xref: /openbmc/linux/kernel/module/dups.c (revision 22b6e7f3)
1 /* SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-or-later */
2 /*
3  * kmod dups - the kernel module autoloader duplicate suppressor
4  *
5  * Copyright (C) 2023 Luis Chamberlain <mcgrof@kernel.org>
6  */
7 
8 #define pr_fmt(fmt)     "module: " fmt
9 
10 #include <linux/module.h>
11 #include <linux/sched.h>
12 #include <linux/sched/task.h>
13 #include <linux/binfmts.h>
14 #include <linux/syscalls.h>
15 #include <linux/unistd.h>
16 #include <linux/kmod.h>
17 #include <linux/slab.h>
18 #include <linux/completion.h>
19 #include <linux/cred.h>
20 #include <linux/file.h>
21 #include <linux/fdtable.h>
22 #include <linux/workqueue.h>
23 #include <linux/security.h>
24 #include <linux/mount.h>
25 #include <linux/kernel.h>
26 #include <linux/init.h>
27 #include <linux/resource.h>
28 #include <linux/notifier.h>
29 #include <linux/suspend.h>
30 #include <linux/rwsem.h>
31 #include <linux/ptrace.h>
32 #include <linux/async.h>
33 #include <linux/uaccess.h>
34 
35 #include "internal.h"
36 
37 #undef MODULE_PARAM_PREFIX
38 #define MODULE_PARAM_PREFIX "module."
39 static bool enable_dups_trace = IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_MODULE_DEBUG_AUTOLOAD_DUPS_TRACE);
40 module_param(enable_dups_trace, bool_enable_only, 0644);
41 
42 /*
43  * Protects dup_kmod_reqs list, adds / removals with RCU.
44  */
45 static DEFINE_MUTEX(kmod_dup_mutex);
46 static LIST_HEAD(dup_kmod_reqs);
47 
48 struct kmod_dup_req {
49 	struct list_head list;
50 	char name[MODULE_NAME_LEN];
51 	struct completion first_req_done;
52 	struct work_struct complete_work;
53 	struct delayed_work delete_work;
54 	int dup_ret;
55 };
56 
57 static struct kmod_dup_req *kmod_dup_request_lookup(char *module_name)
58 {
59 	struct kmod_dup_req *kmod_req;
60 
61 	list_for_each_entry_rcu(kmod_req, &dup_kmod_reqs, list,
62 				lockdep_is_held(&kmod_dup_mutex)) {
63 		if (strlen(kmod_req->name) == strlen(module_name) &&
64 		    !memcmp(kmod_req->name, module_name, strlen(module_name))) {
65 			return kmod_req;
66                 }
67         }
68 
69 	return NULL;
70 }
71 
72 static void kmod_dup_request_delete(struct work_struct *work)
73 {
74 	struct kmod_dup_req *kmod_req;
75 	kmod_req = container_of(to_delayed_work(work), struct kmod_dup_req, delete_work);
76 
77 	/*
78 	 * The typical situation is a module successully loaded. In that
79 	 * situation the module will be present already in userspace. If
80 	 * new requests come in after that, userspace will already know the
81 	 * module is loaded so will just return 0 right away. There is still
82 	 * a small chance right after we delete this entry new request_module()
83 	 * calls may happen after that, they can happen. These heuristics
84 	 * are to protect finit_module() abuse for auto-loading, if modules
85 	 * are still tryign to auto-load even if a module is already loaded,
86 	 * that's on them, and those inneficiencies should not be fixed by
87 	 * kmod. The inneficies there are a call to modprobe and modprobe
88 	 * just returning 0.
89 	 */
90 	mutex_lock(&kmod_dup_mutex);
91 	list_del_rcu(&kmod_req->list);
92 	synchronize_rcu();
93 	mutex_unlock(&kmod_dup_mutex);
94 	kfree(kmod_req);
95 }
96 
97 static void kmod_dup_request_complete(struct work_struct *work)
98 {
99 	struct kmod_dup_req *kmod_req;
100 
101 	kmod_req = container_of(work, struct kmod_dup_req, complete_work);
102 
103 	/*
104 	 * This will ensure that the kernel will let all the waiters get
105 	 * informed its time to check the return value. It's time to
106 	 * go home.
107 	 */
108 	complete_all(&kmod_req->first_req_done);
109 
110 	/*
111 	 * Now that we have allowed prior request_module() calls to go on
112 	 * with life, let's schedule deleting this entry. We don't have
113 	 * to do it right away, but we *eventually* want to do it so to not
114 	 * let this linger forever as this is just a boot optimization for
115 	 * possible abuses of vmalloc() incurred by finit_module() thrashing.
116 	 */
117 	queue_delayed_work(system_wq, &kmod_req->delete_work, 60 * HZ);
118 }
119 
120 bool kmod_dup_request_exists_wait(char *module_name, bool wait, int *dup_ret)
121 {
122 	struct kmod_dup_req *kmod_req, *new_kmod_req;
123 	int ret;
124 
125 	/*
126 	 * Pre-allocate the entry in case we have to use it later
127 	 * to avoid contention with the mutex.
