linux/rust/kernel/uaccess.rs
Gary Guo d072acda48 rust: use custom FFI integer types
Currently FFI integer types are defined in libcore. This commit creates
the `ffi` crate and asks bindgen to use that crate for FFI integer types
instead of `core::ffi`.

This commit is preparatory and no type changes are made in this commit
yet.

Signed-off-by: Gary Guo <gary@garyguo.net>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20240913213041.395655-4-gary@garyguo.net
[ Added `rustdoc`, `rusttest` and KUnit tests support. Rebased on top of
  `rust-next` (e.g. migrated more `core::ffi` cases). Reworded crate
  docs slightly and formatted. - Miguel ]
Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <ojeda@kernel.org>
2024-11-10 23:58:00 +01:00

386 lines
14 KiB
Rust

// SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
//! Slices to user space memory regions.
//!
//! C header: [`include/linux/uaccess.h`](srctree/include/linux/uaccess.h)
use crate::{
alloc::Flags,
bindings,
error::Result,
ffi::{c_ulong, c_void},
prelude::*,
transmute::{AsBytes, FromBytes},
};
use core::mem::{size_of, MaybeUninit};
/// The type used for userspace addresses.
pub type UserPtr = usize;
/// A pointer to an area in userspace memory, which can be either read-only or read-write.
///
/// All methods on this struct are safe: attempting to read or write on bad addresses (either out of
/// the bound of the slice or unmapped addresses) will return [`EFAULT`]. Concurrent access,
/// *including data races to/from userspace memory*, is permitted, because fundamentally another
/// userspace thread/process could always be modifying memory at the same time (in the same way that
/// userspace Rust's [`std::io`] permits data races with the contents of files on disk). In the
/// presence of a race, the exact byte values read/written are unspecified but the operation is
/// well-defined. Kernelspace code should validate its copy of data after completing a read, and not
/// expect that multiple reads of the same address will return the same value.
///
/// These APIs are designed to make it difficult to accidentally write TOCTOU (time-of-check to
/// time-of-use) bugs. Every time a memory location is read, the reader's position is advanced by
/// the read length and the next read will start from there. This helps prevent accidentally reading
/// the same location twice and causing a TOCTOU bug.
///
/// Creating a [`UserSliceReader`] and/or [`UserSliceWriter`] consumes the `UserSlice`, helping
/// ensure that there aren't multiple readers or writers to the same location.
///
/// If double-fetching a memory location is necessary for some reason, then that is done by creating
/// multiple readers to the same memory location, e.g. using [`clone_reader`].
///
/// # Examples
///
/// Takes a region of userspace memory from the current process, and modify it by adding one to
/// every byte in the region.
///
/// ```no_run
/// use kernel::ffi::c_void;
/// use kernel::error::Result;
/// use kernel::uaccess::{UserPtr, UserSlice};
///
/// fn bytes_add_one(uptr: UserPtr, len: usize) -> Result<()> {
/// let (read, mut write) = UserSlice::new(uptr, len).reader_writer();
///
/// let mut buf = KVec::new();
/// read.read_all(&mut buf, GFP_KERNEL)?;
///
/// for b in &mut buf {
/// *b = b.wrapping_add(1);
/// }
///
/// write.write_slice(&buf)?;
/// Ok(())
/// }
/// ```
///
/// Example illustrating a TOCTOU (time-of-check to time-of-use) bug.
///
/// ```no_run
/// use kernel::ffi::c_void;
/// use kernel::error::{code::EINVAL, Result};
/// use kernel::uaccess::{UserPtr, UserSlice};
///
/// /// Returns whether the data in this region is valid.
/// fn is_valid(uptr: UserPtr, len: usize) -> Result<bool> {
/// let read = UserSlice::new(uptr, len).reader();
///
/// let mut buf = KVec::new();
/// read.read_all(&mut buf, GFP_KERNEL)?;
///
/// todo!()
/// }
///
/// /// Returns the bytes behind this user pointer if they are valid.
/// fn get_bytes_if_valid(uptr: UserPtr, len: usize) -> Result<KVec<u8>> {
/// if !is_valid(uptr, len)? {
/// return Err(EINVAL);
/// }
///
/// let read = UserSlice::new(uptr, len).reader();
///
/// let mut buf = KVec::new();
/// read.read_all(&mut buf, GFP_KERNEL)?;
///
/// // THIS IS A BUG! The bytes could have changed since we checked them.
/// //
/// // To avoid this kind of bug, don't call `UserSlice::new` multiple
/// // times with the same address.
/// Ok(buf)
/// }
/// ```
///
/// [`std::io`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/io/index.html
/// [`clone_reader`]: UserSliceReader::clone_reader
pub struct UserSlice {
ptr: UserPtr,
length: usize,
}
impl UserSlice {
/// Constructs a user slice from a raw pointer and a length in bytes.
