Revision a9fc4340aee041dd186d1fb8f1b5d1e9caf28212 authored by Dexuan Cui on 07 May 2019, 07:46:55 UTC, committed by Sasha Levin on 20 August 2019, 16:49:57 UTC
In the case of X86_PAE, unsigned long is u32, but the physical address type
should be u64. Due to the bug here, the netvsc driver can not load
successfully, and sometimes the VM can panic due to memory corruption (the
hypervisor writes data to the wrong location).

Fixes: 6ba34171bcbd ("Drivers: hv: vmbus: Remove use of slow_virt_to_phys()")
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Cc: Michael Kelley <mikelley@microsoft.com>
Reported-and-tested-by: Juliana Rodrigueiro <juliana.rodrigueiro@intra2net.com>
Signed-off-by: Dexuan Cui <decui@microsoft.com>
Reviewed-by:  Michael Kelley <mikelley@microsoft.com>
Signed-off-by: Sasha Levin <sashal@kernel.org>
1 parent 89eb4d8
Raw File
xt_time.c
/*
 *	xt_time
 *	Copyright © CC Computer Consultants GmbH, 2007
 *
 *	based on ipt_time by Fabrice MARIE <fabrice@netfilter.org>
 *	This is a module which is used for time matching
 *	It is using some modified code from dietlibc (localtime() function)
 *	that you can find at http://www.fefe.de/dietlibc/
 *	This file is distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public
 *	License (GPL). Copies of the GPL can be obtained from gnu.org/gpl.
 */

#define pr_fmt(fmt) KBUILD_MODNAME ": " fmt

#include <linux/ktime.h>
#include <linux/module.h>
#include <linux/skbuff.h>
#include <linux/types.h>
#include <linux/netfilter/x_tables.h>
#include <linux/netfilter/xt_time.h>

struct xtm {
	u_int8_t month;    /* (1-12) */
	u_int8_t monthday; /* (1-31) */
	u_int8_t weekday;  /* (1-7) */
	u_int8_t hour;     /* (0-23) */
	u_int8_t minute;   /* (0-59) */
	u_int8_t second;   /* (0-59) */
	unsigned int dse;
};

extern struct timezone sys_tz; /* ouch */

static const u_int16_t days_since_year[] = {
	0, 31, 59, 90, 120, 151, 181, 212, 243, 273, 304, 334,
};

static const u_int16_t days_since_leapyear[] = {
	0, 31, 60, 91, 121, 152, 182, 213, 244, 274, 305, 335,
};

/*
 * Since time progresses forward, it is best to organize this array in reverse,
 * to minimize lookup time.
 */
enum {
	DSE_FIRST = 2039,
	SECONDS_PER_DAY = 86400,
};
static const u_int16_t days_since_epoch[] = {
	/* 2039 - 2030 */
	25202, 24837, 24472, 24106, 23741, 23376, 23011, 22645, 22280, 21915,
	/* 2029 - 2020 */
	21550, 21184, 20819, 20454, 20089, 19723, 19358, 18993, 18628, 18262,
	/* 2019 - 2010 */
	17897, 17532, 17167, 16801, 16436, 16071, 15706, 15340, 14975, 14610,
	/* 2009 - 2000 */
	14245, 13879, 13514, 13149, 12784, 12418, 12053, 11688, 11323, 10957,
	/* 1999 - 1990 */
	10592, 10227, 9862, 9496, 9131, 8766, 8401, 8035, 7670, 7305,
	/* 1989 - 1980 */
	6940, 6574, 6209, 5844, 5479, 5113, 4748, 4383, 4018, 3652,
	/* 1979 - 1970 */
	3287, 2922, 2557, 2191, 1826, 1461, 1096, 730, 365, 0,
};

static inline bool is_leap(unsigned int y)
{
	return y % 4 == 0 && (y % 100 != 0 || y % 400 == 0);
}

