The 'max' range needs to be unsigned, since the size of the user address
space is bigger than 2GB.
We know that 'count' is positive in 'long' (that is checked in the
caller), so we will truncate 'max' down to something that fits in a
signed long, but before we actually do that, that comparison needs to be
done in unsigned.
Bug introduced in commit
92ae03f2ef99 ("x86: merge 32/64-bit versions of
'strncpy_from_user()' and speed it up"). On x86-64 you can't trigger
this, since the user address space is much smaller than 63 bits, and on
x86-32 it works in practice, since you would seldom hit the strncpy
limits anyway.
I had actually tested the corner-cases, I had only tested them on
x86-64. Besides, I had only worried about the case of a pointer *close*
to the end of the address space, rather than really far away from it ;)
This also changes the "we hit the user-specified maximum" to return
'res', for the trivial reason that gcc seems to generate better code
that way. 'res' and 'count' are the same in that case, so it really
doesn't matter which one we return.
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
* hit it), 'max' is the address space maximum (and we return
* -EFAULT if we hit it).
*/
-static inline long do_strncpy_from_user(char *dst, const char __user *src, long count, long max)
+static inline long do_strncpy_from_user(char *dst, const char __user *src, long count, unsigned long max)
{
long res = 0;
* too? If so, that's ok - we got as much as the user asked for.
*/
if (res >= count)
- return count;
+ return res;
/*
* Nope: we hit the address space limit, and we still had more