... does that mean that a filesystem with exactly 64 bytes worth of
> mount option string (and no trailing null) could do something malicious?

Maybe.... I'm surprised syzkaller hasn't managed to create a
maliciously fuzzed file system along these lines.

This was one of the things that I found while I was poking about in
code that I hadn't examined in years.  And I guess the kernel
hardening folks have been looking for strndup() as a deprecated
interface, but apparently they haven't targetted kstrndup() yet.

> My guess is that s_usr_quota_inum mostly saves us, but a nastycrafted
> filesystem with more than 2^24 inodes could cause an out of bounds
> memory access?  But that most likely will just fail the mount option
> parser anyway?

Actually, s_usr_quota_inum won't help, because s_mount_opts is copied
into allocated memory using kstrndup().  So the buffer overrun is
going to be in the allocated memory buffer, and since parse_options()
uses strsep() it could potentially modify an adajacent string/buffer
by replacing ',' and '=' bytes with NUL characters.  I'll leave to
security engineers to see if they can turn it into a usuable exploit,
although I've always said that mounting untrusted file systems isn't a
wise thing for a paranoid system administrator to do/allow, which is
why I'm a big fan of your fuse2fs work.  :-)

						- Ted




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