/*
 * Each network packet has a (nano)seconds-since-the-epoch (SSTE) timestamp.
 * Since we match against days and daytime, the SSTE value needs to be
 * computed back into human-readable dates.
 *
 * This is done in three separate functions so that the most expensive
 * calculations are done last, in case a "simple match" can be found earlier.
 */
static inline unsigned int localtime_1(struct xtm *r, time_t time)
{
	unsigned int v, w;

	/* Each day has 86400s, so finding the hour/minute is actually easy. */
	v         = time % SECONDS_PER_DAY;
	r->second = v % 60;
	w         = v / 60;
	r->minute = w % 60;
	r->hour   = w / 60;
	return v;
}

static inline void localtime_2(struct xtm *r, time_t time)
{
	/*
	 * Here comes the rest (weekday, monthday). First, divide the SSTE
	 * by seconds-per-day to get the number of _days_ since the epoch.
	 */
	r->dse = time / 86400;

	/*
	 * 1970-01-01 (w=0) was a Thursday (4).
	 * -1 and +1 map Sunday properly onto 7.
	 */
	r->weekday = (4 + r->dse - 1) % 7 + 1;
}

static void localtime_3(struct xtm *r, time_t time)
{
	unsigned int year, i, w = r->dse;

	/*
	 * In each year, a certain number of days-since-the-epoch have passed.
	 * Find the year that is closest to said days.
	 *
	 * Consider, for example, w=21612 (2029-03-04). Loop will abort on
	 * dse[i] <= w, which happens when dse[i] == 21550. This implies
	 * year == 2009. w will then be 62.
	 */
	for (i = 0, year = DSE_FIRST; days_since_epoch[i] > w;
	    ++i, --year)
		/* just loop */;

	w -= days_since_epoch[i];

	/*
	 * By now we have the current year, and the day of the year.
	 * r->yearday = w;
	 *
	 * On to finding the month (like above). In each month, a certain
	 * number of days-since-New Year have passed, and find the closest
	 * one.
	 *
	 * Consider w=62 (in a non-leap year). Loop will abort on
	 * dsy[i] < w, which happens when dsy[i] == 31+28 (i == 2).
	 * Concludes i == 2, i.e. 3rd month => March.
	 *
	 * (A different approach to use would be to subtract a monthlength
	 * from w repeatedly while counting.)
	 */
	if (is_leap(year)) {
		/* use days_since_leapyear[] in a leap year */
		for (i = ARRAY_SIZE(days_since_leapyear) - 1;
		    i > 0 && days_since_leapyear[i] > w; --i)
			/* just loop */;
		r->monthday = w - days_since_leapyear[i] + 1;
	} else {
		for (i = ARRAY_SIZE(days_since_year) - 1;
		    i > 0 && days_since_year[i] > w; --i)
			/* just loop */;
		r->monthday = w - days_since_year[i] + 1;
	}

	r->month    = i + 1;
}

static bool
time_mt(const struct sk_buff *skb, struct xt_action_param *par)
{
	const struct xt_time_info *info = par->matchinfo;
	unsigned int packet_time;
	struct xtm current_time;
	s64 stamp;

	/*
	 * We need real time here, but we can neither use skb->tstamp
	 * nor __net_timestamp().
	 *
	 * skb->tstamp and skb->skb_mstamp_ns overlap, however, they
	 * use different clock types (real vs monotonic).
	 *
	 * Suppose you have two rules:
	 *	1. match before 13:00
	 *	2. match after 13:00
	 *
	 * If you match against processing time (get_seconds) it
	 * may happen that the same packet matches both rules if
	 * it arrived at the right moment before 13:00, so it would be
	 * better to check skb->tstamp and set it via __net_timestamp()
	 * if needed.  This however breaks outgoing packets tx timestamp,
	 * and causes them to get delayed forever by fq packet scheduler.
	 */
	stamp = get_seconds();

	if (info->flags & XT_TIME_LOCAL_TZ)
		/* Adjust for local timezone */
		stamp -= 60 * sys_tz.tz_minuteswest;

