alistair23-linux/tools/testing/selftests/x86/sigreturn.c
Andy Lutomirski 1ef0199a1a selftests/x86/sigreturn: Use CX, not AX, as the scratch register
RAX is handled specially in ESPFIX64.  Use CX as our scratch
register so that, if something goes wrong with RAX handling, we'll
notice.

Signed-off-by: Andy Lutomirski <luto@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Borislav Petkov <bp@suse.de>
Cc: Borislav Petkov <bp@alien8.de>
Cc: Brian Gerst <brgerst@gmail.com>
Cc: Denys Vlasenko <dvlasenk@redhat.com>
Cc: H. Peter Anvin <hpa@zytor.com>
Cc: Josh Poimboeuf <jpoimboe@redhat.com>
Cc: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
Cc: Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org>
Cc: Shuah Khan <shuahkh@osg.samsung.com>
Cc: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de>
Link: http://lkml.kernel.org/r/9ceeb24ea56925586c330dc46306f757ddea9fb5.1473717910.git.luto@kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Ingo Molnar <mingo@kernel.org>
2016-09-13 20:34:15 +02:00

859 lines
23 KiB
C

/*
* sigreturn.c - tests for x86 sigreturn(2) and exit-to-userspace
* Copyright (c) 2014-2015 Andrew Lutomirski
*
* This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
* it under the terms and conditions of the GNU General Public License,
* version 2, as published by the Free Software Foundation.
*
* This program is distributed in the hope it will be useful, but
* WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
* General Public License for more details.
*
* This is a series of tests that exercises the sigreturn(2) syscall and
* the IRET / SYSRET paths in the kernel.
*
* For now, this focuses on the effects of unusual CS and SS values,
* and it has a bunch of tests to make sure that ESP/RSP is restored
* properly.
*
* The basic idea behind these tests is to raise(SIGUSR1) to create a
* sigcontext frame, plug in the values to be tested, and then return,
* which implicitly invokes sigreturn(2) and programs the user context
* as desired.
*
* For tests for which we expect sigreturn and the subsequent return to
* user mode to succeed, we return to a short trampoline that generates
* SIGTRAP so that the meat of the tests can be ordinary C code in a
* SIGTRAP handler.
*
* The inner workings of each test is documented below.
*
* Do not run on outdated, unpatched kernels at risk of nasty crashes.
*/
#define _GNU_SOURCE
#include <sys/time.h>
#include <time.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <sys/syscall.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <inttypes.h>
#include <sys/mman.h>
#include <sys/signal.h>
#include <sys/ucontext.h>
#include <asm/ldt.h>
#include <err.h>
#include <setjmp.h>
#include <stddef.h>
#include <stdbool.h>
#include <sys/ptrace.h>
#include <sys/user.h>
/* Pull in AR_xyz defines. */
typedef unsigned int u32;
typedef unsigned short u16;
#include "../../../../arch/x86/include/asm/desc_defs.h"
/*
* Copied from asm/ucontext.h, as asm/ucontext.h conflicts badly with the glibc
* headers.
*/
#ifdef __x86_64__
/*
* UC_SIGCONTEXT_SS will be set when delivering 64-bit or x32 signals on
* kernels that save SS in the sigcontext. All kernels that set
* UC_SIGCONTEXT_SS will correctly restore at least the low 32 bits of esp
* regardless of SS (i.e. they implement espfix).
*
* Kernels that set UC_SIGCONTEXT_SS will also set UC_STRICT_RESTORE_SS
* when delivering a signal that came from 64-bit code.
*
* Sigreturn restores SS as follows:
*
* if (saved SS is valid || UC_STRICT_RESTORE_SS is set ||
* saved CS is not 64-bit)
* new SS = saved SS (will fail IRET and signal if invalid)
* else
* new SS = a flat 32-bit data segment
*/
#define UC_SIGCONTEXT_SS 0x2
#define UC_STRICT_RESTORE_SS 0x4
#endif
/*
* In principle, this test can run on Linux emulation layers (e.g.
* Illumos "LX branded zones"). Solaris-based kernels reserve LDT
* entries 0-5 for their own internal purposes, so start our LDT
* allocations above that reservation. (The tests don't pass on LX
* branded zones, but at least this lets them run.)
