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Re: [PATCH qemu] x86: don't let decompressed kernel image clobber setup_


From: H. Peter Anvin
Subject: Re: [PATCH qemu] x86: don't let decompressed kernel image clobber setup_data
Date: Wed, 28 Dec 2022 23:30:39 -0800
User-agent: K-9 Mail for Android

On December 28, 2022 6:31:07 PM PST, "Jason A. Donenfeld" <Jason@zx2c4.com> 
wrote:
>Hi,
>
>Read this message in a fixed width text editor with a lot of columns.
>
>On Wed, Dec 28, 2022 at 03:58:12PM -0800, H. Peter Anvin wrote:
>> Glad you asked.
>> 
>> So the kernel load addresses are parameterized in the kernel image
>> setup header. One of the things that are so parameterized are the size
>> and possible realignment of the kernel image in memory.
>> 
>> I'm very confused where you are getting the 64 MB number from. There
>> should not be any such limitation.
>
>Currently, QEMU appends it to the kernel image, not to the initramfs as
>you suggest below. So, that winds up looking, currently, like:
>
>          kernel image            setup_data
>   |--------------------------||----------------|
>0x100000                  0x100000+l1     0x100000+l1+l2
>
>The problem is that this decompresses to 0x1000000 (one more zero). So
>if l1 is > (0x1000000-0x100000), then this winds up looking like:
>
>          kernel image            setup_data
>   |--------------------------||----------------|
>0x100000                  0x100000+l1     0x100000+l1+l2
>
>                                 d e c o m p r e s s e d   k e r n e l
>                    
> |-------------------------------------------------------------|
>                0x1000000                                                     
> 0x1000000+l3 
>
>The decompressed kernel seemingly overwriting the compressed kernel
>image isn't a problem, because that gets relocated to a higher address
>early on in the boot process. setup_data, however, stays in the same
>place, since those links are self referential and nothing fixes them up.
>So the decompressed kernel clobbers it.
>
>The solution in this commit adds a bunch of padding between the kernel
>image and setup_data to avoid this. That looks like this:
>
>          kernel image                            padding                      
>          setup_data
>   
> |--------------------------||---------------------------------------------------||----------------|
>0x100000                  0x100000+l1                                         
>0x1000000+l3      0x1000000+l3+l2
>
>                                 d e c o m p r e s s e d   k e r n e l
>                    
> |-------------------------------------------------------------|
>                0x1000000                                                     
> 0x1000000+l3 
>
>This way, the decompressed kernel doesn't clobber setup_data.
>
>The problem is that if 0x1000000+l3-0x100000 is around 62 megabytes,
>then the bootloader crashes when trying to dereference setup_data's
>->len param at the end of initialize_identity_maps() in ident_map_64.c.
>I don't know why it does this. If I could remove the 62 megabyte
>restriction, then I could keep with this technique and all would be
>well.
>
>> In general, setup_data should be able to go anywhere the initrd can
>> go, and so is subject to the same address cap (896 MB for old kernels,
>> 4 GB on newer ones; this address too is enumerated in the header.)
>
>It would be theoretically possible to attach it to the initrd image
>instead of to the kernel image. As a last resort, I guess I can look
>into doing that. However, that's going to require some serious rework
>and plumbing of a lot of different components. So if I can make it work
>as is, that'd be ideal. However, I need to figure out this weird 62 meg
>limitation.
>
>Any ideas on that?
>
>Jason

Ok, the code I sent will figure out the minimum amount of padding that you need 
(min_initrd_addr) as well.



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