Re: [PATCH net-next v2] vsock/test: Add test for null ptr deref when transport changes

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Hi Michal,

On Wed, Mar 19, 2025 at 01:27:35AM +0100, Michal Luczaj wrote:
On 3/14/25 10:27, Luigi Leonardi wrote:
Add a new test to ensure that when the transport changes a null pointer
dereference does not occur[1].

Note that this test does not fail, but it may hang on the client side if
it triggers a kernel oops.

This works by creating a socket, trying to connect to a server, and then
executing a second connect operation on the same socket but to a
different CID (0). This triggers a transport change. If the connect
operation is interrupted by a signal, this could cause a null-ptr-deref.

Just to be clear: that's the splat, right?

Oops: general protection fault, probably for non-canonical address 0xdffffc000000000c: 0000 [#1] PREEMPT SMP KASAN NOPTI
KASAN: null-ptr-deref in range [0x0000000000000060-0x0000000000000067]
CPU: 2 UID: 0 PID: 463 Comm: kworker/2:3 Not tainted
Workqueue: vsock-loopback vsock_loopback_work
RIP: 0010:vsock_stream_has_data+0x44/0x70
Call Trace:
virtio_transport_do_close+0x68/0x1a0
virtio_transport_recv_pkt+0x1045/0x2ae4
vsock_loopback_work+0x27d/0x3f0
process_one_work+0x846/0x1420
worker_thread+0x5b3/0xf80
kthread+0x35a/0x700
ret_from_fork+0x2d/0x70
ret_from_fork_asm+0x1a/0x30


Yep! I'll add it to the commit message in v3.
...
+static void test_stream_transport_change_client(const struct test_opts *opts)
+{
+	__sighandler_t old_handler;
+	pid_t pid = getpid();
+	pthread_t thread_id;
+	time_t tout;
+
+	old_handler = signal(SIGUSR1, test_transport_change_signal_handler);
+	if (old_handler == SIG_ERR) {
+		perror("signal");
+		exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
+	}
+
+	if (pthread_create(&thread_id, NULL, test_stream_transport_change_thread, &pid)) {
+		perror("pthread_create");

Does pthread_create() set errno on failure?
It does not, very good catch!

+		exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
+	}
+
+	tout = current_nsec() + TIMEOUT * NSEC_PER_SEC;

Isn't 10 seconds a bit excessive? I see the oops pretty much immediately.
Yeah it's probably excessive. I used because it's the default timeout value.

+	do {
+		struct sockaddr_vm sa = {
+			.svm_family = AF_VSOCK,
+			.svm_cid = opts->peer_cid,
+			.svm_port = opts->peer_port,
+		};
+		int s;
+
+		s = socket(AF_VSOCK, SOCK_STREAM, 0);
+		if (s < 0) {
+			perror("socket");
+			exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
+		}
+
+		connect(s, (struct sockaddr *)&sa, sizeof(sa));
+
+		/* Set CID to 0 cause a transport change. */
+		sa.svm_cid = 0;
+		connect(s, (struct sockaddr *)&sa, sizeof(sa));
+
+		close(s);
+	} while (current_nsec() < tout);
+
+	if (pthread_cancel(thread_id)) {
+		perror("pthread_cancel");

And errno here.

+		exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
+	}
+
+	/* Wait for the thread to terminate */
+	if (pthread_join(thread_id, NULL)) {
+		perror("pthread_join");

And here.
Aaand I've realized I've made exactly the same mistake elsewhere :)

...
+static void test_stream_transport_change_server(const struct test_opts *opts)
+{
+	time_t tout = current_nsec() + TIMEOUT * NSEC_PER_SEC;
+
+	do {
+		int s = vsock_stream_listen(VMADDR_CID_ANY, opts->peer_port);
+
+		close(s);
+	} while (current_nsec() < tout);
+}

I'm not certain you need to re-create the listener or measure the time
here. What about something like

	int s = vsock_stream_listen(VMADDR_CID_ANY, opts->peer_port);
	control_expectln("DONE");
	close(s);

Just tried and it triggers the oops :)

Thanks,
Michal


Thanks for the review!

Luigi





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