*/
#define LDT_OFFSET 6
/* An aligned stack accessible through some of our segments. */
static unsigned char stack16[65536] __attribute__((aligned(4096)));
/*
* An aligned int3 instruction used as a trampoline. Some of the tests
* want to fish out their ss values, so this trampoline copies ss to eax
* before the int3.
*/
asm (".pushsection .text\n\t"
".type int3, @function\n\t"
".align 4096\n\t"
"int3:\n\t"
"mov %ss,%ecx\n\t"
"int3\n\t"
".size int3, . - int3\n\t"
".align 4096, 0xcc\n\t"
".popsection");
extern char int3[4096];
/*
* At startup, we prepapre:
*
* - ldt_nonexistent_sel: An LDT entry that doesn't exist (all-zero
* descriptor or out of bounds).
* - code16_sel: A 16-bit LDT code segment pointing to int3.
* - data16_sel: A 16-bit LDT data segment pointing to stack16.
* - npcode32_sel: A 32-bit not-present LDT code segment pointing to int3.
* - npdata32_sel: A 32-bit not-present LDT data segment pointing to stack16.
* - gdt_data16_idx: A 16-bit GDT data segment pointing to stack16.
* - gdt_npdata32_idx: A 32-bit not-present GDT data segment pointing to
* stack16.
*
* For no particularly good reason, xyz_sel is a selector value with the
* RPL and LDT bits filled in, whereas xyz_idx is just an index into the
* descriptor table. These variables will be zero if their respective
* segments could not be allocated.
*/
static unsigned short ldt_nonexistent_sel;
static unsigned short code16_sel, data16_sel, npcode32_sel, npdata32_sel;
static unsigned short gdt_data16_idx, gdt_npdata32_idx;
static unsigned short GDT3(int idx)
{
return (idx << 3) | 3;
}
static unsigned short LDT3(int idx)
{
return (idx << 3) | 7;
}
/* Our sigaltstack scratch space. */
static char altstack_data[SIGSTKSZ];
static void sethandler(int sig, void (*handler)(int, siginfo_t *, void *),
int flags)
{
struct sigaction sa;
memset(&sa, 0, sizeof(sa));
sa.sa_sigaction = handler;
sa.sa_flags = SA_SIGINFO | flags;
sigemptyset(&sa.sa_mask);
if (sigaction(sig, &sa, 0))
err(1, "sigaction");
}
static void clearhandler(int sig)
{
struct sigaction sa;
memset(&sa, 0, sizeof(sa));
sa.sa_handler = SIG_DFL;
sigemptyset(&sa.sa_mask);
if (sigaction(sig, &sa, 0))
err(1, "sigaction");
}
static void add_ldt(const struct user_desc *desc, unsigned short *var,
const char *name)
{
if (syscall(SYS_modify_ldt, 1, desc, sizeof(*desc)) == 0) {
*var = LDT3(desc->entry_number);
} else {
printf("[NOTE]\tFailed to create %s segment\n", name);
*var = 0;
}
}
static void setup_ldt(void)
{
if ((unsigned long)stack16 > (1ULL << 32) - sizeof(stack16))
errx(1, "stack16 is too high\n");
if ((unsigned long)int3 > (1ULL << 32) - sizeof(int3))
errx(1, "int3 is too high\n");
ldt_nonexistent_sel = LDT3(LDT_OFFSET + 2);
const struct user_desc code16_desc = {
.entry_number = LDT_OFFSET + 0,
.base_addr = (unsigned long)int3,
.limit = 4095,
.seg_32bit = 0,
.contents = 2, /* Code, not conforming */
.read_exec_only = 0,
.limit_in_pages = 0,
.seg_not_present = 0,
.useable = 0
};
add_ldt(&code16_desc, &code16_sel, "code16");
const struct user_desc data16_desc = {
.entry_number = LDT_OFFSET + 1,
.base_addr = (unsigned long)stack16,
.limit = 0xffff,
.seg_32bit = 0,
.contents = 0, /* Data, grow-up */
.read_exec_only = 0,
.limit_in_pages = 0,
.seg_not_present = 0,
.useable = 0
};
add_ldt(&data16_desc, &data16_sel, "data16");
const struct user_desc npcode32_desc = {
.entry_number = LDT_OFFSET + 3,
.base_addr = (unsigned long)int3,
.limit = 4095,
.seg_32bit = 1,
.contents = 2, /* Code, not conforming */
.read_exec_only = 0,
.limit_in_pages = 0,
.seg_not_present = 1,
.useable = 0
};
add_ldt(&npcode32_desc, &npcode32_sel, "npcode32");
const struct user_desc npdata32_desc = {
.entry_number = LDT_OFFSET + 4,
.base_addr = (unsigned long)stack16,
.limit = 0xffff,
.seg_32bit = 1,
.contents = 0, /* Data, grow-up */
.read_exec_only = 0,
.limit_in_pages = 0,
.seg_not_present = 1,
.useable = 0
};
add_ldt(&npdata32_desc, &npdata32_sel, "npdata32");
struct user_desc gdt_data16_desc = {
.entry_number = -1,
.base_addr = (unsigned long)stack16,
.limit = 0xffff,
.seg_32bit = 0,
.contents = 0, /* Data, grow-up */
.read_exec_only = 0,
.limit_in_pages = 0,
.seg_not_present = 0,
.useable = 0
};
if (syscall(SYS_set_thread_area, &gdt_data16_desc) == 0) {
/*
* This probably indicates vulnerability to CVE-2014-8133.
