Re: Question about a strange behavior of copy_to_user() in ioctl call

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Thank you for your reply. I put the access_ok() as a debugging tool. I
suspected that copy_to_user() failed at the access_ok() test. It is
for debugging.

I did replace copy_from_user() with __copy_from_user(). It gave out
the same result.

On 6/19/07, Jiri Slaby <[email protected]> wrote:
News Letter napsal(a):
> Hi,
>
> I need some help here to understand copy_to_user(). I encountered a
> strange copy_to_user() behavior when working on CentOS from Redhat
> (kernel version 2.6.9-22.ELsmp, x86_64 CPU).
>
> For a kernel module, I wrote a ioctl call to allow user mode program
> to get some kernel data information. When a user program called the
> ioctl, most of the time the ioctl failed with EFAULT, failed at
> copy_to_user(). It succeeded a few times after a lot of running.
>
> Failed message indicated copy_to_user() returned 3840 (which is
> exactly what is asked to copy, PAGE_SIZE-256). The printed value of
> the user pointer were identical for successful ioctl calls and failed
> ioctl calls. Some relevant details are at the end of this email. I
> tried with calloc(PAGE_SIZE, 1), static buffer and automatic variable
> on stack in user mode program. They gave the same result.
>
> I appreciate any help.
>
> Best,
> Jasper
>
> The ioctl call structure is defined as follows,
>
> struct ioctl_get_info
> {
>   ... /* some other information */
>   unsigned long user_pointer;
>   unsigned user_buffer_len;
>   unsigned returned_len;
>   ... /* some other information */
> };
>
> Inside kernel module, a page is allocated with :
>
> static unsigned char *test_page;
>
> static init_test(void)
> {
>   test_page = __get_free_pages(GFP_KERNEL, 0);
>   if (!test_page)
>         .... /* some error handling */
> }
>
> static int test_ioctl(struct inode * inode, struct file * filp,
> unsigned int cmd_in, unsigned long arg)
> {
>   struct ioctl_get_info igi;
>   unsigned size;
>   unsigned long remain;
>
>  size = IOC_SIZE(cmd_in);
>  if (size != sizeof(igi))
>    ....
>
>  ... /* some sanity checking */
>
>  if (!access_ok(VERIFY_READ, (char *)arg, size))
>  {
>      printk(KERN_INFO "...");
>      return -EFAULT;
>   }
>
>   if (copy_from_user(&igi, (char *)arg, size) != 0)
>   {
>       printk(... ...)
>       return -EFAULT;
>   }
>
>   if (!access_ok(VERIFY_WRITE, (char *)igi.user_pointer,
> igi.user_buffer_len))
>   {
>       printk(...);
>       return -EFAULT;
>   }
>
>   size = PAGE_SIZE - 256;
>   if (size > igi.user_buffer_len)
>      size = igi.user_buffer_len;
>   printk("igi.user_pointer %p size %u\n", igi.user_pointer, size);

Weird. Are you sure, that previous access_ok doesn't fail with this 'size', not
the 'igi.user_buffer_len'? Anyway, you can remove these access_ok checks, since
they are provided by copy_from/to_user after debugging.

>   if ((remain = copy_to_user((char *)igi.user_pointer, page + 256,
> size)) != 0)
>   {
>      printk ("Failed to copy from user at %p remain %lu asked %u\n",
> igi.user_pointer, remain, asked);
> /* failed here */
>      return -EFAULT;
>   }
>    igi.returned_len = size;
>
>   /* copy other information */
>
>   return 0;
> }

regards,
--
http://www.fi.muni.cz/~xslaby/            Jiri Slaby
faculty of informatics, masaryk university, brno, cz
e-mail: jirislaby gmail com, gpg pubkey fingerprint:
B674 9967 0407 CE62 ACC8  22A0 32CC 55C3 39D4 7A7E

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