On Sun 28-07-19 14:19:12, Steve Magnani wrote:
> The UDF bitmap allocation code assumes that a recorded 
> Unallocated Space Bitmap is compliant with ECMA-167 4/13,
> which requires that pad bytes between the end of the bitmap 
> and the end of a logical block are all zero.
> 
> When a recorded bitmap does not comply with this requirement,
> for example one padded with FF to the block boundary instead
> of 00, the allocator may "allocate" blocks that are outside
> the UDF partition extent. This can result in UDF volume descriptors
> being overwritten by file data or by partition-level descriptors,
> and in extreme cases, even in scribbling on a subsequent disk partition.
> 
> Add a check that the block selected by the allocator actually
> resides within the UDF partition extent.
> 
> Signed-off-by: Steven J. Magnani <st...@digidescorp.com>

Thanks for the patch! Added to my tree. I've just slightly modified the
patch to also output error message about filesystem corruption.

                                                                Honza

> 
> --- a/fs/udf/balloc.c 2019-07-26 11:35:28.249563705 -0500
> +++ b/fs/udf/balloc.c 2019-07-28 13:11:25.061431597 -0500
> @@ -325,6 +325,13 @@ got_block:
>       newblock = bit + (block_group << (sb->s_blocksize_bits + 3)) -
>               (sizeof(struct spaceBitmapDesc) << 3);
>  
> +     if (newblock >= sbi->s_partmaps[partition].s_partition_len) {
> +             /* Ran off the end of the bitmap,
> +              * and bits following are non-compliant (not all zero)
> +              */
> +             goto error_return;
> +     }
> +
>       if (!udf_clear_bit(bit, bh->b_data)) {
>               udf_debug("bit already cleared for block %d\n", bit);
>               goto repeat;
> 
-- 
Jan Kara <j...@suse.com>
SUSE Labs, CR

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