* Merely getting here isn't definitive, though, and we'll
* diagnose the problem for real later on.
*/
printf("[WARN]\tset_thread_area allocated data16 at index %d\n",
gdt_data16_desc.entry_number);
gdt_data16_idx = gdt_data16_desc.entry_number;
} else {
printf("[OK]\tset_thread_area refused 16-bit data\n");
}
struct user_desc gdt_npdata32_desc = {
.entry_number = -1,
.base_addr = (unsigned long)stack16,
.limit = 0xffff,
.seg_32bit = 1,
.contents = 0, /* Data, grow-up */
.read_exec_only = 0,
.limit_in_pages = 0,
.seg_not_present = 1,
.useable = 0
};
if (syscall(SYS_set_thread_area, &gdt_npdata32_desc) == 0) {
/*
* As a hardening measure, newer kernels don't allow this.
*/
printf("[WARN]\tset_thread_area allocated npdata32 at index %d\n",
gdt_npdata32_desc.entry_number);
gdt_npdata32_idx = gdt_npdata32_desc.entry_number;
} else {
printf("[OK]\tset_thread_area refused 16-bit data\n");
}
}
/* State used by our signal handlers. */
static gregset_t initial_regs, requested_regs, resulting_regs;
/* Instructions for the SIGUSR1 handler. */
static volatile unsigned short sig_cs, sig_ss;
static volatile sig_atomic_t sig_trapped, sig_err, sig_trapno;
#ifdef __x86_64__
static volatile sig_atomic_t sig_corrupt_final_ss;
#endif
/* Abstractions for some 32-bit vs 64-bit differences. */
#ifdef __x86_64__
# define REG_IP REG_RIP
# define REG_SP REG_RSP
# define REG_CX REG_RCX
struct selectors {
unsigned short cs, gs, fs, ss;
};
static unsigned short *ssptr(ucontext_t *ctx)
{
struct selectors *sels = (void *)&ctx->uc_mcontext.gregs[REG_CSGSFS];
return &sels->ss;
}
static unsigned short *csptr(ucontext_t *ctx)
{
struct selectors *sels = (void *)&ctx->uc_mcontext.gregs[REG_CSGSFS];
return &sels->cs;
}
#else
# define REG_IP REG_EIP
# define REG_SP REG_ESP
# define REG_CX REG_ECX
static greg_t *ssptr(ucontext_t *ctx)
{
return &ctx->uc_mcontext.gregs[REG_SS];
}
static greg_t *csptr(ucontext_t *ctx)
{
return &ctx->uc_mcontext.gregs[REG_CS];
}
#endif
/*
* Checks a given selector for its code bitness or returns -1 if it's not
* a usable code segment selector.
