commits
Pull spi fixes from Mark Brown:
"One final batch of fixes for the Tegra SPI drivers, the main one is a
batch of fixes for races with the interrupts in the Tegra210 QSPI
driver that Breno has been working on for a while"
* tag 'spi-fix-v6.19-rc8' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/broonie/spi:
spi: tegra114: Preserve SPI mode bits in def_command1_reg
spi: tegra: Fix a memory leak in tegra_slink_probe()
spi: tegra210-quad: Protect curr_xfer check in IRQ handler
spi: tegra210-quad: Protect curr_xfer clearing in tegra_qspi_non_combined_seq_xfer
spi: tegra210-quad: Protect curr_xfer in tegra_qspi_combined_seq_xfer
spi: tegra210-quad: Protect curr_xfer assignment in tegra_qspi_setup_transfer_one
spi: tegra210-quad: Move curr_xfer read inside spinlock
spi: tegra210-quad: Return IRQ_HANDLED when timeout already processed transfer
Pull regulator fix from Mark Brown:
"One last fix for v6.19: the voltages for the SpaceMIT P1 were not
described correctly"
* tag 'regulator-fix-v6.19-rc8' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/broonie/regulator:
regulator: spacemit-p1: Fix n_voltages for BUCK and LDO regulators
The COMMAND1 register bits [29:28] set the SPI mode, which controls
the clock idle level. When a transfer ends, tegra_spi_transfer_end()
writes def_command1_reg back to restore the default state, but this
register value currently lacks the mode bits. This results in the
clock always being configured as idle low, breaking devices that
need it high.
Fix this by storing the mode bits in def_command1_reg during setup,
to prevent this field from always being cleared.
Fixes: f333a331adfa ("spi/tegra114: add spi driver")
Signed-off-by: Vishwaroop A <va@nvidia.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260204141212.1540382-1-va@nvidia.com
Signed-off-by: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org>
Pull binder fixes from Greg KH:
"Here are some small, last-minute binder C and Rust driver fixes for
reported issues. They include a number of fixes for reported crashes
and other problems.
All of these have been in linux-next this week, and longer"
* tag 'char-misc-6.19-final' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/gregkh/char-misc:
binderfs: fix ida_alloc_max() upper bound
rust_binderfs: fix ida_alloc_max() upper bound
binder: fix BR_FROZEN_REPLY error log
rust_binder: add additional alignment checks
binder: fix UAF in binder_netlink_report()
rust_binder: correctly handle FDA objects of length zero
Higher voltage settings were unusable due to incorrect n_voltages values
causing registration failures. For example, setting aldo4 to 3.3V failed
with -EINVAL because the required selector (123) exceeded the allowed
range (n_voltages=117).
Fix by aligning n_voltages with the hardware register widths per the P1
datasheet [1]:
- BUCK: 255 (was 254), allows selectors 0-254, selector 255 is reserved
- LDO: 128 (was 117), allows selectors 0-127, selectors 0-10 are for
suspend mode, valid operational range is 11-127
This enables the full voltage range supported by the hardware.
Fixes: 8b84d712ad84 ("regulator: spacemit: support SpacemiT P1 regulators")
Link: https://developer.spacemit.com/documentation [1]
Signed-off-by: Guodong Xu <guodong@riscstar.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260122-spacemit-p1-v1-1-309be27fbff9@riscstar.com
Signed-off-by: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org>
In tegra_slink_probe(), when platform_get_irq() fails, it directly
returns from the function with an error code, which causes a memory leak.
Replace it with a goto label to ensure proper cleanup.
Fixes: eb9913b511f1 ("spi: tegra: Fix missing IRQ check in tegra_slink_probe()")
Signed-off-by: Felix Gu <ustc.gu@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Jon Hunter <jonathanh@nvidia.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260202-slink-v1-1-eac50433a6f9@gmail.com
Signed-off-by: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org>
Pull scheduler fixes from Ingo Molnar:
"Miscellaneous MMCID fixes to address bugs and performance regressions
in the recent rewrite of the SCHED_MM_CID management code:
- Fix livelock triggered by BPF CI testing
- Fix hard lockup on weakly ordered systems
- Simplify the dropping of CIDs in the exit path by removing an
unintended transition phase
- Fix performance/scalability regression on a thread-pool benchmark
by optimizing transitional CIDs when scheduling out"
* tag 'sched-urgent-2026-02-07' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/tip/tip:
sched/mmcid: Optimize transitional CIDs when scheduling out
sched/mmcid: Drop per CPU CID immediately when switching to per task mode
sched/mmcid: Protect transition on weakly ordered systems
sched/mmcid: Prevent live lock on task to CPU mode transition
The 'max' argument of ida_alloc_max() takes the maximum valid ID and not
the "count". Using an ID of BINDERFS_MAX_MINOR (1 << 20) for dev->minor
would exceed the limits of minor numbers (20-bits). Fix this off-by-one
error by subtracting 1 from the 'max'.
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Fixes: 3ad20fe393b3 ("binder: implement binderfs")
Signed-off-by: Carlos Llamas <cmllamas@google.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260127235545.2307876-2-cmllamas@google.com
Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
Now that all other accesses to curr_xfer are done under the lock,
protect the curr_xfer NULL check in tegra_qspi_isr_thread() with the
spinlock. Without this protection, the following race can occur:
CPU0 (ISR thread) CPU1 (timeout path)
---------------- -------------------
if (!tqspi->curr_xfer)
// sees non-NULL
spin_lock()
tqspi->curr_xfer = NULL
spin_unlock()
handle_*_xfer()
spin_lock()
t = tqspi->curr_xfer // NULL!
... t->len ... // NULL dereference!
With this patch, all curr_xfer accesses are now properly synchronized.
Although all accesses to curr_xfer are done under the lock, in
tegra_qspi_isr_thread() it checks for NULL, releases the lock and
reacquires it later in handle_cpu_based_xfer()/handle_dma_based_xfer().
There is a potential for an update in between, which could cause a NULL
pointer dereference.
To handle this, add a NULL check inside the handlers after acquiring
the lock. This ensures that if the timeout path has already cleared
curr_xfer, the handler will safely return without dereferencing the
NULL pointer.
Fixes: b4e002d8a7ce ("spi: tegra210-quad: Fix timeout handling")
Signed-off-by: Breno Leitao <leitao@debian.org>
Tested-by: Jon Hunter <jonathanh@nvidia.com>
Acked-by: Jon Hunter <jonathanh@nvidia.com>
Acked-by: Thierry Reding <treding@nvidia.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260126-tegra_xfer-v2-6-6d2115e4f387@debian.org
Signed-off-by: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org>
Pull objtool fixes from Ingo Molnar::
- Bump up the Clang minimum version requirements for livepatch
builds, due to Clang assembler section handling bugs causing
silent miscompilations
- Strip livepatching symbol artifacts from non-livepatch modules
- Fix livepatch build warnings when certain Clang LTO options
are enabled
- Fix livepatch build error when CONFIG_MEM_ALLOC_PROFILING_DEBUG=y
* tag 'objtool-urgent-2026-02-07' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/tip/tip:
objtool/klp: Fix unexported static call key access for manually built livepatch modules
objtool/klp: Fix symbol correlation for orphaned local symbols
livepatch: Free klp_{object,func}_ext data after initialization
livepatch: Fix having __klp_objects relics in non-livepatch modules
livepatch/klp-build: Require Clang assembler >= 20
During the investigation of the various transition mode issues
instrumentation revealed that the amount of bitmap operations can be
significantly reduced when a task with a transitional CID schedules out
after the fixup function completed and disabled the transition mode.
At that point the mode is stable and therefore it is not required to drop
the transitional CID back into the pool. As the fixup is complete the
potential exhaustion of the CID pool is not longer possible, so the CID can
be transferred to the scheduling out task or to the CPU depending on the
current ownership mode.
The racy snapshot of mm_cid::mode which contains both the ownership state
and the transition bit is valid because runqueue lock is held and the fixup
function of a concurrent mode switch is serialized.
Assigning the ownership right there not only spares the bitmap access for
dropping the CID it also avoids it when the task is scheduled back in as it
directly hits the fast path in both modes when the CID is within the
optimal range. If it's outside the range the next schedule in will need to
converge so dropping it right away is sensible. In the good case this also
allows to go into the fast path on the next schedule in operation.
With a thread pool benchmark which is configured to cross the mode switch
boundaries frequently this reduces the number of bitmap operations by about
30% and increases the fastpath utilization in the low single digit
percentage range.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de>
Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org>
Reviewed-by: Mathieu Desnoyers <mathieu.desnoyers@efficios.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260201192835.100194627@kernel.org
The 'max' argument of ida_alloc_max() takes the maximum valid ID and not
the "count". Using an ID of BINDERFS_MAX_MINOR (1 << 20) for dev->minor
would exceed the limits of minor numbers (20-bits). Fix this off-by-one
error by subtracting 1 from the 'max'.
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Fixes: eafedbc7c050 ("rust_binder: add Rust Binder driver")
Reported-by: kernel test robot <lkp@intel.com>
Closes: https://lore.kernel.org/r/202512181203.IOv6IChH-lkp@intel.com/
Signed-off-by: Carlos Llamas <cmllamas@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Alice Ryhl <aliceryhl@google.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260127235545.2307876-1-cmllamas@google.com
Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
Pull SCSI fixes from James Bottomley:
"Only one core change, the rest are drivers.
The core change reorders some state operations in the error handler to
try to prevent missed wake ups of the error handler (which can halt
error processing and effectively freeze the entire system)"
* tag 'scsi-fixes' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/jejb/scsi:
scsi: qla2xxx: Sanitize payload size to prevent member overflow
scsi: target: iscsi: Fix use-after-free in iscsit_dec_session_usage_count()
scsi: target: iscsi: Fix use-after-free in iscsit_dec_conn_usage_count()
scsi: core: Wake up the error handler when final completions race against each other
scsi: storvsc: Process unsupported MODE_SENSE_10
scsi: xen: scsiback: Fix potential memory leak in scsiback_remove()
Protect the curr_xfer clearing in tegra_qspi_non_combined_seq_xfer()
with the spinlock to prevent a race with the interrupt handler that
reads this field to check if a transfer is in progress.
Fixes: b4e002d8a7ce ("spi: tegra210-quad: Fix timeout handling")
Signed-off-by: Breno Leitao <leitao@debian.org>
Tested-by: Jon Hunter <jonathanh@nvidia.com>
Acked-by: Jon Hunter <jonathanh@nvidia.com>
Acked-by: Thierry Reding <treding@nvidia.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260126-tegra_xfer-v2-5-6d2115e4f387@debian.org
Signed-off-by: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org>
Fedora QA reported the following panic:
BUG: unable to handle page fault for address: 0000000040003e54
#PF: supervisor write access in kernel mode
#PF: error_code(0x0002) - not-present page
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS edk2-20251119-3.fc43 11/19/2025
RIP: 0010:vmware_hypercall4.constprop.0+0x52/0x90
..
Call Trace:
vmmouse_report_events+0x13e/0x1b0
psmouse_handle_byte+0x15/0x60
ps2_interrupt+0x8a/0xd0
...
because the QEMU VMware mouse emulation is buggy, and clears the top 32
bits of %rdi that the kernel kept a pointer in.
The QEMU vmmouse driver saves and restores the register state in a
"uint32_t data[6];" and as a result restores the state with the high
bits all cleared.
RDI originally contained the value of a valid kernel stack address
(0xff5eeb3240003e54). After the vmware hypercall it now contains
0x40003e54, and we get a page fault as a result when it is dereferenced.
The proper fix would be in QEMU, but this works around the issue in the
kernel to keep old setups working, when old kernels had not happened to
keep any state in %rdi over the hypercall.
In theory this same issue exists for all the hypercalls in the vmmouse
driver; in practice it has only been seen with vmware_hypercall3() and
vmware_hypercall4(). For now, just mark RDI/RSI as clobbered for those
two calls. This should have a minimal effect on code generation overall
as it should be rare for the compiler to want to make RDI/RSI live
across hypercalls.
Reported-by: Justin Forbes <jforbes@fedoraproject.org>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/all/99a9c69a-fc1a-43b7-8d1e-c42d6493b41f@broadcom.com/
Signed-off-by: Josh Poimboeuf <jpoimboe@kernel.org>
Cc: stable@kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
Enabling CONFIG_MEM_ALLOC_PROFILING_DEBUG with CONFIG_SAMPLE_LIVEPATCH
results in the following error:
samples/livepatch/livepatch-shadow-fix1.o: error: objtool: static_call: can't find static_call_key symbol: __SCK__WARN_trap
This is caused an extra file->klp sanity check which was added by commit
164c9201e1da ("objtool: Add base objtool support for livepatch
modules"). That check was intended to ensure that livepatch modules
built with klp-build always have full access to their static call keys.
However, it failed to account for the fact that manually built livepatch
modules (i.e., not built with klp-build) might need access to unexported
static call keys, for which read-only access is typically allowed for
modules.
While the livepatch-shadow-fix1 module doesn't explicitly use any static
calls, it does have a memory allocation, which can cause
CONFIG_MEM_ALLOC_PROFILING_DEBUG to insert a WARN() call. And WARN() is
now an unexported static call as of commit 860238af7a33 ("x86_64/bug:
Inline the UD1").
Fix it by removing the overzealous file->klp check, restoring the
original behavior for manually built livepatch modules.
Fixes: 164c9201e1da ("objtool: Add base objtool support for livepatch modules")
Reported-by: Arnd Bergmann <arnd@arndb.de>
Acked-by: Song Liu <song@kernel.org>
Tested-by: Arnd Bergmann <arnd@arndb.de>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/0bd3ae9a53c3d743417fe842b740a7720e2bcd1c.1770058775.git.jpoimboe@kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Josh Poimboeuf <jpoimboe@kernel.org>
When a exiting task initiates the switch from per CPU back to per task
mode, it has already dropped its CID and marked itself inactive. But a
leftover from an earlier iteration of the rework then reassigns the per
CPU CID to the exiting task with the transition bit set.
That's wrong as the task is already marked CID inactive, which means it is
inconsistent state. It's harmless because the CID is marked in transit and
therefore dropped back into the pool when the exiting task schedules out
either through preemption or the final schedule().
Simply drop the per CPU CID when the exiting task triggered the transition.
Fixes: fbd0e71dc370 ("sched/mmcid: Provide CID ownership mode fixup functions")
Signed-off-by: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org>
Reviewed-by: Mathieu Desnoyers <mathieu.desnoyers@efficios.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260201192835.032221009@kernel.org
The error logging for failed transactions is misleading as it always
reports "dead process or thread" even when the target is actually
frozen. Additionally, the pid and tid are reversed which can further
confuse debugging efforts. Fix both issues.
