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


From: Jason A. Donenfeld
Subject: Re: [PATCH qemu] x86: don't let decompressed kernel image clobber setup_data
Date: Fri, 30 Dec 2022 16:59:30 +0100

Hi,

On Wed, Dec 28, 2022 at 11:31:34PM -0800, H. Peter Anvin wrote:
> 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
> 
> As far as a crash... that sounds like a big and a pretty serious one at that.
> 
> Could you let me know what kernel you are using and how *exactly* you are 
> booting it?

I'll attach a .config file. Apply the patch at the top of this thread to
qemu, except make one modification:

diff --git a/hw/i386/x86.c b/hw/i386/x86.c
index 628fd2b2e9..a61ee23e13 100644
--- a/hw/i386/x86.c
+++ b/hw/i386/x86.c
@@ -1097,7 +1097,7 @@ void x86_load_linux(X86MachineState *x86ms,
 
             /* The early stage can't address past around 64 MB from the 
original
              * mapping, so just give up in that case. */
-            if (padded_size < 62 * 1024 * 1024)
+            if (true || padded_size < 62 * 1024 * 1024)
                 kernel_size = padded_size;
             else {
                 fprintf(stderr, "qemu: Kernel image too large to hold 
setup_data\n");

Then build qemu. Run it with `-kernel bzImage`, based on the kernel
built with the .config I attached.

You'll see that the CPU triple faults when hitting this line:

        sd = (struct setup_data *)boot_params->hdr.setup_data;
        while (sd) {
                unsigned long sd_addr = (unsigned long)sd;

                kernel_add_identity_map(sd_addr, sd_addr + sizeof(*sd) + 
sd->len);  <----
                sd = (struct setup_data *)sd->next;
        }

, because it dereferences *sd. This does not happen if the decompressed
size of the kernel is < 62 megs.

So that's the "big and pretty serious" bug that might be worthy of
investigation.

Jason



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