*/
int cs_bitness(unsigned short cs)
{
uint32_t valid = 0, ar;
asm ("lar %[cs], %[ar]\n\t"
"jnz 1f\n\t"
"mov $1, %[valid]\n\t"
"1:"
: [ar] "=r" (ar), [valid] "+rm" (valid)
: [cs] "r" (cs));
if (!valid)
return -1;
bool db = (ar & (1 << 22));
bool l = (ar & (1 << 21));
if (!(ar & (1<<11)))
return -1; /* Not code. */
if (l && !db)
return 64;
else if (!l && db)
return 32;
else if (!l && !db)
return 16;
else
return -1; /* Unknown bitness. */
}
/*
* Checks a given selector for its code bitness or returns -1 if it's not
* a usable code segment selector.
*/
bool is_valid_ss(unsigned short cs)
{
uint32_t valid = 0, ar;
asm ("lar %[cs], %[ar]\n\t"
"jnz 1f\n\t"
"mov $1, %[valid]\n\t"
"1:"
: [ar] "=r" (ar), [valid] "+rm" (valid)
: [cs] "r" (cs));
if (!valid)
return false;
if ((ar & AR_TYPE_MASK) != AR_TYPE_RWDATA &&
(ar & AR_TYPE_MASK) != AR_TYPE_RWDATA_EXPDOWN)
return false;
return (ar & AR_P);
}
/* Number of errors in the current test case. */
static volatile sig_atomic_t nerrs;
static void validate_signal_ss(int sig, ucontext_t *ctx)
{
#ifdef __x86_64__
bool was_64bit = (cs_bitness(*csptr(ctx)) == 64);
if (!(ctx->uc_flags & UC_SIGCONTEXT_SS)) {
printf("[FAIL]\tUC_SIGCONTEXT_SS was not set\n");
nerrs++;
/*
* This happens on Linux 4.1. The rest will fail, too, so
* return now to reduce the noise.
*/
return;
}
/* UC_STRICT_RESTORE_SS is set iff we came from 64-bit mode. */
if (!!(ctx->uc_flags & UC_STRICT_RESTORE_SS) != was_64bit) {
printf("[FAIL]\tUC_STRICT_RESTORE_SS was wrong in signal %d\n",
sig);
nerrs++;
}
if (is_valid_ss(*ssptr(ctx))) {
/*
* DOSEMU was written before 64-bit sigcontext had SS, and
* it tries to figure out the signal source SS by looking at
* the physical register. Make sure that keeps working.
*/
unsigned short hw_ss;
asm ("mov %%ss, %0" : "=rm" (hw_ss));
if (hw_ss != *ssptr(ctx)) {
printf("[FAIL]\tHW SS didn't match saved SS\n");
nerrs++;
}
}
#endif
}
/*
* SIGUSR1 handler. Sets CS and SS as requested and points IP to the
* int3 trampoline. Sets SP to a large known value so that we can see
* whether the value round-trips back to user mode correctly.
*/
static void sigusr1(int sig, siginfo_t *info, void *ctx_void)
{
ucontext_t *ctx = (ucontext_t*)ctx_void;
validate_signal_ss(sig, ctx);
memcpy(&initial_regs, &ctx->uc_mcontext.gregs, sizeof(gregset_t));
*csptr(ctx) = sig_cs;
*ssptr(ctx) = sig_ss;
ctx->uc_mcontext.gregs[REG_IP] =
sig_cs == code16_sel ? 0 : (unsigned long)&int3;
ctx->uc_mcontext.gregs[REG_SP] = (unsigned long)0x8badf00d5aadc0deULL;
ctx->uc_mcontext.gregs[REG_CX] = 0;
memcpy(&requested_regs, &ctx->uc_mcontext.gregs, sizeof(gregset_t));
requested_regs[REG_CX] = *ssptr(ctx); /* The asm code does this. */
return;
}
/*
* Called after a successful sigreturn (via int3) or from a failed
* sigreturn (directly by kernel). Restores our state so that the
* original raise(SIGUSR1) returns.