Cc: stable@kernel.org
Cc: Steven Moreland <smoreland@google.com>
Fixes: a15dac8b2286 ("binder: additional transaction error logs")
Signed-off-by: Carlos Llamas <cmllamas@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Alice Ryhl <aliceryhl@google.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260123175702.2154348-1-cmllamas@google.com
Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
Pull keys fix from Jarkko Sakkinen.
* tag 'keys-trusted-next-6.19-rc7' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/jarkko/linux-tpmdd:
keys/trusted_keys: fix handle passed to tpm_buf_append_name during unseal
In qla27xx_copy_fpin_pkt() and qla27xx_copy_multiple_pkt(), the frame_size
reported by firmware is used to calculate the copy length into
item->iocb. However, the iocb member is defined as a fixed-size 64-byte
array within struct purex_item.
If the reported frame_size exceeds 64 bytes, subsequent memcpy calls will
overflow the iocb member boundary. While extra memory might be allocated,
this cross-member write is unsafe and triggers warnings under
CONFIG_FORTIFY_SOURCE.
Fix this by capping total_bytes to the size of the iocb member (64 bytes)
before allocation and copying. This ensures all copies remain within the
bounds of the destination structure member.
Fixes: 875386b98857 ("scsi: qla2xxx: Add Unsolicited LS Request and Response Support for NVMe")
Signed-off-by: Jiasheng Jiang <jiashengjiangcool@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Himanshu Madhani <hmadhani2024@gmail.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260106205344.18031-1-jiashengjiangcool@gmail.com
Signed-off-by: Martin K. Petersen <martin.petersen@oracle.com>
The curr_xfer field is read by the IRQ handler without holding the lock
to check if a transfer is in progress. When clearing curr_xfer in the
combined sequence transfer loop, protect it with the spinlock to prevent
a race with the interrupt handler.
Protect the curr_xfer clearing at the exit path of
tegra_qspi_combined_seq_xfer() with the spinlock to prevent a race
with the interrupt handler that reads this field.
Without this protection, the IRQ handler could read a partially updated
curr_xfer value, leading to NULL pointer dereference or use-after-free.
Fixes: b4e002d8a7ce ("spi: tegra210-quad: Fix timeout handling")
Signed-off-by: Breno Leitao <leitao@debian.org>
Tested-by: Jon Hunter <jonathanh@nvidia.com>
Acked-by: Jon Hunter <jonathanh@nvidia.com>
Acked-by: Thierry Reding <treding@nvidia.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260126-tegra_xfer-v2-4-6d2115e4f387@debian.org
Signed-off-by: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org>
Pull hotfixes from Andrew Morton:
"A couple of late-breaking MM fixes. One against a new-in-this-cycle
patch and the other addresses a locking issue which has been there for
over a year"
* tag 'mm-hotfixes-stable-2026-02-06-12-37' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/akpm/mm:
mm/memory-failure: reject unsupported non-folio compound page
procfs: avoid fetching build ID while holding VMA lock
When compiling with CONFIG_LTO_CLANG_THIN, vmlinux.o has
__irf_[start|end] before the first FILE entry:
$ readelf -sW vmlinux.o
Symbol table '.symtab' contains 597706 entries:
Num: Value Size Type Bind Vis Ndx Name
0: 0000000000000000 0 NOTYPE LOCAL DEFAULT UND
1: 0000000000000000 0 NOTYPE LOCAL DEFAULT 18 __irf_start
2: 0000000000000200 0 NOTYPE LOCAL DEFAULT 18 __irf_end
3: 0000000000000000 0 SECTION LOCAL DEFAULT 17 .text
4: 0000000000000000 0 SECTION LOCAL DEFAULT 18 .init.ramfs
This causes klp-build warnings like:
vmlinux.o: warning: objtool: no correlation: __irf_start
vmlinux.o: warning: objtool: no correlation: __irf_end
The problem is that Clang LTO is stripping the initramfs_data.o FILE
symbol, causing those two symbols to be orphaned and not noticed by
klp-diff's correlation logic. Add a loop to correlate any symbols found
before the first FILE symbol.
Fixes: dd590d4d57eb ("objtool/klp: Introduce klp diff subcommand for diffing object files")
Reported-by: Song Liu <song@kernel.org>
Acked-by: Song Liu <song@kernel.org>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/e21ec1141fc749b5f538d7329b531c1ab63a6d1a.1770055235.git.jpoimboe@kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Josh Poimboeuf <jpoimboe@kernel.org>
Shrikanth reported a hard lockup which he observed once. The stack trace
shows the following CID related participants:
watchdog: CPU 23 self-detected hard LOCKUP @ mm_get_cid+0xe8/0x188
NIP: mm_get_cid+0xe8/0x188
LR: mm_get_cid+0x108/0x188
mm_cid_switch_to+0x3c4/0x52c
__schedule+0x47c/0x700
schedule_idle+0x3c/0x64
do_idle+0x160/0x1b0
cpu_startup_entry+0x48/0x50
start_secondary+0x284/0x288
start_secondary_prolog+0x10/0x14
watchdog: CPU 11 self-detected hard LOCKUP @ plpar_hcall_norets_notrace+0x18/0x2c
NIP: plpar_hcall_norets_notrace+0x18/0x2c
LR: queued_spin_lock_slowpath+0xd88/0x15d0
_raw_spin_lock+0x80/0xa0
raw_spin_rq_lock_nested+0x3c/0xf8
mm_cid_fixup_cpus_to_tasks+0xc8/0x28c
sched_mm_cid_exit+0x108/0x22c
do_exit+0xf4/0x5d0
make_task_dead+0x0/0x178
system_call_exception+0x128/0x390
system_call_vectored_common+0x15c/0x2ec
The task on CPU11 is running the CID ownership mode change fixup function
and is stuck on a runqueue lock. The task on CPU23 is trying to get a CID
from the pool with the same runqueue lock held, but the pool is empty.
After decoding a similar issue in the opposite direction switching from per
task to per CPU mode the tool which models the possible scenarios failed to
come up with a similar loop hole.
This showed up only once, was not reproducible and according to tooling not
related to a overlooked scheduling scenario permutation. But the fact that
it was observed on a PowerPC system gave the right hint: PowerPC is a
weakly ordered architecture.
The transition mechanism does:
WRITE_ONCE(mm->mm_cid.transit, MM_CID_TRANSIT);
WRITE_ONCE(mm->mm_cid.percpu, new_mode);
fixup()
WRITE_ONCE(mm->mm_cid.transit, 0);
mm_cid_schedin() does:
if (!READ_ONCE(mm->mm_cid.percpu))
...
cid |= READ_ONCE(mm->mm_cid.transit);
so weakly ordered systems can observe percpu == false and transit == 0 even
if the fixup function has not yet completed. As a consequence the task will
not drop the CID when scheduling out before the fixup is completed, which
means the CID space can be exhausted and the next task scheduling in will
loop in mm_get_cid() and the fixup thread can livelock on the held runqueue
lock as above.
This could obviously be solved by using:
smp_store_release(&mm->mm_cid.percpu, true);
and
smp_load_acquire(&mm->mm_cid.percpu);
but that brings a memory barrier back into the scheduler hotpath, which was
just designed out by the CID rewrite.
That can be completely avoided by combining the per CPU mode and the
transit storage into a single mm_cid::mode member and ordering the stores
against the fixup functions to prevent the CPU from reordering them.
That makes the update of both states atomic and a concurrent read observes
always consistent state.
The price is an additional AND operation in mm_cid_schedin() to evaluate
the per CPU or the per task path, but that's in the noise even on strongly
ordered architectures as the actual load can be significantly more
expensive and the conditional branch evaluation is there anyway.
Fixes: fbd0e71dc370 ("sched/mmcid: Provide CID ownership mode fixup functions")
Closes: https://lore.kernel.org/bdfea828-4585-40e8-8835-247c6a8a76b0@linux.ibm.com
Reported-by: Shrikanth Hegde <sshegde@linux.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org>
Reviewed-by: Mathieu Desnoyers <mathieu.desnoyers@efficios.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260201192834.965217106@kernel.org
This adds some alignment checks to match C Binder more closely. This
causes the driver to reject more transactions. I don't think any of the
transactions in question are harmful, but it's still a bug because it's
the wrong uapi to accept them.
The cases where usize is changed for u64, it will affect only 32-bit
kernels.
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Fixes: eafedbc7c050 ("rust_binder: add Rust Binder driver")
Signed-off-by: Alice Ryhl <aliceryhl@google.com>
Acked-by: Carlos Llamas <cmllamas@google.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260123-binder-alignment-more-checks-v1-1-7e1cea77411d@google.com
Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
Pull char/misc/iio driver fixes from Greg KH:
"Here are some small char/misc/iio and some other minor driver
subsystem fixes for 6.19-rc7. Nothing huge here, just some fixes for
reported issues including:
- lots of little iio driver fixes
- comedi driver fixes
- mux driver fix
- w1 driver fixes
- uio driver fix
- slimbus driver fixes
- hwtracing bugfix
- other tiny bugfixes
All of these have been in linux-next for a while with no reported
issues"
* tag 'char-misc-6.19-rc7' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/gregkh/char-misc: (36 commits)
comedi: dmm32at: serialize use of paged registers
mei: trace: treat reg parameter as string
uio: pci_sva: correct '-ENODEV' check logic
uacce: ensure safe queue release with state management
uacce: implement mremap in uacce_vm_ops to return -EPERM
uacce: fix isolate sysfs check condition
uacce: fix cdev handling in the cleanup path
slimbus: core: clean up of_slim_get_device()
slimbus: core: fix of_slim_get_device() kernel doc
slimbus: core: amend slim_get_device() kernel doc
slimbus: core: fix device reference leak on report present
slimbus: core: fix runtime PM imbalance on report present
slimbus: core: fix OF node leak on registration failure
intel_th: rename error label
intel_th: fix device leak on output open()
comedi: Fix getting range information for subdevices 16 to 255
mux: mmio: Fix IS_ERR() vs NULL check in probe()
interconnect: debugfs: initialize src_node and dst_node to empty strings
iio: dac: ad3552r-hs: fix out-of-bound write in ad3552r_hs_write_data_source
iio: accel: iis328dq: fix gain values
...
TPM2_Unseal[1] expects the handle of a loaded data object, and not the
handle of the parent key. But the tpm2_unseal_cmd provides the parent
keyhandle instead of blob_handle for the session HMAC calculation. This
causes unseal to fail.
Fix this by passing blob_handle to tpm_buf_append_name().
References:
[1] trustedcomputinggroup.org/wp-content/uploads/
Trusted-Platform-Module-2.0-Library-Part-3-Version-184_pub.pdf
Fixes: 6e9722e9a7bf ("tpm2-sessions: Fix out of range indexing in name_size")
Signed-off-by: Srish Srinivasan <ssrish@linux.ibm.com>
Reviewed-by: Stefan Berger <stefanb@linux.ibm.com>
Reviewed-by: Jarkko Sakkinen <jarkko@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Jarkko Sakkinen <jarkko@kernel.org>
In iscsit_dec_session_usage_count(), the function calls complete() while
holding the sess->session_usage_lock. Similar to the connection usage count
logic, the waiter signaled by complete() (e.g., in the session release
path) may wake up and free the iscsit_session structure immediately.
This creates a race condition where the current thread may attempt to
execute spin_unlock_bh() on a session structure that has already been
deallocated, resulting in a KASAN slab-use-after-free.
To resolve this, release the session_usage_lock before calling complete()
to ensure all dereferences of the sess pointer are finished before the
waiter is allowed to proceed with deallocation.
Signed-off-by: Maurizio Lombardi <mlombard@redhat.com>
Reported-by: Zhaojuan Guo <zguo@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Mike Christie <michael.christie@oracle.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260112165352.138606-3-mlombard@redhat.com
Signed-off-by: Martin K. Petersen <martin.petersen@oracle.com>
When the timeout handler processes a completed transfer and signals
completion, the transfer thread can immediately set up the next transfer
and assign curr_xfer to point to it.
If a delayed ISR from the previous transfer then runs, it checks if
(!tqspi->curr_xfer) (currently without the lock also -- to be fixed
soon) to detect stale interrupts, but this check passes because
curr_xfer now points to the new transfer. The ISR then incorrectly
processes the new transfer's context.
Protect the curr_xfer assignment with the spinlock to ensure the ISR
either sees NULL (and bails out) or sees the new value only after the
assignment is complete.
Fixes: 921fc1838fb0 ("spi: tegra210-quad: Add support for Tegra210 QSPI controller")
Signed-off-by: Breno Leitao <leitao@debian.org>
Tested-by: Jon Hunter <jonathanh@nvidia.com>
Acked-by: Jon Hunter <jonathanh@nvidia.com>
Acked-by: Thierry Reding <treding@nvidia.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260126-tegra_xfer-v2-3-6d2115e4f387@debian.org
Signed-off-by: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org>
Pull tracing fix from Steven Rostedt:
- Fix event format field alignments for 32 bit architectures
The fields in the event format files are used to parse the raw binary
buffer data by applications. If they are incorrect, then the
application produces garbage.
On 32 bit architectures, the function graph 64bit calltime and
rettime were off by 4bytes. That's because the actual fields are in a
packed structure but the macros used by the ftrace events did not
mark them as packed, and instead, gave them their natural alignment
which made their offsets off by 4 bytes.
There are macros to have a packed field within an embedded structure
of an event, but there's no macro for normal fields within a packed
structure of the event. The macro __field_packed() was used for the
packed embedded structure field. Rename that to __field_desc_packed()
(to match the non-packed embedded field macro __field_desc()), and
make __field_packed() for fields that are in a packed event structure
(which matches the unpacked __field() macro).
Switch the calltime and rettime fields of the function graph event to
use the new __field_packed() and this makes the offsets correct.
* tag 'trace-v6.19-rc7' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/trace/linux-trace:
tracing: Fix ftrace event field alignments
When !CONFIG_TRANSPARENT_HUGEPAGE, a non-folio compound page can appear in
a userspace mapping via either vm_insert_*() functions or
vm_operatios_struct->fault(). They are not folios, thus should not be
considered for folio operations like split. To reject these pages, make
sure get_hwpoison_page() is always called as HWPoisonHandlable() will do
the right work.
[Some commit log borrowed from Zi Yan. Thanks.]
Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20260205075328.523211-1-linmiaohe@huawei.com
Fixes: 689b8986776c ("mm/memory-failure: improve large block size folio handling")
Signed-off-by: Miaohe Lin <linmiaohe@huawei.com>
Reported-by: 是参差 <shicenci@gmail.com>
Closes: https://lore.kernel.org/all/PS1PPF7E1D7501F1E4F4441E7ECD056DEADAB98A@PS1PPF7E1D7501F.apcprd02.prod.outlook.com/
Reviewed-by: Zi Yan <ziy@nvidia.com>
Tested-by: Zi Yan <ziy@nvidia.com>
Cc: David Hildenbrand <david@kernel.org>
Cc: Jane Chu <jane.chu@oracle.com>
Cc: Miaohe Lin <linmiaohe@huawei.com>
Cc: Naoya Horiguchi <nao.horiguchi@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
The klp_object_ext and klp_func_ext data, which are stored in the
__klp_objects and __klp_funcs sections, respectively, are not needed
after they are used to create the actual klp_object and klp_func
instances. This operation is implemented by the init function in
scripts/livepatch/init.c.
Prefix the two sections with ".init" so they are freed after the module
is initializated.
Signed-off-by: Petr Pavlu <petr.pavlu@suse.com>
Acked-by: Joe Lawrence <joe.lawrence@redhat.com>
Acked-by: Miroslav Benes <mbenes@suse.cz>
Reviewed-by: Aaron Tomlin <atomlin@atomlin.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260123102825.3521961-3-petr.pavlu@suse.com
Signed-off-by: Josh Poimboeuf <jpoimboe@kernel.org>
Ihor reported a BPF CI failure which turned out to be a live lock in the
MM_CID management. The scenario is:
A test program creates the 5th thread, which means the MM_CID users become
more than the number of CPUs (four in this example), so it switches to per
CPU ownership mode.
At this point each live task of the program has a CID associated. Assume
thread creation order assignment for simplicity.
T0 CID0 runs fork() and creates T4
T1 CID1
T2 CID2
T3 CID3
T4 --- not visible yet
T0 sets mm_cid::percpu = true and transfers its own CID to CPU0 where it
runs on and then starts the fixup which walks through the threads to
transfer the per task CIDs either to the CPU the task is running on or drop
it back into the pool if the task is not on a CPU.
During that T1 - T3 are free to schedule in and out before the fixup caught
up with them. Going through all possible permutations with a python script
revealed a few problematic cases. The most trivial one is:
T1 schedules in on CPU1 and observes percpu == true, so it transfers
its CID to CPU1
T1 is migrated to CPU2 and schedule in observes percpu == true, but
CPU2 does not have a CID associated and T1 transferred its own to
CPU1
So it has to allocate one with CPU2 runqueue lock held, but the
pool is empty, so it keeps looping in mm_get_cid().
Now T0 reaches T1 in the thread walk and tries to lock the corresponding
runqueue lock, which is held causing a full live lock.
There is a similar scenario in the reverse direction of switching from per
CPU to task mode which is way more obvious and got therefore addressed by
an intermediate mode. In this mode the CIDs are marked with MM_CID_TRANSIT,
which means that they are neither owned by the CPU nor by the task. When a
task schedules out with a transit CID it drops the CID back into the pool
making it available for others to use temporarily. Once the task which
initiated the mode switch finished the fixup it clears the transit mode and
the process goes back into per task ownership mode.
Unfortunately this insight was not mapped back to the task to CPU mode
switch as the above described scenario was not considered in the analysis.
Apply the same transit mechanism to the task to CPU mode switch to handle
these problematic cases correctly.
As with the CPU to task transition this results in a potential temporary
contention on the CID bitmap, but that's only for the time it takes to
complete the transition. After that it stays in steady mode which does not
touch the bitmap at all.
Fixes: fbd0e71dc370 ("sched/mmcid: Provide CID ownership mode fixup functions")
Closes: https://lore.kernel.org/2b7463d7-0f58-4e34-9775-6e2115cfb971@linux.dev
Reported-by: Ihor Solodrai <ihor.solodrai@linux.dev>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org>
Reviewed-by: Mathieu Desnoyers <mathieu.desnoyers@efficios.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260201192834.897115238@kernel.org
Oneway transactions sent to frozen targets via binder_proc_transaction()
return a BR_TRANSACTION_PENDING_FROZEN error but they are still treated
as successful since the target is expected to thaw at some point. It is
then not safe to access 't' after BR_TRANSACTION_PENDING_FROZEN errors
as the transaction could have been consumed by the now thawed target.
This is the case for binder_netlink_report() which derreferences 't'
after a pending frozen error, as pointed out by the following KASAN
report:
==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: slab-use-after-free in binder_netlink_report.isra.0+0x694/0x6c8
Read of size 8 at addr ffff00000f98ba38 by task binder-util/522
CPU: 4 UID: 0 PID: 522 Comm: binder-util Not tainted 6.19.0-rc6-00015-gc03e9c42ae8f #1 PREEMPT
Hardware name: linux,dummy-virt (DT)
Call trace:
binder_netlink_report.isra.0+0x694/0x6c8
binder_transaction+0x66e4/0x79b8
binder_thread_write+0xab4/0x4440
binder_ioctl+0x1fd4/0x2940
[...]
Allocated by task 522:
__kmalloc_cache_noprof+0x17c/0x50c
binder_transaction+0x584/0x79b8
binder_thread_write+0xab4/0x4440
binder_ioctl+0x1fd4/0x2940
[...]
Freed by task 488:
kfree+0x1d0/0x420
binder_free_transaction+0x150/0x234
binder_thread_read+0x2d08/0x3ce4
binder_ioctl+0x488/0x2940
[...]
==================================================================
Instead, make a transaction copy so the data can be safely accessed by
binder_netlink_report() after a pending frozen error. While here, add a
comment about not using t->buffer in binder_netlink_report().
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Fixes: 63740349eba7 ("binder: introduce transaction reports via netlink")
Signed-off-by: Carlos Llamas <cmllamas@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Alice Ryhl <aliceryhl@google.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260122180203.1502637-1-cmllamas@google.com
Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
Pull serial driver fixes from Greg KH:
"Here are three small serial driver fixes for 6.19-rc7 that resolve
some reported issues. They include:
- tty->port race condition fix for a reported problem
- qcom_geni serial driver fix
- 8250_pci serial driver fix
All of these have been in linux-next with no reported issues"
* tag 'tty-6.19-rc7' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/gregkh/tty:
serial: Fix not set tty->port race condition
serial: 8250_pci: Fix broken RS485 for F81504/508/512
serial: qcom_geni: Fix BT failure regression on RB2 platform
1-Wire bus drivers fixes
Non critical (old issues) fixes:
1. Fix possible buffer overflow in W1 thermal driver sysfs interfasce,
2. Drop duplicated device put when attaching a slave device failed,
which could lead to memory corruption.
* tag 'w1-drv-6.20' of ssh://gitolite.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/krzk/linux-w1:
w1: fix redundant counter decrement in w1_attach_slave_device()
w1: therm: Fix off-by-one buffer overflow in alarms_store
Pull RISC-V fixes from Paul Walmsley:
"The notable changes here are the three RISC-V timer compare register
update sequence patches. These only apply to RV32 systems and are
related to the 64-bit timer compare value being split across two
separate 32-bit registers.
We weren't using the appropriate three-write sequence, documented in
the RISC-V ISA specifications, to avoid spurious timer interrupts
during the update sequence; so, these patches now use the recommended
sequence.
This doesn't affect 64-bit RISC-V systems, since the timer compare
value fits inside a single register and can be updated with a single
write.
- Fix the RISC-V timer compare register update sequence on RV32
systems to use the recommended sequence in the RISC-V ISA manual
This avoids spurious interrupts during updates
- Add a dependence on the new CONFIG_CACHEMAINT_FOR_DMA Kconfig
symbol for Renesas and StarFive RISC-V SoCs
- Add a temporary workaround for a Clang compiler bug caused by using
asm_goto_output for get_user()
- Clarify our documentation to specifically state a particular ISA
specification version for a chapter number reference"
* tag 'riscv-for-linus-6.19-rc7' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/riscv/linux:
riscv: Add intermediate cast to 'unsigned long' in __get_user_asm
riscv: Use 64-bit variable for output in __get_user_asm
soc: renesas: Fix missing dependency on new CONFIG_CACHEMAINT_FOR_DMA
riscv: ERRATA_STARFIVE_JH7100: Fix missing dependency on new CONFIG_CACHEMAINT_FOR_DMA
riscv: suspend: Fix stimecmp update hazard on RV32
riscv: kvm: Fix vstimecmp update hazard on RV32
riscv: clocksource: Fix stimecmp update hazard on RV32
Documentation: riscv: uabi: Clarify ISA spec version for canonical order
In iscsit_dec_conn_usage_count(), the function calls complete() while
holding the conn->conn_usage_lock. As soon as complete() is invoked, the
waiter (such as iscsit_close_connection()) may wake up and proceed to free
the iscsit_conn structure.
If the waiter frees the memory before the current thread reaches
spin_unlock_bh(), it results in a KASAN slab-use-after-free as the function
attempts to release a lock within the already-freed connection structure.
Fix this by releasing the spinlock before calling complete().
Signed-off-by: Maurizio Lombardi <mlombard@redhat.com>
Reported-by: Zhaojuan Guo <zguo@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Mike Christie <michael.christie@oracle.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260112165352.138606-2-mlombard@redhat.com
Signed-off-by: Martin K. Petersen <martin.petersen@oracle.com>
Move the assignment of the transfer pointer from curr_xfer inside the
spinlock critical section in both handle_cpu_based_xfer() and
handle_dma_based_xfer().
Previously, curr_xfer was read before acquiring the lock, creating a
window where the timeout path could clear curr_xfer between reading it
and using it. By moving the read inside the lock, the handlers are
guaranteed to see a consistent value that cannot be modified by the
timeout path.
Fixes: 921fc1838fb0 ("spi: tegra210-quad: Add support for Tegra210 QSPI controller")
Signed-off-by: Breno Leitao <leitao@debian.org>
Acked-by: Thierry Reding <treding@nvidia.com>
Tested-by: Jon Hunter <jonathanh@nvidia.com>
Acked-by: Jon Hunter <jonathanh@nvidia.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260126-tegra_xfer-v2-2-6d2115e4f387@debian.org
Signed-off-by: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org>
Pull ceph fixes from Ilya Dryomov:
"One RBD and two CephFS fixes which address potential oopses.
The RBD thing is more of a rare edge case that pops up in our CI,
while the two CephFS scenarios are regressions that were reported by
users and can be triggered trivially in normal operation. All marked
for stable"
* tag 'ceph-for-6.19-rc9' of https://github.com/ceph/ceph-client:
ceph: fix NULL pointer dereference in ceph_mds_auth_match()
ceph: fix oops due to invalid pointer for kfree() in parse_longname()
rbd: check for EOD after exclusive lock is ensured to be held
The fields of ftrace specific events (events used to save ftrace internal
events like function traces and trace_printk) are generated similarly to
how normal trace event fields are generated. That is, the fields are added
to a trace_events_fields array that saves the name, offset, size,
alignment and signness of the field. It is used to produce the output in
the format file in tracefs so that tooling knows how to parse the binary
data of the trace events.
The issue is that some of the ftrace event structures are packed. The
function graph exit event structures are one of them. The 64 bit calltime
and rettime fields end up 4 byte aligned, but the algorithm to show to
userspace shows them as 8 byte aligned.
The macros that create the ftrace events has one for embedded structure
fields. There's two macros for theses fields:
__field_desc() and __field_packed()
The difference of the latter macro is that it treats the field as packed.
Rename that field to __field_desc_packed() and create replace the
__field_packed() to be a normal field that is packed and have the calltime
and rettime use those.
This showed up on 32bit architectures for function graph time fields. It
had:
~# cat /sys/kernel/tracing/events/ftrace/funcgraph_exit/format
[..]
field:unsigned long func; offset:8; size:4; signed:0;
field:unsigned int depth; offset:12; size:4; signed:0;
field:unsigned int overrun; offset:16; size:4; signed:0;
field:unsigned long long calltime; offset:24; size:8; signed:0;
field:unsigned long long rettime; offset:32; size:8; signed:0;
Notice that overrun is at offset 16 with size 4, where in the structure
calltime is at offset 20 (16 + 4), but it shows the offset at 24. That's
because it used the alignment of unsigned long long when used as a
declaration and not as a member of a structure where it would be aligned
by word size (in this case 4).
By using the proper structure alignment, the format has it at the correct
offset:
~# cat /sys/kernel/tracing/events/ftrace/funcgraph_exit/format
[..]
field:unsigned long func; offset:8; size:4; signed:0;
field:unsigned int depth; offset:12; size:4; signed:0;
field:unsigned int overrun; offset:16; size:4; signed:0;
field:unsigned long long calltime; offset:20; size:8; signed:0;
field:unsigned long long rettime; offset:28; size:8; signed:0;
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Cc: Mathieu Desnoyers <mathieu.desnoyers@efficios.com>
Cc: Mark Rutland <mark.rutland@arm.com>
Acked-by: Masami Hiramatsu (Google) <mhiramat@kernel.org>
Reported-by: "jempty.liang" <imntjempty@163.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260204113628.53faec78@gandalf.local.home
Fixes: 04ae87a52074e ("ftrace: Rework event_create_dir()")
Closes: https://lore.kernel.org/all/20260130015740.212343-1-imntjempty@163.com/
Closes: https://lore.kernel.org/all/20260202123342.2544795-1-imntjempty@163.com/
Signed-off-by: Steven Rostedt (Google) <rostedt@goodmis.org>
Fix PROCMAP_QUERY to fetch optional build ID only after dropping mmap_lock
or per-VMA lock, whichever was used to lock VMA under question, to avoid
deadlock reported by syzbot:
-> #1 (&mm->mmap_lock){++++}-{4:4}:
__might_fault+0xed/0x170
_copy_to_iter+0x118/0x1720
copy_page_to_iter+0x12d/0x1e0
filemap_read+0x720/0x10a0
blkdev_read_iter+0x2b5/0x4e0
vfs_read+0x7f4/0xae0
ksys_read+0x12a/0x250
do_syscall_64+0xcb/0xf80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x77/0x7f
-> #0 (&sb->s_type->i_mutex_key#8){++++}-{4:4}:
__lock_acquire+0x1509/0x26d0
lock_acquire+0x185/0x340
down_read+0x98/0x490
blkdev_read_iter+0x2a7/0x4e0
__kernel_read+0x39a/0xa90
freader_fetch+0x1d5/0xa80
__build_id_parse.isra.0+0xea/0x6a0
do_procmap_query+0xd75/0x1050
procfs_procmap_ioctl+0x7a/0xb0
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x18e/0x210
do_syscall_64+0xcb/0xf80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x77/0x7f
other info that might help us debug this:
Possible unsafe locking scenario:
CPU0 CPU1
---- ----
rlock(&mm->mmap_lock);
lock(&sb->s_type->i_mutex_key#8);
lock(&mm->mmap_lock);
rlock(&sb->s_type->i_mutex_key#8);
*** DEADLOCK ***
This seems to be exacerbated (as we haven't seen these syzbot reports
before that) by the recent:
777a8560fd29 ("lib/buildid: use __kernel_read() for sleepable context")
To make this safe, we need to grab file refcount while VMA is still locked, but
other than that everything is pretty straightforward. Internal build_id_parse()
API assumes VMA is passed, but it only needs the underlying file reference, so
just add another variant build_id_parse_file() that expects file passed
directly.
