Simon Kissane 3c98431da5 gmon: fix memory corruption issues [BZ# 30101]
V2 of this patch fixes an issue in V1, where the state was changed to ON not
OFF at end of _mcleanup. I hadn't noticed that (counterintuitively) ON=0 and
OFF=3, hence zeroing the buffer turned it back on. So set the state to OFF
after the memset.

1. Prevent double free, and reads from unallocated memory, when
   _mcleanup is (incorrectly) called two or more times in a row,
   without an intervening call to __monstartup; with this patch, the
   second and subsequent calls effectively become no-ops instead.
   While setting tos=NULL is minimal fix, safest action is to zero the
   whole gmonparam buffer.

2. Prevent memory leak when __monstartup is (incorrectly) called two
   or more times in a row, without an intervening call to _mcleanup;
   with this patch, the second and subsequent calls effectively become
   no-ops instead.

3. After _mcleanup, treat __moncontrol(1) as __moncontrol(0) instead.
   With zeroing of gmonparam buffer in _mcleanup, this stops the
   state incorrectly being changed to GMON_PROF_ON despite profiling
   actually being off. If we'd just done the minimal fix to _mcleanup
   of setting tos=NULL, there is risk of far worse memory corruption:
   kcount would point to deallocated memory, and the __profil syscall
   would make the kernel write profiling data into that memory,
   which could have since been reallocated to something unrelated.

4. Ensure __moncontrol(0) still turns off profiling even in error
   state. Otherwise, if mcount overflows and sets state to
   GMON_PROF_ERROR, when _mcleanup calls __moncontrol(0), the __profil
   syscall to disable profiling will not be invoked. _mcleanup will
   free the buffer, but the kernel will still be writing profiling
   data into it, potentially corrupted arbitrary memory.

Also adds a test case for (1). Issues (2)-(4) are not feasible to test.

Signed-off-by: Simon Kissane <skissane@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: DJ Delorie <dj@redhat.com>
(cherry picked from commit bde121872001d8f3224eeafa5b7effb871c3fbca)
2023-04-28 16:18:02 +02:00
2022-07-05 09:07:02 +02:00
2022-02-14 19:29:02 +01:00
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2021-01-10 21:25:13 -05:00
2017-05-11 13:38:30 -04:00
2022-07-29 17:59:01 -04:00

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