On Mon, Nov 15, 2021 at 07:59:10AM +0100, Greg Kroah-Hartman wrote:
> > @@ -566,6 +567,12 @@ static int really_probe(struct device *dev, struct 
> > device_driver *drv)
> >             goto done;
> >     }
> >  
> > +   if (!drv->suppress_auto_claim_dma_owner) {
> > +           ret = iommu_device_set_dma_owner(dev, DMA_OWNER_KERNEL, NULL);
> > +           if (ret)
> > +                   return ret;
> > +   }
> > +
> 
> This feels wrong to be doing it in the driver core, why doesn't the bus
> that cares about this handle it instead?

As Christoph said, it is not related to the bus. To elaborate any
bus_type that has iommu_ops != NULL needs this check, and it must be
done on an individual struct device as the result is sensitive to the
iommu_group member of each struct device.

> You just caused all drivers in the kernel today to set and release this
> ownership, as none set this flag.  Shouldn't it be the other way around?

No - the whole point is to cause every driver to do this test.

iommu_device_set_dma_owner() can fail for any device, if it does then
a kernel driver must not be probed. Probing a kernel driver when
iommu_device_set_dma_owner() fails will break kernel integrity due to
HW limitations.

The drv->suppress_auto_claim_dma_owner disables this restriction
because three drivers will deal with DMA ownership on their own.

> You only have problems with 1 driver out of thousands, this feels wrong
> to abuse the driver core this way for just that one.

I think you have it backwards. Few drivers out of thousands can take
an action that impacts the security of a thousand other drivers.

The key thing is that device A can have a driver with
suppress_auto_claim_dma_owner=1 and call
iommu_device_set_dma_owner(DMA_OWNER_USER) which will then cause
another device B to be unsable in the kernel.

Device B, with a normal driver, must be prevented from having a kernel
driver because of what the special driver on device A did.

This behavior is a IOMMU HW limitation that cannot be avoided. The
restrictions have always been in the kernel, they were just enforced
with a BUG_ON at probe via a bus_notifier instead of a clean failure.

So, I don't know how to block probing of the thousands of drivers
without adding a test during probing, do you have an different idea?

Jason
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