[akpm@linux-foundation.org: fix up kerneldoc]
Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20260129215340.3742283-1-andrii@kernel.org
Fixes: ed5d583a88a9 ("fs/procfs: implement efficient VMA querying API for /proc/<pid>/maps")
Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andrii@kernel.org>
Reported-by: <syzbot+4e70c8e0a2017b432f7a@syzkaller.appspotmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Suren Baghdasaryan <surenb@google.com>
Tested-by: Suren Baghdasaryan <surenb@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Shakeel Butt <shakeel.butt@linux.dev>
Cc: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org>
Cc: Daniel Borkmann <daniel@iogearbox.net>
Cc: Eduard Zingerman <eddyz87@gmail.com>
Cc: Hao Luo <haoluo@google.com>
Cc: Jiri Olsa <jolsa@kernel.org>
Cc: John Fastabend <john.fastabend@gmail.com>
Cc: KP Singh <kpsingh@kernel.org>
Cc: Martin KaFai Lau <martin.lau@linux.dev>
Cc: Song Liu <song@kernel.org>
Cc: Stanislav Fomichev <sdf@fomichev.me>
Cc: Yonghong Song <yonghong.song@linux.dev>
Cc: <stable@vger.kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
The linker script scripts/module.lds.S specifies that all input
__klp_objects sections should be consolidated into an output section of
the same name, and start/stop symbols should be created to enable
scripts/livepatch/init.c to locate this data.
This start/stop pattern is not ideal for modules because the symbols are
created even if no __klp_objects input sections are present.
Consequently, a dummy __klp_objects section also appears in the
resulting module. This unnecessarily pollutes non-livepatch modules.
Instead, since modules are relocatable files, the usual method for
locating consolidated data in a module is to read its section table.
This approach avoids the aforementioned problem.
The klp_modinfo already stores a copy of the entire section table with
the final addresses. Introduce a helper function that
scripts/livepatch/init.c can call to obtain the location of the
__klp_objects section from this data.
Fixes: dd590d4d57eb ("objtool/klp: Introduce klp diff subcommand for diffing object files")
Signed-off-by: Petr Pavlu <petr.pavlu@suse.com>
Acked-by: Joe Lawrence <joe.lawrence@redhat.com>
Acked-by: Miroslav Benes <mbenes@suse.cz>
Reviewed-by: Aaron Tomlin <atomlin@atomlin.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260123102825.3521961-2-petr.pavlu@suse.com
Signed-off-by: Josh Poimboeuf <jpoimboe@kernel.org>
Fix a bug where an empty FDA (fd array) object with 0 fds would cause an
out-of-bounds error. The previous implementation used `skip == 0` to
mean "this is a pointer fixup", but 0 is also the correct skip length
for an empty FDA. If the FDA is at the end of the buffer, then this
results in an attempt to write 8-bytes out of bounds. This is caught and
results in an EINVAL error being returned to userspace.
The pattern of using `skip == 0` as a special value originates from the
C-implementation of Binder. As part of fixing this bug, this pattern is
replaced with a Rust enum.
I considered the alternate option of not pushing a fixup when the length
is zero, but I think it's cleaner to just get rid of the zero-is-special
stuff.
The root cause of this bug was diagnosed by Gemini CLI on first try. I
used the following prompt:
> There appears to be a bug in @drivers/android/binder/thread.rs where
> the Fixups oob bug is triggered with 316 304 316 324. This implies
> that we somehow ended up with a fixup where buffer A has a pointer to
> buffer B, but the pointer is located at an index in buffer A that is
> out of bounds. Please investigate the code to find the bug. You may
> compare with @drivers/android/binder.c that implements this correctly.
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Reported-by: DeepChirp <DeepChirp@outlook.com>
Closes: https://github.com/waydroid/waydroid/issues/2157
Fixes: eafedbc7c050 ("rust_binder: add Rust Binder driver")
Tested-by: DeepChirp <DeepChirp@outlook.com>
Signed-off-by: Alice Ryhl <aliceryhl@google.com>
Acked-by: Carlos Llamas <cmllamas@google.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20251229-fda-zero-v1-1-58a41cb0e7ec@google.com
Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
Pull i2c fix from Wolfram Sang:
- k1: drop wrong IRQF_ONESHOT from IRQ request to fix genirq warning
* tag 'i2c-for-6.19-rc7' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/wsa/linux:
i2c: spacemit: drop IRQF_ONESHOT flag from IRQ request
Revert commit bfc467db60b7 ("serial: remove redundant
tty_port_link_device()") because the tty_port_link_device() is not
redundant: the tty->port has to be confured before we call
uart_configure_port(), otherwise user-space can open console without TTY
linked to the driver.
This tty_port_link_device() was added explicitly to avoid this exact
issue in commit fb2b90014d78 ("tty: link tty and port before configuring
it as console"), so offending commit basically reverted the fix saying
it is redundant without addressing the actual race condition presented
there.
Reproducible always as tty->port warning on Qualcomm SoC with most of
devices disabled, so with very fast boot, and one serial device being
the console:
printk: legacy console [ttyMSM0] enabled
printk: legacy console [ttyMSM0] enabled
printk: legacy bootconsole [qcom_geni0] disabled
printk: legacy bootconsole [qcom_geni0] disabled
------------[ cut here ]------------
tty_init_dev: ttyMSM driver does not set tty->port. This would crash the kernel. Fix the driver!
WARNING: drivers/tty/tty_io.c:1414 at tty_init_dev.part.0+0x228/0x25c, CPU#2: systemd/1
Modules linked in: socinfo tcsrcc_eliza gcc_eliza sm3_ce fuse ipv6
CPU: 2 UID: 0 PID: 1 Comm: systemd Tainted: G S 6.19.0-rc4-next-20260108-00024-g2202f4d30aa8 #73 PREEMPT
Tainted: [S]=CPU_OUT_OF_SPEC
Hardware name: Qualcomm Technologies, Inc. Eliza (DT)
...
tty_init_dev.part.0 (drivers/tty/tty_io.c:1414 (discriminator 11)) (P)
tty_open (arch/arm64/include/asm/atomic_ll_sc.h:95 (discriminator 3) drivers/tty/tty_io.c:2073 (discriminator 3) drivers/tty/tty_io.c:2120 (discriminator 3))
chrdev_open (fs/char_dev.c:411)
do_dentry_open (fs/open.c:962)
vfs_open (fs/open.c:1094)
do_open (fs/namei.c:4634)
path_openat (fs/namei.c:4793)
do_filp_open (fs/namei.c:4820)
do_sys_openat2 (fs/open.c:1391 (discriminator 3))
...
Starting Network Name Resolution...
Apparently the flow with this small Yocto-based ramdisk user-space is:
driver (qcom_geni_serial.c): user-space:
============================ ===========
qcom_geni_serial_probe()
uart_add_one_port()
serial_core_register_port()
serial_core_add_one_port()
uart_configure_port()
register_console()
|
| open console
| ...
| tty_init_dev()
| driver->ports[idx] is NULL
|
tty_port_register_device_attr_serdev()
tty_port_link_device() <- set driver->ports[idx]
Fixes: bfc467db60b7 ("serial: remove redundant tty_port_link_device()")
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Krzysztof Kozlowski <krzysztof.kozlowski@oss.qualcomm.com>
Reviewed-by: Jiri Slaby <jirislaby@kernel.org>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260123072139.53293-2-krzysztof.kozlowski@oss.qualcomm.com
Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
Some of the hardware registers of the DMM-32-AT board are multiplexed,
using the least significant two bits of the Miscellaneous Control
register to select the function of registers at offsets 12 to 15:
00 => 8254 timer/counter registers are accessible
01 => 8255 digital I/O registers are accessible
10 => Reserved
11 => Calibration registers are accessible
The interrupt service routine (`dmm32at_isr()`) clobbers the bottom two
bits of the register with value 00, which would interfere with access to
the 8255 registers by the `dm32at_8255_io()` function (used for Comedi
instruction handling on the digital I/O subdevice).
Make use of the generic Comedi device spin-lock `dev->spinlock` (which
is otherwise unused by this driver) to serialize access to the
miscellaneous control register and paged registers.
Fixes: 3c501880ac44 ("Staging: comedi: add dmm32at driver")
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Ian Abbott <abbotti@mev.co.uk>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260112162835.91688-1-abbotti@mev.co.uk
Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
In w1_attach_slave_device(), if __w1_attach_slave_device() fails,
put_device() -> w1_slave_release() is called to do the cleanup job.
In w1_slave_release(), sl->family->refcnt and sl->master->slave_count
have already been decremented. There is no need to decrement twice
in w1_attach_slave_device().
Fixes: 2c927c0c73fd ("w1: Fix slave count on 1-Wire bus (resend)")
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Haoxiang Li <lihaoxiang@isrc.iscas.ac.cn>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20251218111414.564403-1-lihaoxiang@isrc.iscas.ac.cn
Signed-off-by: Krzysztof Kozlowski <krzk@kernel.org>
Pull NTB fix from Jon Mason:
"Bug fix for uninitialized mutex in ntb transport"
* tag 'ntb-6.19-bugfixes' of https://github.com/jonmason/ntb:
ntb: transport: Fix uninitialized mutex
After commit bdce162f2e57 ("riscv: Use 64-bit variable for output in
__get_user_asm"), there is a warning when building for 32-bit RISC-V:
In file included from include/linux/uaccess.h:13,
from include/linux/sched/task.h:13,
from include/linux/sched/signal.h:9,
from include/linux/rcuwait.h:6,
from include/linux/mm.h:36,
from include/linux/migrate.h:5,
from mm/migrate.c:16:
mm/migrate.c: In function 'do_pages_move':
arch/riscv/include/asm/uaccess.h:115:15: warning: cast to pointer from integer of different size [-Wint-to-pointer-cast]
115 | (x) = (__typeof__(x))__tmp; \
| ^
arch/riscv/include/asm/uaccess.h:198:17: note: in expansion of macro '__get_user_asm'
198 | __get_user_asm("lb", (x), __gu_ptr, label); \
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~
arch/riscv/include/asm/uaccess.h:218:9: note: in expansion of macro '__get_user_nocheck'
218 | __get_user_nocheck(x, ptr, __gu_failed); \
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
arch/riscv/include/asm/uaccess.h:255:9: note: in expansion of macro '__get_user_error'
255 | __get_user_error(__gu_val, __gu_ptr, __gu_err); \
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
arch/riscv/include/asm/uaccess.h:285:17: note: in expansion of macro '__get_user'
285 | __get_user((x), __p) : \
| ^~~~~~~~~~
mm/migrate.c:2358:29: note: in expansion of macro 'get_user'
2358 | if (get_user(p, pages + i))
| ^~~~~~~~
Add an intermediate cast to 'unsigned long', which is guaranteed to be the same
width as a pointer, before the cast to the type of the output variable to clear
up the warning.
Fixes: bdce162f2e57 ("riscv: Use 64-bit variable for output in __get_user_asm")
Reported-by: kernel test robot <lkp@intel.com>
Closes: https://lore.kernel.org/oe-kbuild-all/202601210526.OT45dlOZ-lkp@intel.com/
Signed-off-by: Nathan Chancellor <nathan@kernel.org>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260121-riscv-fix-int-to-pointer-cast-v1-1-b83eebe57c76@kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Paul Walmsley <pjw@kernel.org>
The fragile ordering between marking commands completed or failed so
that the error handler only wakes when the last running command
completes or times out has race conditions. These race conditions can
cause the SCSI layer to fail to wake the error handler, leaving I/O
through the SCSI host stuck as the error state cannot advance.
First, there is an memory ordering issue within scsi_dec_host_busy().
The write which clears SCMD_STATE_INFLIGHT may be reordered with reads
counting in scsi_host_busy(). While the local CPU will see its own
write, reordering can allow other CPUs in scsi_dec_host_busy() or
scsi_eh_inc_host_failed() to see a raised busy count, causing no CPU to
see a host busy equal to the host_failed count.
This race condition can be prevented with a memory barrier on the error
path to force the write to be visible before counting host busy
commands.
Second, there is a general ordering issue with scsi_eh_inc_host_failed(). By
counting busy commands before incrementing host_failed, it can race with a
final command in scsi_dec_host_busy(), such that scsi_dec_host_busy() does
not see host_failed incremented but scsi_eh_inc_host_failed() counts busy
commands before SCMD_STATE_INFLIGHT is cleared by scsi_dec_host_busy(),
resulting in neither waking the error handler task.
This needs the call to scsi_host_busy() to be moved after host_failed is
incremented to close the race condition.
Fixes: 6eb045e092ef ("scsi: core: avoid host-wide host_busy counter for scsi_mq")
Signed-off-by: David Jeffery <djeffery@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Bart Van Assche <bvanassche@acm.org>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260113161036.6730-1-djeffery@redhat.com
Signed-off-by: Martin K. Petersen <martin.petersen@oracle.com>
When the ISR thread wakes up late and finds that the timeout handler
has already processed the transfer (curr_xfer is NULL), return
IRQ_HANDLED instead of IRQ_NONE.
Use a similar approach to tegra_qspi_handle_timeout() by reading
QSPI_TRANS_STATUS and checking the QSPI_RDY bit to determine if the
hardware actually completed the transfer. If QSPI_RDY is set, the
interrupt was legitimate and triggered by real hardware activity.
The fact that the timeout path handled it first doesn't make it
spurious. Returning IRQ_NONE incorrectly suggests the interrupt
wasn't for this device, which can cause issues with shared interrupt
lines and interrupt accounting.
