On Wed, Feb 14 2018, Milan Broz wrote:

> Hi,
>
> the commit (found by bisect)
>
>   commit 18a25da84354c6bb655320de6072c00eda6eb602
>   Author: NeilBrown <ne...@suse.com>
>   Date:   Wed Sep 6 09:43:28 2017 +1000
>
>     dm: ensure bio submission follows a depth-first tree walk
>
> cause serious regression while reading from DM device.
>
> The reproducer is below, basically it tries to simulate failure we see in 
> cryptsetup
> regression test: we have DM device with error and zero target and try to read
> "passphrase" from it (it is test for 64 bit offset error path):
>
> Test device:
> # dmsetup table test
> 0 10000000 error 
> 10000000 1000000 zero 
>
> We try to run this operation:
>   lseek64(fd, 5119999988, SEEK_CUR); // this should seek to error target 
> sector
>   read(fd, buf, 13); // this should fail, if we seek to error part of the 
> device
>
> While on 4.15 the read properly fails:
>   Seek returned 5119999988.
>   Read returned -1.
>
> for 4.16 it actually succeeds returning some random data
> (perhaps kernel memory, so this bug is even more dangerous):
>   Seek returned 5119999988.
>   Read returned 13.
>
> Full reproducer below:
>
> #define _GNU_SOURCE
> #define _LARGEFILE64_SOURCE
> #include <stdio.h>
> #include <stddef.h>
> #include <stdint.h>
> #include <stdlib.h>
> #include <unistd.h>
> #include <fcntl.h>
> #include <inttypes.h>
>
> int main (int argc, char *argv[])
> {
>         char buf[13];
>         int fd;
>         //uint64_t offset64 = 5119999999;
>         uint64_t offset64 =   5119999988;
>         off64_t r;
>         ssize_t bytes;
>
>         system("echo -e \'0 10000000 error\'\\\\n\'10000000 1000000 zero\' | 
> dmsetup create test");
>
>         fd = open("/dev/mapper/test", O_RDONLY);
>         if (fd == -1) {
>                 printf("open fail\n");
>                 return 1;
>         }
>
>         r = lseek64(fd, offset64, SEEK_CUR);
>         printf("Seek returned %" PRIu64 ".\n", r);
>         if (r < 0) {
>                 printf("seek fail\n");
>                 close(fd);
>                 return 2;
>         }
>
>         bytes = read(fd, buf, 13);
>         printf("Read returned %d.\n", (int)bytes);
>
>         close(fd);
>         return 0;
> }
>
>
> Please let me know if you need more info to reproduce it.

Thanks for the detailed report.  I haven't tried to reproduce, but the
code looks very weird.
The patch I posted "Date: Wed, 06 Sep 2017 09:43:28 +1000" had:
      +                         struct bio *b = bio_clone_bioset(bio, GFP_NOIO,
      +                                                          
md->queue->bio_split);
      +                         bio_advance(b, (bio_sectors(b) - 
ci.sector_count) << 9);
      +                         bio_chain(b, bio);
      +                         generic_make_request(b);
      +                         break;

The code in Linux has:

                                struct bio *b = bio_clone_bioset(bio, GFP_NOIO,
                                                                 
md->queue->bio_split);
                                ci.io->orig_bio = b;
                                bio_advance(bio, (bio_sectors(bio) - 
ci.sector_count) << 9);
                                bio_chain(b, bio);
                                ret = generic_make_request(bio);
                                break;

So the wrong bio is sent to generic_make_request().
Mike: do you remember how that change happened?  I think there were
discussions following the patch, but I cannot find anything about making
that change.

Thanks,
NeilBrown

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