*/
static void sigtrap(int sig, siginfo_t *info, void *ctx_void)
{
ucontext_t *ctx = (ucontext_t*)ctx_void;
validate_signal_ss(sig, ctx);
sig_err = ctx->uc_mcontext.gregs[REG_ERR];
sig_trapno = ctx->uc_mcontext.gregs[REG_TRAPNO];
unsigned short ss;
asm ("mov %%ss,%0" : "=r" (ss));
greg_t asm_ss = ctx->uc_mcontext.gregs[REG_CX];
if (asm_ss != sig_ss && sig == SIGTRAP) {
/* Sanity check failure. */
printf("[FAIL]\tSIGTRAP: ss = %hx, frame ss = %hx, ax = %llx\n",
ss, *ssptr(ctx), (unsigned long long)asm_ss);
nerrs++;
}
memcpy(&resulting_regs, &ctx->uc_mcontext.gregs, sizeof(gregset_t));
memcpy(&ctx->uc_mcontext.gregs, &initial_regs, sizeof(gregset_t));
#ifdef __x86_64__
if (sig_corrupt_final_ss) {
if (ctx->uc_flags & UC_STRICT_RESTORE_SS) {
printf("[FAIL]\tUC_STRICT_RESTORE_SS was set inappropriately\n");
nerrs++;
} else {
/*
* DOSEMU transitions from 32-bit to 64-bit mode by
* adjusting sigcontext, and it requires that this work
* even if the saved SS is bogus.
*/
printf("\tCorrupting SS on return to 64-bit mode\n");
*ssptr(ctx) = 0;
}
}
#endif
sig_trapped = sig;
}
#ifdef __x86_64__
/* Tests recovery if !UC_STRICT_RESTORE_SS */
static void sigusr2(int sig, siginfo_t *info, void *ctx_void)
{
ucontext_t *ctx = (ucontext_t*)ctx_void;
if (!(ctx->uc_flags & UC_STRICT_RESTORE_SS)) {
printf("[FAIL]\traise(2) didn't set UC_STRICT_RESTORE_SS\n");
nerrs++;
return; /* We can't do the rest. */
}
ctx->uc_flags &= ~UC_STRICT_RESTORE_SS;
*ssptr(ctx) = 0;
/* Return. The kernel should recover without sending another signal. */
}
static int test_nonstrict_ss(void)
{
clearhandler(SIGUSR1);
clearhandler(SIGTRAP);
clearhandler(SIGSEGV);
clearhandler(SIGILL);
sethandler(SIGUSR2, sigusr2, 0);
nerrs = 0;
printf("[RUN]\tClear UC_STRICT_RESTORE_SS and corrupt SS\n");
raise(SIGUSR2);
if (!nerrs)
printf("[OK]\tIt worked\n");
return nerrs;
}
#endif
/* Finds a usable code segment of the requested bitness. */
int find_cs(int bitness)
{
unsigned short my_cs;
asm ("mov %%cs,%0" : "=r" (my_cs));
if (cs_bitness(my_cs) == bitness)
return my_cs;
if (cs_bitness(my_cs + (2 << 3)) == bitness)
return my_cs + (2 << 3);
if (my_cs > (2<<3) && cs_bitness(my_cs - (2 << 3)) == bitness)
return my_cs - (2 << 3);
if (cs_bitness(code16_sel) == bitness)
return code16_sel;
printf("[WARN]\tCould not find %d-bit CS\n", bitness);
return -1;
}
static int test_valid_sigreturn(int cs_bits, bool use_16bit_ss, int force_ss)
{
int cs = find_cs(cs_bits);
if (cs == -1) {
printf("[SKIP]\tCode segment unavailable for %d-bit CS, %d-bit SS\n",
cs_bits, use_16bit_ss ? 16 : 32);
return 0;
}
if (force_ss != -1) {
sig_ss = force_ss;
} else {
if (use_16bit_ss) {
if (!data16_sel) {
printf("[SKIP]\tData segment unavailable for %d-bit CS, 16-bit SS\n",
cs_bits);
return 0;
}
sig_ss = data16_sel;
} else {
asm volatile ("mov %%ss,%0" : "=r" (sig_ss));
}
}
sig_cs = cs;
printf("[RUN]\tValid sigreturn: %d-bit CS (%hx), %d-bit SS (%hx%s)\n",
cs_bits, sig_cs, use_16bit_ss ? 16 : 32, sig_ss,
(sig_ss & 4) ? "" : ", GDT");
raise(SIGUSR1);
nerrs = 0;
/*
* Check that each register had an acceptable value when the
* int3 trampoline was invoked.