Fixes: b4e002d8a7ce ("spi: tegra210-quad: Fix timeout handling")
Signed-off-by: Breno Leitao <leitao@debian.org>
Signed-off-by: Usama Arif <usamaarif642@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Jon Hunter <jonathanh@nvidia.com>
Acked-by: Jon Hunter <jonathanh@nvidia.com>
Acked-by: Thierry Reding <treding@nvidia.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260126-tegra_xfer-v2-1-6d2115e4f387@debian.org
Signed-off-by: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org>
Pull dma-mapping fixes from Marek Szyprowski:
"Two minor fixes for the DMA-mapping subsystem:
- check for the rare case of the allocation failure of the global CMA
pool (Shanker Donthineni)
- avoid perf buffer overflow when tracing large scatter-gather lists
(Deepanshu Kartikey)"
* tag 'dma-mapping-6.19-2026-02-06' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/mszyprowski/linux:
dma: contiguous: Check return value of dma_contiguous_reserve_area()
tracing/dma: Cap dma_map_sg tracepoint arrays to prevent buffer overflow
The CephFS kernel client has regression starting from 6.18-rc1.
We have issue in ceph_mds_auth_match() if fs_name == NULL:
const char fs_name = mdsc->fsc->mount_options->mds_namespace;
...
if (auth->match.fs_name && strcmp(auth->match.fs_name, fs_name)) {
/ fsname mismatch, try next one */
return 0;
}
Patrick Donnelly suggested that: In summary, we should definitely start
decoding `fs_name` from the MDSMap and do strict authorizations checks
against it. Note that the `-o mds_namespace=foo` should only be used for
selecting the file system to mount and nothing else. It's possible
no mds_namespace is specified but the kernel will mount the only
file system that exists which may have name "foo".
This patch reworks ceph_mdsmap_decode() and namespace_equals() with
the goal of supporting the suggested concept. Now struct ceph_mdsmap
contains m_fs_name field that receives copy of extracted FS name
by ceph_extract_encoded_string(). For the case of "old" CephFS file
systems, it is used "cephfs" name.
[ idryomov: replace redundant %*pE with %s in ceph_mdsmap_decode(),
get rid of a series of strlen() calls in ceph_namespace_match(),
drop changes to namespace_equals() body to avoid treating empty
mds_namespace as equal, drop changes to ceph_mdsc_handle_fsmap()
as namespace_equals() isn't an equivalent substitution there ]
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Fixes: 22c73d52a6d0 ("ceph: fix multifs mds auth caps issue")
Link: https://tracker.ceph.com/issues/73886
Signed-off-by: Viacheslav Dubeyko <Slava.Dubeyko@ibm.com>
Reviewed-by: Patrick Donnelly <pdonnell@ibm.com>
Tested-by: Patrick Donnelly <pdonnell@ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Ilya Dryomov <idryomov@gmail.com>
When realloc() fails in add_string(), the function returns -1 but leaves
*vals pointing to the previously allocated memory. This can cause memory
leaks in callers like make_trace_array() that return on error without
freeing the partially built array.
Fix this by freeing *vals and setting it to NULL when realloc() fails.
This makes the error handling self-contained in add_string() so callers
don't need to handle cleanup on failure.
This bug is found by my static analysis tool and my code review.
Cc: Masami Hiramatsu <mhiramat@kernel.org>
Cc: Mathieu Desnoyers <mathieu.desnoyers@efficios.com>
Fixes: e30f8e61e2518 ("tracing: Add a tracepoint verification check at build time")
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260119114542.1714405-1-geoffreyhe2@gmail.com
Signed-off-by: Weigang He <geoffreyhe2@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Steven Rostedt (Google) <rostedt@goodmis.org>
liveupdate is used to enable Live Update Orchestrator (LUO) early during
boot. Add it to kernel-parameters.txt so users can discover and use it.
Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20260130112036.359806-1-me@linux.beauty
Signed-off-by: Li Chen <me@linux.beauty>
Acked-by: Mike Rapoport (Microsoft) <rppt@kernel.org>
Cc: Arnd Bergmann <arnd@arndb.de>
Cc: "Borislav Petkov (AMD)" <bp@alien8.de>
Cc: Frank van der Linden <fvdl@google.com>
Cc: Ingo Molnar <mingo@kernel.org>
Cc: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net>
Cc: Kees Cook <kees@kernel.org>
Cc: Li RongQing <lirongqing@baidu.com>
Cc: Pawan Gupta <pawan.kumar.gupta@linux.intel.com>
Cc: Randy Dunlap <rdunlap@infradead.org>
Cc: Pratyush Yadav <ptyadav@amazon.de>
Cc: Pasha Tatashin <pasha.tatashin@soleen.com>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
Some special sections specify their ELF section entsize, for example:
.pushsection section, "M", @progbits, 8
The entsize (8 in this example) is needed by objtool klp-diff for
extracting individual entries.
Clang assembler versions older than 20 silently ignore the above
construct and set entsize to 0, resulting in the following error:
.discard.annotate_data: missing special section entsize or annotations
Add a klp-build check to prevent the use of Clang assembler versions
prior to 20.
Fixes: 24ebfcd65a87 ("livepatch/klp-build: Introduce klp-build script for generating livepatch modules")
Reported-by: Song Liu <song@kernel.org>
Acked-by: Song Liu <song@kernel.org>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/957fd52e375d0e2cfa3ac729160da995084a7f5e.1769562556.git.jpoimboe@kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Josh Poimboeuf <jpoimboe@kernel.org>
Pull SCSI fixes from James Bottomley:
"Small changes in drivers only, no core changes.
The firewire one fixes a user controlled overflow (but I still can't
see how it could be exploited)"
* tag 'scsi-fixes' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/jejb/scsi:
scsi: ufs: amd-versal2: Fix PHY initialization in HCE enable notify
scsi: firewire: sbp-target: Fix overflow in sbp_make_tpg()
scsi: be2iscsi: Fix a memory leak in beiscsi_boot_get_sinfo()
scsi: qla2xxx: edif: Fix dma_free_coherent() size
Pull spi fixes from Mark Brown:
"One final batch of fixes for the Tegra SPI drivers, the main one is a
batch of fixes for races with the interrupts in the Tegra210 QSPI
driver that Breno has been working on for a while"
* tag 'spi-fix-v6.19-rc8' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/broonie/spi:
spi: tegra114: Preserve SPI mode bits in def_command1_reg
spi: tegra: Fix a memory leak in tegra_slink_probe()
spi: tegra210-quad: Protect curr_xfer check in IRQ handler
spi: tegra210-quad: Protect curr_xfer clearing in tegra_qspi_non_combined_seq_xfer
spi: tegra210-quad: Protect curr_xfer in tegra_qspi_combined_seq_xfer
spi: tegra210-quad: Protect curr_xfer assignment in tegra_qspi_setup_transfer_one
spi: tegra210-quad: Move curr_xfer read inside spinlock
spi: tegra210-quad: Return IRQ_HANDLED when timeout already processed transfer
The COMMAND1 register bits [29:28] set the SPI mode, which controls
the clock idle level. When a transfer ends, tegra_spi_transfer_end()
writes def_command1_reg back to restore the default state, but this
register value currently lacks the mode bits. This results in the
clock always being configured as idle low, breaking devices that
need it high.
Fix this by storing the mode bits in def_command1_reg during setup,
to prevent this field from always being cleared.
Fixes: f333a331adfa ("spi/tegra114: add spi driver")
Signed-off-by: Vishwaroop A <va@nvidia.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260204141212.1540382-1-va@nvidia.com
Signed-off-by: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org>
Pull binder fixes from Greg KH:
"Here are some small, last-minute binder C and Rust driver fixes for
reported issues. They include a number of fixes for reported crashes
and other problems.
All of these have been in linux-next this week, and longer"
* tag 'char-misc-6.19-final' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/gregkh/char-misc:
binderfs: fix ida_alloc_max() upper bound
rust_binderfs: fix ida_alloc_max() upper bound
binder: fix BR_FROZEN_REPLY error log
rust_binder: add additional alignment checks
binder: fix UAF in binder_netlink_report()
rust_binder: correctly handle FDA objects of length zero
Higher voltage settings were unusable due to incorrect n_voltages values
causing registration failures. For example, setting aldo4 to 3.3V failed
with -EINVAL because the required selector (123) exceeded the allowed
range (n_voltages=117).
Fix by aligning n_voltages with the hardware register widths per the P1
datasheet [1]:
- BUCK: 255 (was 254), allows selectors 0-254, selector 255 is reserved
- LDO: 128 (was 117), allows selectors 0-127, selectors 0-10 are for
suspend mode, valid operational range is 11-127
This enables the full voltage range supported by the hardware.
Fixes: 8b84d712ad84 ("regulator: spacemit: support SpacemiT P1 regulators")
Link: https://developer.spacemit.com/documentation [1]
Signed-off-by: Guodong Xu <guodong@riscstar.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260122-spacemit-p1-v1-1-309be27fbff9@riscstar.com
Signed-off-by: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org>
In tegra_slink_probe(), when platform_get_irq() fails, it directly
returns from the function with an error code, which causes a memory leak.
Replace it with a goto label to ensure proper cleanup.
Fixes: eb9913b511f1 ("spi: tegra: Fix missing IRQ check in tegra_slink_probe()")
Signed-off-by: Felix Gu <ustc.gu@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Jon Hunter <jonathanh@nvidia.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260202-slink-v1-1-eac50433a6f9@gmail.com
Signed-off-by: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org>
Pull scheduler fixes from Ingo Molnar:
"Miscellaneous MMCID fixes to address bugs and performance regressions
in the recent rewrite of the SCHED_MM_CID management code:
- Fix livelock triggered by BPF CI testing
- Fix hard lockup on weakly ordered systems
- Simplify the dropping of CIDs in the exit path by removing an
unintended transition phase
- Fix performance/scalability regression on a thread-pool benchmark
by optimizing transitional CIDs when scheduling out"
* tag 'sched-urgent-2026-02-07' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/tip/tip:
sched/mmcid: Optimize transitional CIDs when scheduling out
sched/mmcid: Drop per CPU CID immediately when switching to per task mode
sched/mmcid: Protect transition on weakly ordered systems
sched/mmcid: Prevent live lock on task to CPU mode transition
The 'max' argument of ida_alloc_max() takes the maximum valid ID and not
the "count". Using an ID of BINDERFS_MAX_MINOR (1 << 20) for dev->minor
would exceed the limits of minor numbers (20-bits). Fix this off-by-one
error by subtracting 1 from the 'max'.
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Fixes: 3ad20fe393b3 ("binder: implement binderfs")
Signed-off-by: Carlos Llamas <cmllamas@google.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260127235545.2307876-2-cmllamas@google.com
Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
Now that all other accesses to curr_xfer are done under the lock,
protect the curr_xfer NULL check in tegra_qspi_isr_thread() with the
spinlock. Without this protection, the following race can occur:
CPU0 (ISR thread) CPU1 (timeout path)
---------------- -------------------
if (!tqspi->curr_xfer)
// sees non-NULL
spin_lock()
tqspi->curr_xfer = NULL
spin_unlock()
handle_*_xfer()
spin_lock()
t = tqspi->curr_xfer // NULL!
... t->len ... // NULL dereference!
With this patch, all curr_xfer accesses are now properly synchronized.
Although all accesses to curr_xfer are done under the lock, in
tegra_qspi_isr_thread() it checks for NULL, releases the lock and
reacquires it later in handle_cpu_based_xfer()/handle_dma_based_xfer().
There is a potential for an update in between, which could cause a NULL
pointer dereference.
To handle this, add a NULL check inside the handlers after acquiring
the lock. This ensures that if the timeout path has already cleared
curr_xfer, the handler will safely return without dereferencing the
NULL pointer.
Fixes: b4e002d8a7ce ("spi: tegra210-quad: Fix timeout handling")
Signed-off-by: Breno Leitao <leitao@debian.org>
Tested-by: Jon Hunter <jonathanh@nvidia.com>
Acked-by: Jon Hunter <jonathanh@nvidia.com>
Acked-by: Thierry Reding <treding@nvidia.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260126-tegra_xfer-v2-6-6d2115e4f387@debian.org
Signed-off-by: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org>
Pull objtool fixes from Ingo Molnar::
- Bump up the Clang minimum version requirements for livepatch
builds, due to Clang assembler section handling bugs causing
silent miscompilations
- Strip livepatching symbol artifacts from non-livepatch modules
- Fix livepatch build warnings when certain Clang LTO options
are enabled
- Fix livepatch build error when CONFIG_MEM_ALLOC_PROFILING_DEBUG=y
* tag 'objtool-urgent-2026-02-07' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/tip/tip:
objtool/klp: Fix unexported static call key access for manually built livepatch modules
objtool/klp: Fix symbol correlation for orphaned local symbols
livepatch: Free klp_{object,func}_ext data after initialization
livepatch: Fix having __klp_objects relics in non-livepatch modules
livepatch/klp-build: Require Clang assembler >= 20
During the investigation of the various transition mode issues
instrumentation revealed that the amount of bitmap operations can be
significantly reduced when a task with a transitional CID schedules out
after the fixup function completed and disabled the transition mode.
At that point the mode is stable and therefore it is not required to drop
the transitional CID back into the pool. As the fixup is complete the
potential exhaustion of the CID pool is not longer possible, so the CID can
be transferred to the scheduling out task or to the CPU depending on the
current ownership mode.
The racy snapshot of mm_cid::mode which contains both the ownership state
and the transition bit is valid because runqueue lock is held and the fixup
function of a concurrent mode switch is serialized.
Assigning the ownership right there not only spares the bitmap access for
dropping the CID it also avoids it when the task is scheduled back in as it
directly hits the fast path in both modes when the CID is within the
optimal range. If it's outside the range the next schedule in will need to
converge so dropping it right away is sensible. In the good case this also
allows to go into the fast path on the next schedule in operation.
With a thread pool benchmark which is configured to cross the mode switch
boundaries frequently this reduces the number of bitmap operations by about
30% and increases the fastpath utilization in the low single digit
percentage range.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de>
Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org>
Reviewed-by: Mathieu Desnoyers <mathieu.desnoyers@efficios.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260201192835.100194627@kernel.org
The 'max' argument of ida_alloc_max() takes the maximum valid ID and not
the "count". Using an ID of BINDERFS_MAX_MINOR (1 << 20) for dev->minor
would exceed the limits of minor numbers (20-bits). Fix this off-by-one
error by subtracting 1 from the 'max'.
