8ce99bb405
fget_cap() tries to do a cheaper snapshot of a file descriptor without holding the file descriptor lock. This snapshot does not do a deep copy of the ioctls capability array, but instead uses a different return value to inform the caller to retry the copy with the lock held. However, filecaps_copy() was returning 1 to indicate that a retry was required, and fget_cap() was checking for 0 (actually '!filecaps_copy()'). As a result, fget_cap() did not do a deep copy of the ioctls array and just reused the original pointer. This cause multiple file descriptor entries to think they owned the same pointer and eventually resulted in duplicate frees. The only code path that I'm aware of that triggers this is to create a listen socket that has a restricted list of ioctls and then call accept() which calls fget_cap() with a valid filecaps structure from getsock_cap(). To fix, change the return value of filecaps_copy() to return true if it succeeds in copying the caps and false if it fails because the lock is required. I find this more intuitive than fixing the caller in this case. While here, change the return type from 'int' to 'bool'. Finally, make filecaps_copy() more robust in the failure case by not copying any of the source filecaps structure over. This avoids the possibility of leaking a pointer into a structure if a similar future caller doesn't properly handle the return value from filecaps_copy() at the expense of one more branch. I also added a test case that panics before this change and now passes. Reviewed by: kib Discussed with: mjg (not a fan of the extra branch) MFC after: 1 week Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15047 |
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