*/
for (int i = 0; i < NGREG; i++) {
greg_t req = requested_regs[i], res = resulting_regs[i];
if (i == REG_TRAPNO || i == REG_IP)
continue; /* don't care */
if (i == REG_SP) {
printf("\tSP: %llx -> %llx\n", (unsigned long long)req,
(unsigned long long)res);
/*
* In many circumstances, the high 32 bits of rsp
* are zeroed. For example, we could be a real
* 32-bit program, or we could hit any of a number
* of poorly-documented IRET or segmented ESP
* oddities. If this happens, it's okay.
*/
if (res == (req & 0xFFFFFFFF))
continue; /* OK; not expected to work */
}
bool ignore_reg = false;
#if __i386__
if (i == REG_UESP)
ignore_reg = true;
#else
if (i == REG_CSGSFS) {
struct selectors *req_sels =
(void *)&requested_regs[REG_CSGSFS];
struct selectors *res_sels =
(void *)&resulting_regs[REG_CSGSFS];
if (req_sels->cs != res_sels->cs) {
printf("[FAIL]\tCS mismatch: requested 0x%hx; got 0x%hx\n",
req_sels->cs, res_sels->cs);
nerrs++;
}
if (req_sels->ss != res_sels->ss) {
printf("[FAIL]\tSS mismatch: requested 0x%hx; got 0x%hx\n",
req_sels->ss, res_sels->ss);
nerrs++;
}
continue;
}
#endif
/* Sanity check on the kernel */
if (i == REG_CX && requested_regs[i] != resulting_regs[i]) {
printf("[FAIL]\tCX (saved SP) mismatch: requested 0x%llx; got 0x%llx\n",
(unsigned long long)requested_regs[i],
(unsigned long long)resulting_regs[i]);
nerrs++;
continue;
}
if (requested_regs[i] != resulting_regs[i] && !ignore_reg) {
/*
* SP is particularly interesting here. The
* usual cause of failures is that we hit the
* nasty IRET case of returning to a 16-bit SS,
* in which case bits 16:31 of the *kernel*
* stack pointer persist in ESP.
*/
printf("[FAIL]\tReg %d mismatch: requested 0x%llx; got 0x%llx\n",
i, (unsigned long long)requested_regs[i],
(unsigned long long)resulting_regs[i]);
nerrs++;
}
}
if (nerrs == 0)
printf("[OK]\tall registers okay\n");
return nerrs;
}
static int test_bad_iret(int cs_bits, unsigned short ss, int force_cs)
{
int cs = force_cs == -1 ? find_cs(cs_bits) : force_cs;
if (cs == -1)
return 0;
sig_cs = cs;
sig_ss = ss;
printf("[RUN]\t%d-bit CS (%hx), bogus SS (%hx)\n",
cs_bits, sig_cs, sig_ss);
sig_trapped = 0;
raise(SIGUSR1);
if (sig_trapped) {
char errdesc[32] = "";
if (sig_err) {
const char *src = (sig_err & 1) ? " EXT" : "";
const char *table;
if ((sig_err & 0x6) == 0x0)
table = "GDT";
else if ((sig_err & 0x6) == 0x4)
table = "LDT";
else if ((sig_err & 0x6) == 0x2)
table = "IDT";
else
table = "???";
sprintf(errdesc, "%s%s index %d, ",
table, src, sig_err >> 3);
}
char trapname[32];
if (sig_trapno == 13)
strcpy(trapname, "GP");
else if (sig_trapno == 11)
strcpy(trapname, "NP");
else if (sig_trapno == 12)
strcpy(trapname, "SS");
else if (sig_trapno == 32)
strcpy(trapname, "IRET"); /* X86_TRAP_IRET */
else
sprintf(trapname, "%d", sig_trapno);
printf("[OK]\tGot #%s(0x%lx) (i.e. %s%s)\n",
trapname, (unsigned long)sig_err,
errdesc, strsignal(sig_trapped));
return 0;
} else {
/*
* This also implicitly tests UC_STRICT_RESTORE_SS:
* We check that these signals set UC_STRICT_RESTORE_SS and,
* if UC_STRICT_RESTORE_SS doesn't cause strict behavior,
* then we won't get SIGSEGV.