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Fixes: eafedbc7c050 ("rust_binder: add Rust Binder driver")
Reported-by: kernel test robot <lkp@intel.com>
Closes: https://lore.kernel.org/r/202512181203.IOv6IChH-lkp@intel.com/
Signed-off-by: Carlos Llamas <cmllamas@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Alice Ryhl <aliceryhl@google.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260127235545.2307876-1-cmllamas@google.com
Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
Pull SCSI fixes from James Bottomley:
"Only one core change, the rest are drivers.
The core change reorders some state operations in the error handler to
try to prevent missed wake ups of the error handler (which can halt
error processing and effectively freeze the entire system)"
* tag 'scsi-fixes' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/jejb/scsi:
scsi: qla2xxx: Sanitize payload size to prevent member overflow
scsi: target: iscsi: Fix use-after-free in iscsit_dec_session_usage_count()
scsi: target: iscsi: Fix use-after-free in iscsit_dec_conn_usage_count()
scsi: core: Wake up the error handler when final completions race against each other
scsi: storvsc: Process unsupported MODE_SENSE_10
scsi: xen: scsiback: Fix potential memory leak in scsiback_remove()
Protect the curr_xfer clearing in tegra_qspi_non_combined_seq_xfer()
with the spinlock to prevent a race with the interrupt handler that
reads this field to check if a transfer is in progress.
Fixes: b4e002d8a7ce ("spi: tegra210-quad: Fix timeout handling")
Signed-off-by: Breno Leitao <leitao@debian.org>
Tested-by: Jon Hunter <jonathanh@nvidia.com>
Acked-by: Jon Hunter <jonathanh@nvidia.com>
Acked-by: Thierry Reding <treding@nvidia.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260126-tegra_xfer-v2-5-6d2115e4f387@debian.org
Signed-off-by: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org>
Fedora QA reported the following panic:
BUG: unable to handle page fault for address: 0000000040003e54
#PF: supervisor write access in kernel mode
#PF: error_code(0x0002) - not-present page
Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (Q35 + ICH9, 2009), BIOS edk2-20251119-3.fc43 11/19/2025
RIP: 0010:vmware_hypercall4.constprop.0+0x52/0x90
..
Call Trace:
vmmouse_report_events+0x13e/0x1b0
psmouse_handle_byte+0x15/0x60
ps2_interrupt+0x8a/0xd0
...
because the QEMU VMware mouse emulation is buggy, and clears the top 32
bits of %rdi that the kernel kept a pointer in.
The QEMU vmmouse driver saves and restores the register state in a
"uint32_t data[6];" and as a result restores the state with the high
bits all cleared.
RDI originally contained the value of a valid kernel stack address
(0xff5eeb3240003e54). After the vmware hypercall it now contains
0x40003e54, and we get a page fault as a result when it is dereferenced.
The proper fix would be in QEMU, but this works around the issue in the
kernel to keep old setups working, when old kernels had not happened to
keep any state in %rdi over the hypercall.
In theory this same issue exists for all the hypercalls in the vmmouse
driver; in practice it has only been seen with vmware_hypercall3() and
vmware_hypercall4(). For now, just mark RDI/RSI as clobbered for those
two calls. This should have a minimal effect on code generation overall
as it should be rare for the compiler to want to make RDI/RSI live
across hypercalls.
Reported-by: Justin Forbes <jforbes@fedoraproject.org>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/all/99a9c69a-fc1a-43b7-8d1e-c42d6493b41f@broadcom.com/
Signed-off-by: Josh Poimboeuf <jpoimboe@kernel.org>
Cc: stable@kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
Enabling CONFIG_MEM_ALLOC_PROFILING_DEBUG with CONFIG_SAMPLE_LIVEPATCH
results in the following error:
samples/livepatch/livepatch-shadow-fix1.o: error: objtool: static_call: can't find static_call_key symbol: __SCK__WARN_trap
This is caused an extra file->klp sanity check which was added by commit
164c9201e1da ("objtool: Add base objtool support for livepatch
modules"). That check was intended to ensure that livepatch modules
built with klp-build always have full access to their static call keys.
However, it failed to account for the fact that manually built livepatch
modules (i.e., not built with klp-build) might need access to unexported
static call keys, for which read-only access is typically allowed for
modules.
While the livepatch-shadow-fix1 module doesn't explicitly use any static
calls, it does have a memory allocation, which can cause
CONFIG_MEM_ALLOC_PROFILING_DEBUG to insert a WARN() call. And WARN() is
now an unexported static call as of commit 860238af7a33 ("x86_64/bug:
Inline the UD1").
Fix it by removing the overzealous file->klp check, restoring the
original behavior for manually built livepatch modules.
Fixes: 164c9201e1da ("objtool: Add base objtool support for livepatch modules")
Reported-by: Arnd Bergmann <arnd@arndb.de>
Acked-by: Song Liu <song@kernel.org>
Tested-by: Arnd Bergmann <arnd@arndb.de>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/0bd3ae9a53c3d743417fe842b740a7720e2bcd1c.1770058775.git.jpoimboe@kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Josh Poimboeuf <jpoimboe@kernel.org>
When a exiting task initiates the switch from per CPU back to per task
mode, it has already dropped its CID and marked itself inactive. But a
leftover from an earlier iteration of the rework then reassigns the per
CPU CID to the exiting task with the transition bit set.
That's wrong as the task is already marked CID inactive, which means it is
inconsistent state. It's harmless because the CID is marked in transit and
therefore dropped back into the pool when the exiting task schedules out
either through preemption or the final schedule().
Simply drop the per CPU CID when the exiting task triggered the transition.
Fixes: fbd0e71dc370 ("sched/mmcid: Provide CID ownership mode fixup functions")
Signed-off-by: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org>
Reviewed-by: Mathieu Desnoyers <mathieu.desnoyers@efficios.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260201192835.032221009@kernel.org
The error logging for failed transactions is misleading as it always
reports "dead process or thread" even when the target is actually
frozen. Additionally, the pid and tid are reversed which can further
confuse debugging efforts. Fix both issues.
Cc: stable@kernel.org
Cc: Steven Moreland <smoreland@google.com>
Fixes: a15dac8b2286 ("binder: additional transaction error logs")
Signed-off-by: Carlos Llamas <cmllamas@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Alice Ryhl <aliceryhl@google.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260123175702.2154348-1-cmllamas@google.com
Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
In qla27xx_copy_fpin_pkt() and qla27xx_copy_multiple_pkt(), the frame_size
reported by firmware is used to calculate the copy length into
item->iocb. However, the iocb member is defined as a fixed-size 64-byte
array within struct purex_item.
If the reported frame_size exceeds 64 bytes, subsequent memcpy calls will
overflow the iocb member boundary. While extra memory might be allocated,
this cross-member write is unsafe and triggers warnings under
CONFIG_FORTIFY_SOURCE.
Fix this by capping total_bytes to the size of the iocb member (64 bytes)
before allocation and copying. This ensures all copies remain within the
bounds of the destination structure member.
Fixes: 875386b98857 ("scsi: qla2xxx: Add Unsolicited LS Request and Response Support for NVMe")
Signed-off-by: Jiasheng Jiang <jiashengjiangcool@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Himanshu Madhani <hmadhani2024@gmail.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260106205344.18031-1-jiashengjiangcool@gmail.com
Signed-off-by: Martin K. Petersen <martin.petersen@oracle.com>
The curr_xfer field is read by the IRQ handler without holding the lock
to check if a transfer is in progress. When clearing curr_xfer in the
combined sequence transfer loop, protect it with the spinlock to prevent
a race with the interrupt handler.
Protect the curr_xfer clearing at the exit path of
tegra_qspi_combined_seq_xfer() with the spinlock to prevent a race
with the interrupt handler that reads this field.
Without this protection, the IRQ handler could read a partially updated
curr_xfer value, leading to NULL pointer dereference or use-after-free.
Fixes: b4e002d8a7ce ("spi: tegra210-quad: Fix timeout handling")
Signed-off-by: Breno Leitao <leitao@debian.org>
Tested-by: Jon Hunter <jonathanh@nvidia.com>
Acked-by: Jon Hunter <jonathanh@nvidia.com>
Acked-by: Thierry Reding <treding@nvidia.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260126-tegra_xfer-v2-4-6d2115e4f387@debian.org
Signed-off-by: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org>
Pull hotfixes from Andrew Morton:
"A couple of late-breaking MM fixes. One against a new-in-this-cycle
patch and the other addresses a locking issue which has been there for
over a year"
* tag 'mm-hotfixes-stable-2026-02-06-12-37' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/akpm/mm:
mm/memory-failure: reject unsupported non-folio compound page
procfs: avoid fetching build ID while holding VMA lock
When compiling with CONFIG_LTO_CLANG_THIN, vmlinux.o has
__irf_[start|end] before the first FILE entry:
$ readelf -sW vmlinux.o
Symbol table '.symtab' contains 597706 entries:
Num: Value Size Type Bind Vis Ndx Name
0: 0000000000000000 0 NOTYPE LOCAL DEFAULT UND
1: 0000000000000000 0 NOTYPE LOCAL DEFAULT 18 __irf_start
2: 0000000000000200 0 NOTYPE LOCAL DEFAULT 18 __irf_end
3: 0000000000000000 0 SECTION LOCAL DEFAULT 17 .text
4: 0000000000000000 0 SECTION LOCAL DEFAULT 18 .init.ramfs
This causes klp-build warnings like:
vmlinux.o: warning: objtool: no correlation: __irf_start
vmlinux.o: warning: objtool: no correlation: __irf_end
The problem is that Clang LTO is stripping the initramfs_data.o FILE
symbol, causing those two symbols to be orphaned and not noticed by
klp-diff's correlation logic. Add a loop to correlate any symbols found
before the first FILE symbol.
Fixes: dd590d4d57eb ("objtool/klp: Introduce klp diff subcommand for diffing object files")
Reported-by: Song Liu <song@kernel.org>
Acked-by: Song Liu <song@kernel.org>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/e21ec1141fc749b5f538d7329b531c1ab63a6d1a.1770055235.git.jpoimboe@kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Josh Poimboeuf <jpoimboe@kernel.org>
Shrikanth reported a hard lockup which he observed once. The stack trace
shows the following CID related participants:
watchdog: CPU 23 self-detected hard LOCKUP @ mm_get_cid+0xe8/0x188
NIP: mm_get_cid+0xe8/0x188
LR: mm_get_cid+0x108/0x188
mm_cid_switch_to+0x3c4/0x52c
__schedule+0x47c/0x700
schedule_idle+0x3c/0x64
do_idle+0x160/0x1b0
cpu_startup_entry+0x48/0x50
start_secondary+0x284/0x288
start_secondary_prolog+0x10/0x14
watchdog: CPU 11 self-detected hard LOCKUP @ plpar_hcall_norets_notrace+0x18/0x2c
NIP: plpar_hcall_norets_notrace+0x18/0x2c
LR: queued_spin_lock_slowpath+0xd88/0x15d0
_raw_spin_lock+0x80/0xa0
raw_spin_rq_lock_nested+0x3c/0xf8
mm_cid_fixup_cpus_to_tasks+0xc8/0x28c
sched_mm_cid_exit+0x108/0x22c
do_exit+0xf4/0x5d0
make_task_dead+0x0/0x178
system_call_exception+0x128/0x390
system_call_vectored_common+0x15c/0x2ec
The task on CPU11 is running the CID ownership mode change fixup function
and is stuck on a runqueue lock. The task on CPU23 is trying to get a CID
from the pool with the same runqueue lock held, but the pool is empty.
After decoding a similar issue in the opposite direction switching from per
task to per CPU mode the tool which models the possible scenarios failed to
come up with a similar loop hole.
This showed up only once, was not reproducible and according to tooling not
related to a overlooked scheduling scenario permutation. But the fact that
it was observed on a PowerPC system gave the right hint: PowerPC is a
weakly ordered architecture.
The transition mechanism does:
WRITE_ONCE(mm->mm_cid.transit, MM_CID_TRANSIT);
WRITE_ONCE(mm->mm_cid.percpu, new_mode);
fixup()
WRITE_ONCE(mm->mm_cid.transit, 0);
mm_cid_schedin() does:
if (!READ_ONCE(mm->mm_cid.percpu))
...
cid |= READ_ONCE(mm->mm_cid.transit);
so weakly ordered systems can observe percpu == false and transit == 0 even
if the fixup function has not yet completed. As a consequence the task will
not drop the CID when scheduling out before the fixup is completed, which
means the CID space can be exhausted and the next task scheduling in will
loop in mm_get_cid() and the fixup thread can livelock on the held runqueue
lock as above.
This could obviously be solved by using:
smp_store_release(&mm->mm_cid.percpu, true);
and
smp_load_acquire(&mm->mm_cid.percpu);
but that brings a memory barrier back into the scheduler hotpath, which was
just designed out by the CID rewrite.
That can be completely avoided by combining the per CPU mode and the
transit storage into a single mm_cid::mode member and ordering the stores
against the fixup functions to prevent the CPU from reordering them.
That makes the update of both states atomic and a concurrent read observes
always consistent state.
The price is an additional AND operation in mm_cid_schedin() to evaluate
the per CPU or the per task path, but that's in the noise even on strongly
ordered architectures as the actual load can be significantly more
expensive and the conditional branch evaluation is there anyway.
Fixes: fbd0e71dc370 ("sched/mmcid: Provide CID ownership mode fixup functions")
Closes: https://lore.kernel.org/bdfea828-4585-40e8-8835-247c6a8a76b0@linux.ibm.com
Reported-by: Shrikanth Hegde <sshegde@linux.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org>
Reviewed-by: Mathieu Desnoyers <mathieu.desnoyers@efficios.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260201192834.965217106@kernel.org
This adds some alignment checks to match C Binder more closely. This
causes the driver to reject more transactions. I don't think any of the
transactions in question are harmful, but it's still a bug because it's
the wrong uapi to accept them.
The cases where usize is changed for u64, it will affect only 32-bit
kernels.