128 	 */
129 	new_kmod_req = kzalloc(sizeof(*new_kmod_req), GFP_KERNEL);
130 	if (!new_kmod_req)
131 		return false;
132 
133 	memcpy(new_kmod_req->name, module_name, strlen(module_name));
134 	INIT_WORK(&new_kmod_req->complete_work, kmod_dup_request_complete);
135 	INIT_DELAYED_WORK(&new_kmod_req->delete_work, kmod_dup_request_delete);
136 	init_completion(&new_kmod_req->first_req_done);
137 
138 	mutex_lock(&kmod_dup_mutex);
139 
140 	kmod_req = kmod_dup_request_lookup(module_name);
141 	if (!kmod_req) {
142 		/*
143 		 * If the first request that came through for a module
144 		 * was with request_module_nowait() we cannot wait for it
145 		 * and share its return value with other users which may
146 		 * have used request_module() and need a proper return value
147 		 * so just skip using them as an anchor.
148 		 *
149 		 * If a prior request to this one came through with
150 		 * request_module() though, then a request_module_nowait()
151 		 * would benefit from duplicate detection.
152 		 */
153 		if (!wait) {
154 			kfree(new_kmod_req);
155 			pr_debug("New request_module_nowait() for %s -- cannot track duplicates for this request\n", module_name);
156 			mutex_unlock(&kmod_dup_mutex);
157 			return false;
158 		}
159 
160 		/*
161 		 * There was no duplicate, just add the request so we can
162 		 * keep tab on duplicates later.
163 		 */
164 		pr_debug("New request_module() for %s\n", module_name);
165 		list_add_rcu(&new_kmod_req->list, &dup_kmod_reqs);
166 		mutex_unlock(&kmod_dup_mutex);
167 		return false;
168 	}
169 	mutex_unlock(&kmod_dup_mutex);
170 
171 	/* We are dealing with a duplicate request now */
172 	kfree(new_kmod_req);
173 
174 	/*
175 	 * To fix these try to use try_then_request_module() instead as that
176 	 * will check if the component you are looking for is present or not.
177 	 * You could also just queue a single request to load the module once,
178 	 * instead of having each and everything you need try to request for
179 	 * the module.
180 	 *
181 	 * Duplicate request_module() calls  can cause quite a bit of wasted
182 	 * vmalloc() space when racing with userspace.
183 	 */
184 	if (enable_dups_trace)
185 		WARN(1, "module-autoload: duplicate request for module %s\n", module_name);
186 	else
187 		pr_warn("module-autoload: duplicate request for module %s\n", module_name);
188 
189 	if (!wait) {
190 		/*
191 		 * If request_module_nowait() was used then the user just
192 		 * wanted to issue the request and if another module request
193 		 * was already its way with the same name we don't care for
194 		 * the return value either. Let duplicate request_module_nowait()
195 		 * calls bail out right away.
196 		 */
197 		*dup_ret = 0;
198 		return true;
199 	}
200 
201 	/*
202 	 * If a duplicate request_module() was used they *may* care for
203 	 * the return value, so we have no other option but to wait for
204 	 * the first caller to complete. If the first caller used
205 	 * the request_module_nowait() call, subsquent callers will
206 	 * deal with the comprmise of getting a successful call with this
207 	 * optimization enabled ...
208 	 */
209 	ret = wait_for_completion_state(&kmod_req->first_req_done,
210 					TASK_UNINTERRUPTIBLE | TASK_KILLABLE);
211 	if (ret) {
212 		*dup_ret = ret;
213 		return true;
214 	}
215 
216 	/* Now the duplicate request has the same exact return value as the first request */
217 	*dup_ret = kmod_req->dup_ret;
218 
219 	return true;
220 }
221 
222 void kmod_dup_request_announce(char *module_name, int ret)
223 {
224 	struct kmod_dup_req *kmod_req;
225 
226 	mutex_lock(&kmod_dup_mutex);
227 
228 	kmod_req = kmod_dup_request_lookup(module_name);
229 	if (!kmod_req)
230 		goto out;
231 
232 	kmod_req->dup_ret = ret;
233 
234 	/*
235 	 * If we complete() here we may allow duplicate threads
236 	 * to continue before the first one that submitted the
237 	 * request. We're in no rush also, given that each and
238 	 * every bounce back to userspace is slow we avoid that
239 	 * with a slight delay here. So queueue up the completion
240 	 * and let duplicates suffer, just wait a tad bit longer.
241 	 * There is no rush. But we also don't want to hold the
242 	 * caller up forever or introduce any boot delays.
243 	 */
244 	queue_work(system_wq, &kmod_req->complete_work);
245 
246 out:
247 	mutex_unlock(&kmod_dup_mutex);
248 }
249