///
/// Constructing a [`UserSlice`] performs no checks on the provided address and length, it can
/// safely be constructed inside a kernel thread with no current userspace process. Reads and
/// writes wrap the kernel APIs `copy_from_user` and `copy_to_user`, which check the memory map
/// of the current process and enforce that the address range is within the user range (no
/// additional calls to `access_ok` are needed). Validity of the pointer is checked when you
/// attempt to read or write, not in the call to `UserSlice::new`.
///
/// Callers must be careful to avoid time-of-check-time-of-use (TOCTOU) issues. The simplest way
/// is to create a single instance of [`UserSlice`] per user memory block as it reads each byte
/// at most once.
pub fn new(ptr: UserPtr, length: usize) -> Self {
UserSlice { ptr, length }
}
/// Reads the entirety of the user slice, appending it to the end of the provided buffer.
///
/// Fails with [`EFAULT`] if the read happens on a bad address.
pub fn read_all(self, buf: &mut KVec<u8>, flags: Flags) -> Result {
self.reader().read_all(buf, flags)
}
/// Constructs a [`UserSliceReader`].
pub fn reader(self) -> UserSliceReader {
UserSliceReader {
ptr: self.ptr,
length: self.length,
}
}
/// Constructs a [`UserSliceWriter`].
pub fn writer(self) -> UserSliceWriter {
UserSliceWriter {
ptr: self.ptr,
length: self.length,
}
}
/// Constructs both a [`UserSliceReader`] and a [`UserSliceWriter`].
///
/// Usually when this is used, you will first read the data, and then overwrite it afterwards.
pub fn reader_writer(self) -> (UserSliceReader, UserSliceWriter) {
(
UserSliceReader {
ptr: self.ptr,
length: self.length,
},
UserSliceWriter {
ptr: self.ptr,
length: self.length,
},
)
}
}
/// A reader for [`UserSlice`].
///
/// Used to incrementally read from the user slice.
pub struct UserSliceReader {
ptr: UserPtr,
length: usize,
}
impl UserSliceReader {
/// Skip the provided number of bytes.
///
/// Returns an error if skipping more than the length of the buffer.
pub fn skip(&mut self, num_skip: usize) -> Result {
// Update `self.length` first since that's the fallible part of this operation.
self.length = self.length.checked_sub(num_skip).ok_or(EFAULT)?;
self.ptr = self.ptr.wrapping_add(num_skip);
Ok(())
}
/// Create a reader that can access the same range of data.
///
/// Reading from the clone does not advance the current reader.
///
/// The caller should take care to not introduce TOCTOU issues, as described in the
/// documentation for [`UserSlice`].
pub fn clone_reader(&self) -> UserSliceReader {
UserSliceReader {
ptr: self.ptr,
length: self.length,
}
}
/// Returns the number of bytes left to be read from this reader.
///
/// Note that even reading less than this number of bytes may fail.
pub fn len(&self) -> usize {
self.length
}
/// Returns `true` if no data is available in the io buffer.
pub fn is_empty(&self) -> bool {
self.length == 0
}
/// Reads raw data from the user slice into a kernel buffer.
///
/// For a version that uses `&mut [u8]`, please see [`UserSliceReader::read_slice`].
///
/// Fails with [`EFAULT`] if the read happens on a bad address, or if the read goes out of
/// bounds of this [`UserSliceReader`]. This call may modify `out` even if it returns an error.
///
/// # Guarantees
///
/// After a successful call to this method, all bytes in `out` are initialized.
pub fn read_raw(&mut self, out: &mut [MaybeUninit<u8>]) -> Result {
let len = out.len();
let out_ptr = out.as_mut_ptr().cast::<c_void>();
if len > self.length {
return Err(EFAULT);
}
let Ok(len_ulong) = c_ulong::try_from(len) else {
return Err(EFAULT);
};
// SAFETY: `out_ptr` points into a mutable slice of length `len_ulong`, so we may write
// that many bytes to it.
let res =
unsafe { bindings::copy_from_user(out_ptr, self.ptr as *const c_void, len_ulong) };
if res != 0 {
return Err(EFAULT);
}
self.ptr = self.ptr.wrapping_add(len);
self.length -= len;
Ok(())
}
/// Reads raw data from the user slice into a kernel buffer.
///
/// Fails with [`EFAULT`] if the read happens on a bad address, or if the read goes out of
/// bounds of this [`UserSliceReader`]. This call may modify `out` even if it returns an error.
pub fn read_slice(&mut self, out: &mut [u8]) -> Result {
// SAFETY: The types are compatible and `read_raw` doesn't write uninitialized bytes to
// `out`.
let out = unsafe { &mut *(out as *mut [u8] as *mut [MaybeUninit<u8>]) };
self.read_raw(out)
}
/// Reads a value of the specified type.