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Fixes: eafedbc7c050 ("rust_binder: add Rust Binder driver")
Signed-off-by: Alice Ryhl <aliceryhl@google.com>
Acked-by: Carlos Llamas <cmllamas@google.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260123-binder-alignment-more-checks-v1-1-7e1cea77411d@google.com
Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
Pull char/misc/iio driver fixes from Greg KH:
"Here are some small char/misc/iio and some other minor driver
subsystem fixes for 6.19-rc7. Nothing huge here, just some fixes for
reported issues including:
- lots of little iio driver fixes
- comedi driver fixes
- mux driver fix
- w1 driver fixes
- uio driver fix
- slimbus driver fixes
- hwtracing bugfix
- other tiny bugfixes
All of these have been in linux-next for a while with no reported
issues"
* tag 'char-misc-6.19-rc7' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/gregkh/char-misc: (36 commits)
comedi: dmm32at: serialize use of paged registers
mei: trace: treat reg parameter as string
uio: pci_sva: correct '-ENODEV' check logic
uacce: ensure safe queue release with state management
uacce: implement mremap in uacce_vm_ops to return -EPERM
uacce: fix isolate sysfs check condition
uacce: fix cdev handling in the cleanup path
slimbus: core: clean up of_slim_get_device()
slimbus: core: fix of_slim_get_device() kernel doc
slimbus: core: amend slim_get_device() kernel doc
slimbus: core: fix device reference leak on report present
slimbus: core: fix runtime PM imbalance on report present
slimbus: core: fix OF node leak on registration failure
intel_th: rename error label
intel_th: fix device leak on output open()
comedi: Fix getting range information for subdevices 16 to 255
mux: mmio: Fix IS_ERR() vs NULL check in probe()
interconnect: debugfs: initialize src_node and dst_node to empty strings
iio: dac: ad3552r-hs: fix out-of-bound write in ad3552r_hs_write_data_source
iio: accel: iis328dq: fix gain values
...
TPM2_Unseal[1] expects the handle of a loaded data object, and not the
handle of the parent key. But the tpm2_unseal_cmd provides the parent
keyhandle instead of blob_handle for the session HMAC calculation. This
causes unseal to fail.
Fix this by passing blob_handle to tpm_buf_append_name().
References:
[1] trustedcomputinggroup.org/wp-content/uploads/
Trusted-Platform-Module-2.0-Library-Part-3-Version-184_pub.pdf
Fixes: 6e9722e9a7bf ("tpm2-sessions: Fix out of range indexing in name_size")
Signed-off-by: Srish Srinivasan <ssrish@linux.ibm.com>
Reviewed-by: Stefan Berger <stefanb@linux.ibm.com>
Reviewed-by: Jarkko Sakkinen <jarkko@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Jarkko Sakkinen <jarkko@kernel.org>
In iscsit_dec_session_usage_count(), the function calls complete() while
holding the sess->session_usage_lock. Similar to the connection usage count
logic, the waiter signaled by complete() (e.g., in the session release
path) may wake up and free the iscsit_session structure immediately.
This creates a race condition where the current thread may attempt to
execute spin_unlock_bh() on a session structure that has already been
deallocated, resulting in a KASAN slab-use-after-free.
To resolve this, release the session_usage_lock before calling complete()
to ensure all dereferences of the sess pointer are finished before the
waiter is allowed to proceed with deallocation.
Signed-off-by: Maurizio Lombardi <mlombard@redhat.com>
Reported-by: Zhaojuan Guo <zguo@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Mike Christie <michael.christie@oracle.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260112165352.138606-3-mlombard@redhat.com
Signed-off-by: Martin K. Petersen <martin.petersen@oracle.com>
When the timeout handler processes a completed transfer and signals
completion, the transfer thread can immediately set up the next transfer
and assign curr_xfer to point to it.
If a delayed ISR from the previous transfer then runs, it checks if
(!tqspi->curr_xfer) (currently without the lock also -- to be fixed
soon) to detect stale interrupts, but this check passes because
curr_xfer now points to the new transfer. The ISR then incorrectly
processes the new transfer's context.
Protect the curr_xfer assignment with the spinlock to ensure the ISR
either sees NULL (and bails out) or sees the new value only after the
assignment is complete.
Fixes: 921fc1838fb0 ("spi: tegra210-quad: Add support for Tegra210 QSPI controller")
Signed-off-by: Breno Leitao <leitao@debian.org>
Tested-by: Jon Hunter <jonathanh@nvidia.com>
Acked-by: Jon Hunter <jonathanh@nvidia.com>
Acked-by: Thierry Reding <treding@nvidia.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260126-tegra_xfer-v2-3-6d2115e4f387@debian.org
Signed-off-by: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org>
Pull tracing fix from Steven Rostedt:
- Fix event format field alignments for 32 bit architectures
The fields in the event format files are used to parse the raw binary
buffer data by applications. If they are incorrect, then the
application produces garbage.
On 32 bit architectures, the function graph 64bit calltime and
rettime were off by 4bytes. That's because the actual fields are in a
packed structure but the macros used by the ftrace events did not
mark them as packed, and instead, gave them their natural alignment
which made their offsets off by 4 bytes.
There are macros to have a packed field within an embedded structure
of an event, but there's no macro for normal fields within a packed
structure of the event. The macro __field_packed() was used for the
packed embedded structure field. Rename that to __field_desc_packed()
(to match the non-packed embedded field macro __field_desc()), and
make __field_packed() for fields that are in a packed event structure
(which matches the unpacked __field() macro).
Switch the calltime and rettime fields of the function graph event to
use the new __field_packed() and this makes the offsets correct.
* tag 'trace-v6.19-rc7' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/trace/linux-trace:
tracing: Fix ftrace event field alignments
When !CONFIG_TRANSPARENT_HUGEPAGE, a non-folio compound page can appear in
a userspace mapping via either vm_insert_*() functions or
vm_operatios_struct->fault(). They are not folios, thus should not be
considered for folio operations like split. To reject these pages, make
sure get_hwpoison_page() is always called as HWPoisonHandlable() will do
the right work.
[Some commit log borrowed from Zi Yan. Thanks.]
Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20260205075328.523211-1-linmiaohe@huawei.com
Fixes: 689b8986776c ("mm/memory-failure: improve large block size folio handling")
Signed-off-by: Miaohe Lin <linmiaohe@huawei.com>
Reported-by: 是参差 <shicenci@gmail.com>
Closes: https://lore.kernel.org/all/PS1PPF7E1D7501F1E4F4441E7ECD056DEADAB98A@PS1PPF7E1D7501F.apcprd02.prod.outlook.com/
Reviewed-by: Zi Yan <ziy@nvidia.com>
Tested-by: Zi Yan <ziy@nvidia.com>
Cc: David Hildenbrand <david@kernel.org>
Cc: Jane Chu <jane.chu@oracle.com>
Cc: Miaohe Lin <linmiaohe@huawei.com>
Cc: Naoya Horiguchi <nao.horiguchi@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
The klp_object_ext and klp_func_ext data, which are stored in the
__klp_objects and __klp_funcs sections, respectively, are not needed
after they are used to create the actual klp_object and klp_func
instances. This operation is implemented by the init function in
scripts/livepatch/init.c.
Prefix the two sections with ".init" so they are freed after the module
is initializated.
Signed-off-by: Petr Pavlu <petr.pavlu@suse.com>
Acked-by: Joe Lawrence <joe.lawrence@redhat.com>
Acked-by: Miroslav Benes <mbenes@suse.cz>
Reviewed-by: Aaron Tomlin <atomlin@atomlin.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260123102825.3521961-3-petr.pavlu@suse.com
Signed-off-by: Josh Poimboeuf <jpoimboe@kernel.org>
Ihor reported a BPF CI failure which turned out to be a live lock in the
MM_CID management. The scenario is:
A test program creates the 5th thread, which means the MM_CID users become
more than the number of CPUs (four in this example), so it switches to per
CPU ownership mode.
At this point each live task of the program has a CID associated. Assume
thread creation order assignment for simplicity.
T0 CID0 runs fork() and creates T4
T1 CID1
T2 CID2
T3 CID3
T4 --- not visible yet
T0 sets mm_cid::percpu = true and transfers its own CID to CPU0 where it
runs on and then starts the fixup which walks through the threads to
transfer the per task CIDs either to the CPU the task is running on or drop
it back into the pool if the task is not on a CPU.
During that T1 - T3 are free to schedule in and out before the fixup caught
up with them. Going through all possible permutations with a python script
revealed a few problematic cases. The most trivial one is:
T1 schedules in on CPU1 and observes percpu == true, so it transfers
its CID to CPU1
T1 is migrated to CPU2 and schedule in observes percpu == true, but
CPU2 does not have a CID associated and T1 transferred its own to
CPU1
So it has to allocate one with CPU2 runqueue lock held, but the
pool is empty, so it keeps looping in mm_get_cid().
Now T0 reaches T1 in the thread walk and tries to lock the corresponding
runqueue lock, which is held causing a full live lock.
There is a similar scenario in the reverse direction of switching from per
CPU to task mode which is way more obvious and got therefore addressed by
an intermediate mode. In this mode the CIDs are marked with MM_CID_TRANSIT,
which means that they are neither owned by the CPU nor by the task. When a
task schedules out with a transit CID it drops the CID back into the pool
making it available for others to use temporarily. Once the task which
initiated the mode switch finished the fixup it clears the transit mode and
the process goes back into per task ownership mode.
Unfortunately this insight was not mapped back to the task to CPU mode
switch as the above described scenario was not considered in the analysis.
Apply the same transit mechanism to the task to CPU mode switch to handle
these problematic cases correctly.
As with the CPU to task transition this results in a potential temporary
contention on the CID bitmap, but that's only for the time it takes to
complete the transition. After that it stays in steady mode which does not
touch the bitmap at all.
Fixes: fbd0e71dc370 ("sched/mmcid: Provide CID ownership mode fixup functions")
Closes: https://lore.kernel.org/2b7463d7-0f58-4e34-9775-6e2115cfb971@linux.dev
Reported-by: Ihor Solodrai <ihor.solodrai@linux.dev>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org>
Reviewed-by: Mathieu Desnoyers <mathieu.desnoyers@efficios.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260201192834.897115238@kernel.org
Oneway transactions sent to frozen targets via binder_proc_transaction()
return a BR_TRANSACTION_PENDING_FROZEN error but they are still treated
as successful since the target is expected to thaw at some point. It is
then not safe to access 't' after BR_TRANSACTION_PENDING_FROZEN errors
as the transaction could have been consumed by the now thawed target.
This is the case for binder_netlink_report() which derreferences 't'
after a pending frozen error, as pointed out by the following KASAN
report:
==================================================================
BUG: KASAN: slab-use-after-free in binder_netlink_report.isra.0+0x694/0x6c8
Read of size 8 at addr ffff00000f98ba38 by task binder-util/522
CPU: 4 UID: 0 PID: 522 Comm: binder-util Not tainted 6.19.0-rc6-00015-gc03e9c42ae8f #1 PREEMPT
Hardware name: linux,dummy-virt (DT)
Call trace:
binder_netlink_report.isra.0+0x694/0x6c8
binder_transaction+0x66e4/0x79b8
binder_thread_write+0xab4/0x4440
binder_ioctl+0x1fd4/0x2940
[...]
Allocated by task 522:
__kmalloc_cache_noprof+0x17c/0x50c
binder_transaction+0x584/0x79b8
binder_thread_write+0xab4/0x4440
binder_ioctl+0x1fd4/0x2940
[...]
Freed by task 488:
kfree+0x1d0/0x420
binder_free_transaction+0x150/0x234
binder_thread_read+0x2d08/0x3ce4
binder_ioctl+0x488/0x2940
[...]
==================================================================
Instead, make a transaction copy so the data can be safely accessed by
binder_netlink_report() after a pending frozen error. While here, add a
comment about not using t->buffer in binder_netlink_report().
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Fixes: 63740349eba7 ("binder: introduce transaction reports via netlink")
Signed-off-by: Carlos Llamas <cmllamas@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Alice Ryhl <aliceryhl@google.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260122180203.1502637-1-cmllamas@google.com
Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
Pull serial driver fixes from Greg KH:
"Here are three small serial driver fixes for 6.19-rc7 that resolve
some reported issues. They include:
- tty->port race condition fix for a reported problem
- qcom_geni serial driver fix
- 8250_pci serial driver fix
All of these have been in linux-next with no reported issues"
* tag 'tty-6.19-rc7' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/gregkh/tty:
serial: Fix not set tty->port race condition
serial: 8250_pci: Fix broken RS485 for F81504/508/512
serial: qcom_geni: Fix BT failure regression on RB2 platform
1-Wire bus drivers fixes
Non critical (old issues) fixes:
1. Fix possible buffer overflow in W1 thermal driver sysfs interfasce,
2. Drop duplicated device put when attaching a slave device failed,
which could lead to memory corruption.
* tag 'w1-drv-6.20' of ssh://gitolite.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/krzk/linux-w1:
w1: fix redundant counter decrement in w1_attach_slave_device()
w1: therm: Fix off-by-one buffer overflow in alarms_store
Pull RISC-V fixes from Paul Walmsley:
"The notable changes here are the three RISC-V timer compare register
update sequence patches. These only apply to RV32 systems and are
related to the 64-bit timer compare value being split across two
separate 32-bit registers.
We weren't using the appropriate three-write sequence, documented in
the RISC-V ISA specifications, to avoid spurious timer interrupts
during the update sequence; so, these patches now use the recommended
sequence.
This doesn't affect 64-bit RISC-V systems, since the timer compare
value fits inside a single register and can be updated with a single
write.
- Fix the RISC-V timer compare register update sequence on RV32
systems to use the recommended sequence in the RISC-V ISA manual
This avoids spurious interrupts during updates
- Add a dependence on the new CONFIG_CACHEMAINT_FOR_DMA Kconfig
symbol for Renesas and StarFive RISC-V SoCs
- Add a temporary workaround for a Clang compiler bug caused by using
asm_goto_output for get_user()
- Clarify our documentation to specifically state a particular ISA
specification version for a chapter number reference"
* tag 'riscv-for-linus-6.19-rc7' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/riscv/linux:
riscv: Add intermediate cast to 'unsigned long' in __get_user_asm
riscv: Use 64-bit variable for output in __get_user_asm
soc: renesas: Fix missing dependency on new CONFIG_CACHEMAINT_FOR_DMA
riscv: ERRATA_STARFIVE_JH7100: Fix missing dependency on new CONFIG_CACHEMAINT_FOR_DMA
riscv: suspend: Fix stimecmp update hazard on RV32
riscv: kvm: Fix vstimecmp update hazard on RV32
riscv: clocksource: Fix stimecmp update hazard on RV32
Documentation: riscv: uabi: Clarify ISA spec version for canonical order
In iscsit_dec_conn_usage_count(), the function calls complete() while
holding the conn->conn_usage_lock. As soon as complete() is invoked, the
waiter (such as iscsit_close_connection()) may wake up and proceed to free
the iscsit_conn structure.
If the waiter frees the memory before the current thread reaches
spin_unlock_bh(), it results in a KASAN slab-use-after-free as the function
attempts to release a lock within the already-freed connection structure.
Fix this by releasing the spinlock before calling complete().