*/
printf("[FAIL]\tDid not get SIGSEGV\n");
return 1;
}
}
int main()
{
int total_nerrs = 0;
unsigned short my_cs, my_ss;
asm volatile ("mov %%cs,%0" : "=r" (my_cs));
asm volatile ("mov %%ss,%0" : "=r" (my_ss));
setup_ldt();
stack_t stack = {
.ss_sp = altstack_data,
.ss_size = SIGSTKSZ,
};
if (sigaltstack(&stack, NULL) != 0)
err(1, "sigaltstack");
sethandler(SIGUSR1, sigusr1, 0);
sethandler(SIGTRAP, sigtrap, SA_ONSTACK);
/* Easy cases: return to a 32-bit SS in each possible CS bitness. */
total_nerrs += test_valid_sigreturn(64, false, -1);
total_nerrs += test_valid_sigreturn(32, false, -1);
total_nerrs += test_valid_sigreturn(16, false, -1);
/*
* Test easy espfix cases: return to a 16-bit LDT SS in each possible
* CS bitness. NB: with a long mode CS, the SS bitness is irrelevant.
*
* This catches the original missing-espfix-on-64-bit-kernels issue
* as well as CVE-2014-8134.
*/
total_nerrs += test_valid_sigreturn(64, true, -1);
total_nerrs += test_valid_sigreturn(32, true, -1);
total_nerrs += test_valid_sigreturn(16, true, -1);
if (gdt_data16_idx) {
/*
* For performance reasons, Linux skips espfix if SS points
* to the GDT. If we were able to allocate a 16-bit SS in
* the GDT, see if it leaks parts of the kernel stack pointer.
*
* This tests for CVE-2014-8133.
*/
total_nerrs += test_valid_sigreturn(64, true,
GDT3(gdt_data16_idx));
total_nerrs += test_valid_sigreturn(32, true,
GDT3(gdt_data16_idx));
total_nerrs += test_valid_sigreturn(16, true,
GDT3(gdt_data16_idx));
}
#ifdef __x86_64__
/* Nasty ABI case: check SS corruption handling. */
sig_corrupt_final_ss = 1;
total_nerrs += test_valid_sigreturn(32, false, -1);
total_nerrs += test_valid_sigreturn(32, true, -1);
sig_corrupt_final_ss = 0;
#endif
/*
* We're done testing valid sigreturn cases. Now we test states
* for which sigreturn itself will succeed but the subsequent
* entry to user mode will fail.
*
* Depending on the failure mode and the kernel bitness, these
* entry failures can generate SIGSEGV, SIGBUS, or SIGILL.
*/
clearhandler(SIGTRAP);
sethandler(SIGSEGV, sigtrap, SA_ONSTACK);
sethandler(SIGBUS, sigtrap, SA_ONSTACK);
sethandler(SIGILL, sigtrap, SA_ONSTACK); /* 32-bit kernels do this */
/* Easy failures: invalid SS, resulting in #GP(0) */
test_bad_iret(64, ldt_nonexistent_sel, -1);
test_bad_iret(32, ldt_nonexistent_sel, -1);
test_bad_iret(16, ldt_nonexistent_sel, -1);
/* These fail because SS isn't a data segment, resulting in #GP(SS) */
test_bad_iret(64, my_cs, -1);
test_bad_iret(32, my_cs, -1);
test_bad_iret(16, my_cs, -1);
/* Try to return to a not-present code segment, triggering #NP(SS). */
test_bad_iret(32, my_ss, npcode32_sel);
/*
* Try to return to a not-present but otherwise valid data segment.
* This will cause IRET to fail with #SS on the espfix stack. This
* exercises CVE-2014-9322.
*
* Note that, if espfix is enabled, 64-bit Linux will lose track
* of the actual cause of failure and report #GP(0) instead.
* This would be very difficult for Linux to avoid, because
* espfix64 causes IRET failures to be promoted to #DF, so the
* original exception frame is never pushed onto the stack.
*/
test_bad_iret(32, npdata32_sel, -1);
/*
* Try to return to a not-present but otherwise valid data
* segment without invoking espfix. Newer kernels don't allow
* this to happen in the first place. On older kernels, though,
* this can trigger CVE-2014-9322.
*/
if (gdt_npdata32_idx)
test_bad_iret(32, GDT3(gdt_npdata32_idx), -1);
#ifdef __x86_64__
total_nerrs += test_nonstrict_ss();
#endif
return total_nerrs ? 1 : 0;
}