	/*
	 * xt_time will match when _all_ of the following hold:
	 *   - 'now' is in the global time range date_start..date_end
	 *   - 'now' is in the monthday mask
	 *   - 'now' is in the weekday mask
	 *   - 'now' is in the daytime range time_start..time_end
	 * (and by default, libxt_time will set these so as to match)
	 */

	if (stamp < info->date_start || stamp > info->date_stop)
		return false;

	packet_time = localtime_1(&current_time, stamp);

	if (info->daytime_start < info->daytime_stop) {
		if (packet_time < info->daytime_start ||
		    packet_time > info->daytime_stop)
			return false;
	} else {
		if (packet_time < info->daytime_start &&
		    packet_time > info->daytime_stop)
			return false;

		/** if user asked to ignore 'next day', then e.g.
		 *  '1 PM Wed, August 1st' should be treated
		 *  like 'Tue 1 PM July 31st'.
		 *
		 * This also causes
		 * 'Monday, "23:00 to 01:00", to match for 2 hours, starting
		 * Monday 23:00 to Tuesday 01:00.
		 */
		if ((info->flags & XT_TIME_CONTIGUOUS) &&
		     packet_time <= info->daytime_stop)
			stamp -= SECONDS_PER_DAY;
	}

	localtime_2(&current_time, stamp);

	if (!(info->weekdays_match & (1 << current_time.weekday)))
		return false;

	/* Do not spend time computing monthday if all days match anyway */
	if (info->monthdays_match != XT_TIME_ALL_MONTHDAYS) {
		localtime_3(&current_time, stamp);
		if (!(info->monthdays_match & (1 << current_time.monthday)))
			return false;
	}

	return true;
}

static int time_mt_check(const struct xt_mtchk_param *par)
{
	const struct xt_time_info *info = par->matchinfo;

	if (info->daytime_start > XT_TIME_MAX_DAYTIME ||
	    info->daytime_stop > XT_TIME_MAX_DAYTIME) {
		pr_info_ratelimited("invalid argument - start or stop time greater than 23:59:59\n");
		return -EDOM;
	}

	if (info->flags & ~XT_TIME_ALL_FLAGS) {
		pr_info_ratelimited("unknown flags 0x%x\n",
				    info->flags & ~XT_TIME_ALL_FLAGS);
		return -EINVAL;
	}

	if ((info->flags & XT_TIME_CONTIGUOUS) &&
	     info->daytime_start < info->daytime_stop)
		return -EINVAL;

	return 0;
}

static struct xt_match xt_time_mt_reg __read_mostly = {
	.name       = "time",
	.family     = NFPROTO_UNSPEC,
	.match      = time_mt,
	.checkentry = time_mt_check,
	.matchsize  = sizeof(struct xt_time_info),
	.me         = THIS_MODULE,
};

static int __init time_mt_init(void)
{
	int minutes = sys_tz.tz_minuteswest;

	if (minutes < 0) /* east of Greenwich */
		pr_info("kernel timezone is +%02d%02d\n",
			-minutes / 60, -minutes % 60);
	else /* west of Greenwich */
		pr_info("kernel timezone is -%02d%02d\n",
			minutes / 60, minutes % 60);

	return xt_register_match(&xt_time_mt_reg);
}

static void __exit time_mt_exit(void)
{
	xt_unregister_match(&xt_time_mt_reg);
}

module_init(time_mt_init);
module_exit(time_mt_exit);
MODULE_AUTHOR("Jan Engelhardt <jengelh@medozas.de>");
MODULE_DESCRIPTION("Xtables: time-based matching");
MODULE_LICENSE("GPL");
MODULE_ALIAS("ipt_time");
MODULE_ALIAS("ip6t_time");
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