///
/// Fails with [`EFAULT`] if the read happens on a bad address, or if the read goes out of
/// bounds of this [`UserSliceReader`].
pub fn read<T: FromBytes>(&mut self) -> Result<T> {
let len = size_of::<T>();
if len > self.length {
return Err(EFAULT);
}
let Ok(len_ulong) = c_ulong::try_from(len) else {
return Err(EFAULT);
};
let mut out: MaybeUninit<T> = MaybeUninit::uninit();
// SAFETY: The local variable `out` is valid for writing `size_of::<T>()` bytes.
//
// By using the _copy_from_user variant, we skip the check_object_size check that verifies
// the kernel pointer. This mirrors the logic on the C side that skips the check when the
// length is a compile-time constant.
let res = unsafe {
bindings::_copy_from_user(
out.as_mut_ptr().cast::<c_void>(),
self.ptr as *const c_void,
len_ulong,
)
};
if res != 0 {
return Err(EFAULT);
}
self.ptr = self.ptr.wrapping_add(len);
self.length -= len;
// SAFETY: The read above has initialized all bytes in `out`, and since `T` implements
// `FromBytes`, any bit-pattern is a valid value for this type.
Ok(unsafe { out.assume_init() })
}
/// Reads the entirety of the user slice, appending it to the end of the provided buffer.
///
/// Fails with [`EFAULT`] if the read happens on a bad address.
pub fn read_all(mut self, buf: &mut KVec<u8>, flags: Flags) -> Result {
let len = self.length;
buf.reserve(len, flags)?;
// The call to `try_reserve` was successful, so the spare capacity is at least `len` bytes
// long.
self.read_raw(&mut buf.spare_capacity_mut()[..len])?;
// SAFETY: Since the call to `read_raw` was successful, so the next `len` bytes of the
// vector have been initialized.
unsafe { buf.set_len(buf.len() + len) };
Ok(())
}
}
/// A writer for [`UserSlice`].
///
/// Used to incrementally write into the user slice.
pub struct UserSliceWriter {
ptr: UserPtr,
length: usize,
}
impl UserSliceWriter {
/// Returns the amount of space remaining in this buffer.
///
/// Note that even writing less than this number of bytes may fail.
pub fn len(&self) -> usize {
self.length
}
/// Returns `true` if no more data can be written to this buffer.
pub fn is_empty(&self) -> bool {
self.length == 0
}
/// Writes raw data to this user pointer from a kernel buffer.
///
/// Fails with [`EFAULT`] if the write happens on a bad address, or if the write goes out of
/// bounds of this [`UserSliceWriter`]. This call may modify the associated userspace slice even
/// if it returns an error.
pub fn write_slice(&mut self, data: &[u8]) -> Result {
let len = data.len();
let data_ptr = data.as_ptr().cast::<c_void>();
if len > self.length {
return Err(EFAULT);
}
let Ok(len_ulong) = c_ulong::try_from(len) else {
return Err(EFAULT);
};
// SAFETY: `data_ptr` points into an immutable slice of length `len_ulong`, so we may read
// that many bytes from it.
let res = unsafe { bindings::copy_to_user(self.ptr as *mut c_void, data_ptr, len_ulong) };
if res != 0 {
return Err(EFAULT);
}
self.ptr = self.ptr.wrapping_add(len);
self.length -= len;
Ok(())
}
/// Writes the provided Rust value to this userspace pointer.
///
/// Fails with [`EFAULT`] if the write happens on a bad address, or if the write goes out of
/// bounds of this [`UserSliceWriter`]. This call may modify the associated userspace slice even
/// if it returns an error.
pub fn write<T: AsBytes>(&mut self, value: &T) -> Result {
let len = size_of::<T>();
if len > self.length {
return Err(EFAULT);
}
let Ok(len_ulong) = c_ulong::try_from(len) else {
return Err(EFAULT);
};
// SAFETY: The reference points to a value of type `T`, so it is valid for reading
// `size_of::<T>()` bytes.
//
// By using the _copy_to_user variant, we skip the check_object_size check that verifies the
// kernel pointer. This mirrors the logic on the C side that skips the check when the length
// is a compile-time constant.
let res = unsafe {
bindings::_copy_to_user(
self.ptr as *mut c_void,
(value as *const T).cast::<c_void>(),
len_ulong,
)
};
if res != 0 {
return Err(EFAULT);
}
self.ptr = self.ptr.wrapping_add(len);
self.length -= len;
Ok(())
}
}