Signed-off-by: Maurizio Lombardi <mlombard@redhat.com>
Reported-by: Zhaojuan Guo <zguo@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Mike Christie <michael.christie@oracle.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260112165352.138606-2-mlombard@redhat.com
Signed-off-by: Martin K. Petersen <martin.petersen@oracle.com>
Move the assignment of the transfer pointer from curr_xfer inside the
spinlock critical section in both handle_cpu_based_xfer() and
handle_dma_based_xfer().
Previously, curr_xfer was read before acquiring the lock, creating a
window where the timeout path could clear curr_xfer between reading it
and using it. By moving the read inside the lock, the handlers are
guaranteed to see a consistent value that cannot be modified by the
timeout path.
Fixes: 921fc1838fb0 ("spi: tegra210-quad: Add support for Tegra210 QSPI controller")
Signed-off-by: Breno Leitao <leitao@debian.org>
Acked-by: Thierry Reding <treding@nvidia.com>
Tested-by: Jon Hunter <jonathanh@nvidia.com>
Acked-by: Jon Hunter <jonathanh@nvidia.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260126-tegra_xfer-v2-2-6d2115e4f387@debian.org
Signed-off-by: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org>
Pull ceph fixes from Ilya Dryomov:
"One RBD and two CephFS fixes which address potential oopses.
The RBD thing is more of a rare edge case that pops up in our CI,
while the two CephFS scenarios are regressions that were reported by
users and can be triggered trivially in normal operation. All marked
for stable"
* tag 'ceph-for-6.19-rc9' of https://github.com/ceph/ceph-client:
ceph: fix NULL pointer dereference in ceph_mds_auth_match()
ceph: fix oops due to invalid pointer for kfree() in parse_longname()
rbd: check for EOD after exclusive lock is ensured to be held
The fields of ftrace specific events (events used to save ftrace internal
events like function traces and trace_printk) are generated similarly to
how normal trace event fields are generated. That is, the fields are added
to a trace_events_fields array that saves the name, offset, size,
alignment and signness of the field. It is used to produce the output in
the format file in tracefs so that tooling knows how to parse the binary
data of the trace events.
The issue is that some of the ftrace event structures are packed. The
function graph exit event structures are one of them. The 64 bit calltime
and rettime fields end up 4 byte aligned, but the algorithm to show to
userspace shows them as 8 byte aligned.
The macros that create the ftrace events has one for embedded structure
fields. There's two macros for theses fields:
__field_desc() and __field_packed()
The difference of the latter macro is that it treats the field as packed.
Rename that field to __field_desc_packed() and create replace the
__field_packed() to be a normal field that is packed and have the calltime
and rettime use those.
This showed up on 32bit architectures for function graph time fields. It
had:
~# cat /sys/kernel/tracing/events/ftrace/funcgraph_exit/format
[..]
field:unsigned long func; offset:8; size:4; signed:0;
field:unsigned int depth; offset:12; size:4; signed:0;
field:unsigned int overrun; offset:16; size:4; signed:0;
field:unsigned long long calltime; offset:24; size:8; signed:0;
field:unsigned long long rettime; offset:32; size:8; signed:0;
Notice that overrun is at offset 16 with size 4, where in the structure
calltime is at offset 20 (16 + 4), but it shows the offset at 24. That's
because it used the alignment of unsigned long long when used as a
declaration and not as a member of a structure where it would be aligned
by word size (in this case 4).
By using the proper structure alignment, the format has it at the correct
offset:
~# cat /sys/kernel/tracing/events/ftrace/funcgraph_exit/format
[..]
field:unsigned long func; offset:8; size:4; signed:0;
field:unsigned int depth; offset:12; size:4; signed:0;
field:unsigned int overrun; offset:16; size:4; signed:0;
field:unsigned long long calltime; offset:20; size:8; signed:0;
field:unsigned long long rettime; offset:28; size:8; signed:0;
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Cc: Mathieu Desnoyers <mathieu.desnoyers@efficios.com>
Cc: Mark Rutland <mark.rutland@arm.com>
Acked-by: Masami Hiramatsu (Google) <mhiramat@kernel.org>
Reported-by: "jempty.liang" <imntjempty@163.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260204113628.53faec78@gandalf.local.home
Fixes: 04ae87a52074e ("ftrace: Rework event_create_dir()")
Closes: https://lore.kernel.org/all/20260130015740.212343-1-imntjempty@163.com/
Closes: https://lore.kernel.org/all/20260202123342.2544795-1-imntjempty@163.com/
Signed-off-by: Steven Rostedt (Google) <rostedt@goodmis.org>
Fix PROCMAP_QUERY to fetch optional build ID only after dropping mmap_lock
or per-VMA lock, whichever was used to lock VMA under question, to avoid
deadlock reported by syzbot:
-> #1 (&mm->mmap_lock){++++}-{4:4}:
__might_fault+0xed/0x170
_copy_to_iter+0x118/0x1720
copy_page_to_iter+0x12d/0x1e0
filemap_read+0x720/0x10a0
blkdev_read_iter+0x2b5/0x4e0
vfs_read+0x7f4/0xae0
ksys_read+0x12a/0x250
do_syscall_64+0xcb/0xf80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x77/0x7f
-> #0 (&sb->s_type->i_mutex_key#8){++++}-{4:4}:
__lock_acquire+0x1509/0x26d0
lock_acquire+0x185/0x340
down_read+0x98/0x490
blkdev_read_iter+0x2a7/0x4e0
__kernel_read+0x39a/0xa90
freader_fetch+0x1d5/0xa80
__build_id_parse.isra.0+0xea/0x6a0
do_procmap_query+0xd75/0x1050
procfs_procmap_ioctl+0x7a/0xb0
__x64_sys_ioctl+0x18e/0x210
do_syscall_64+0xcb/0xf80
entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x77/0x7f
other info that might help us debug this:
Possible unsafe locking scenario:
CPU0 CPU1
---- ----
rlock(&mm->mmap_lock);
lock(&sb->s_type->i_mutex_key#8);
lock(&mm->mmap_lock);
rlock(&sb->s_type->i_mutex_key#8);
*** DEADLOCK ***
This seems to be exacerbated (as we haven't seen these syzbot reports
before that) by the recent:
777a8560fd29 ("lib/buildid: use __kernel_read() for sleepable context")
To make this safe, we need to grab file refcount while VMA is still locked, but
other than that everything is pretty straightforward. Internal build_id_parse()
API assumes VMA is passed, but it only needs the underlying file reference, so
just add another variant build_id_parse_file() that expects file passed
directly.
[akpm@linux-foundation.org: fix up kerneldoc]
Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20260129215340.3742283-1-andrii@kernel.org
Fixes: ed5d583a88a9 ("fs/procfs: implement efficient VMA querying API for /proc/<pid>/maps")
Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andrii@kernel.org>
Reported-by: <syzbot+4e70c8e0a2017b432f7a@syzkaller.appspotmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Suren Baghdasaryan <surenb@google.com>
Tested-by: Suren Baghdasaryan <surenb@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Shakeel Butt <shakeel.butt@linux.dev>
Cc: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org>
Cc: Daniel Borkmann <daniel@iogearbox.net>
Cc: Eduard Zingerman <eddyz87@gmail.com>
Cc: Hao Luo <haoluo@google.com>
Cc: Jiri Olsa <jolsa@kernel.org>
Cc: John Fastabend <john.fastabend@gmail.com>
Cc: KP Singh <kpsingh@kernel.org>
Cc: Martin KaFai Lau <martin.lau@linux.dev>
Cc: Song Liu <song@kernel.org>
Cc: Stanislav Fomichev <sdf@fomichev.me>
Cc: Yonghong Song <yonghong.song@linux.dev>
Cc: <stable@vger.kernel.org>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
The linker script scripts/module.lds.S specifies that all input
__klp_objects sections should be consolidated into an output section of
the same name, and start/stop symbols should be created to enable
scripts/livepatch/init.c to locate this data.
This start/stop pattern is not ideal for modules because the symbols are
created even if no __klp_objects input sections are present.
Consequently, a dummy __klp_objects section also appears in the
resulting module. This unnecessarily pollutes non-livepatch modules.
Instead, since modules are relocatable files, the usual method for
locating consolidated data in a module is to read its section table.
This approach avoids the aforementioned problem.
The klp_modinfo already stores a copy of the entire section table with
the final addresses. Introduce a helper function that
scripts/livepatch/init.c can call to obtain the location of the
__klp_objects section from this data.
Fixes: dd590d4d57eb ("objtool/klp: Introduce klp diff subcommand for diffing object files")
Signed-off-by: Petr Pavlu <petr.pavlu@suse.com>
Acked-by: Joe Lawrence <joe.lawrence@redhat.com>
Acked-by: Miroslav Benes <mbenes@suse.cz>
Reviewed-by: Aaron Tomlin <atomlin@atomlin.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260123102825.3521961-2-petr.pavlu@suse.com
Signed-off-by: Josh Poimboeuf <jpoimboe@kernel.org>
Fix a bug where an empty FDA (fd array) object with 0 fds would cause an
out-of-bounds error. The previous implementation used `skip == 0` to
mean "this is a pointer fixup", but 0 is also the correct skip length
for an empty FDA. If the FDA is at the end of the buffer, then this
results in an attempt to write 8-bytes out of bounds. This is caught and
results in an EINVAL error being returned to userspace.
The pattern of using `skip == 0` as a special value originates from the
C-implementation of Binder. As part of fixing this bug, this pattern is
replaced with a Rust enum.
I considered the alternate option of not pushing a fixup when the length
is zero, but I think it's cleaner to just get rid of the zero-is-special
stuff.
The root cause of this bug was diagnosed by Gemini CLI on first try. I
used the following prompt:
> There appears to be a bug in @drivers/android/binder/thread.rs where
> the Fixups oob bug is triggered with 316 304 316 324. This implies
> that we somehow ended up with a fixup where buffer A has a pointer to
> buffer B, but the pointer is located at an index in buffer A that is
> out of bounds. Please investigate the code to find the bug. You may
> compare with @drivers/android/binder.c that implements this correctly.
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Reported-by: DeepChirp <DeepChirp@outlook.com>
Closes: https://github.com/waydroid/waydroid/issues/2157
Fixes: eafedbc7c050 ("rust_binder: add Rust Binder driver")
Tested-by: DeepChirp <DeepChirp@outlook.com>
Signed-off-by: Alice Ryhl <aliceryhl@google.com>
Acked-by: Carlos Llamas <cmllamas@google.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20251229-fda-zero-v1-1-58a41cb0e7ec@google.com
Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
Revert commit bfc467db60b7 ("serial: remove redundant
tty_port_link_device()") because the tty_port_link_device() is not
redundant: the tty->port has to be confured before we call
uart_configure_port(), otherwise user-space can open console without TTY
linked to the driver.
This tty_port_link_device() was added explicitly to avoid this exact
issue in commit fb2b90014d78 ("tty: link tty and port before configuring
it as console"), so offending commit basically reverted the fix saying
it is redundant without addressing the actual race condition presented
there.
Reproducible always as tty->port warning on Qualcomm SoC with most of
devices disabled, so with very fast boot, and one serial device being
the console:
printk: legacy console [ttyMSM0] enabled
printk: legacy console [ttyMSM0] enabled
printk: legacy bootconsole [qcom_geni0] disabled
printk: legacy bootconsole [qcom_geni0] disabled
------------[ cut here ]------------
tty_init_dev: ttyMSM driver does not set tty->port. This would crash the kernel. Fix the driver!
WARNING: drivers/tty/tty_io.c:1414 at tty_init_dev.part.0+0x228/0x25c, CPU#2: systemd/1
Modules linked in: socinfo tcsrcc_eliza gcc_eliza sm3_ce fuse ipv6
CPU: 2 UID: 0 PID: 1 Comm: systemd Tainted: G S 6.19.0-rc4-next-20260108-00024-g2202f4d30aa8 #73 PREEMPT
Tainted: [S]=CPU_OUT_OF_SPEC
Hardware name: Qualcomm Technologies, Inc. Eliza (DT)
...
tty_init_dev.part.0 (drivers/tty/tty_io.c:1414 (discriminator 11)) (P)
tty_open (arch/arm64/include/asm/atomic_ll_sc.h:95 (discriminator 3) drivers/tty/tty_io.c:2073 (discriminator 3) drivers/tty/tty_io.c:2120 (discriminator 3))
chrdev_open (fs/char_dev.c:411)
do_dentry_open (fs/open.c:962)
vfs_open (fs/open.c:1094)
do_open (fs/namei.c:4634)
path_openat (fs/namei.c:4793)
do_filp_open (fs/namei.c:4820)
do_sys_openat2 (fs/open.c:1391 (discriminator 3))
...
Starting Network Name Resolution...
Apparently the flow with this small Yocto-based ramdisk user-space is:
driver (qcom_geni_serial.c): user-space:
============================ ===========
qcom_geni_serial_probe()
uart_add_one_port()
serial_core_register_port()
serial_core_add_one_port()
uart_configure_port()
register_console()
|
| open console
| ...
| tty_init_dev()
| driver->ports[idx] is NULL
|
tty_port_register_device_attr_serdev()
tty_port_link_device() <- set driver->ports[idx]
Fixes: bfc467db60b7 ("serial: remove redundant tty_port_link_device()")
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Krzysztof Kozlowski <krzysztof.kozlowski@oss.qualcomm.com>
Reviewed-by: Jiri Slaby <jirislaby@kernel.org>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260123072139.53293-2-krzysztof.kozlowski@oss.qualcomm.com
Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
Some of the hardware registers of the DMM-32-AT board are multiplexed,
using the least significant two bits of the Miscellaneous Control
register to select the function of registers at offsets 12 to 15:
00 => 8254 timer/counter registers are accessible
01 => 8255 digital I/O registers are accessible
10 => Reserved
11 => Calibration registers are accessible
The interrupt service routine (`dmm32at_isr()`) clobbers the bottom two
bits of the register with value 00, which would interfere with access to
the 8255 registers by the `dm32at_8255_io()` function (used for Comedi
instruction handling on the digital I/O subdevice).
Make use of the generic Comedi device spin-lock `dev->spinlock` (which
is otherwise unused by this driver) to serialize access to the
miscellaneous control register and paged registers.
Fixes: 3c501880ac44 ("Staging: comedi: add dmm32at driver")
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Ian Abbott <abbotti@mev.co.uk>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260112162835.91688-1-abbotti@mev.co.uk
Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
In w1_attach_slave_device(), if __w1_attach_slave_device() fails,
put_device() -> w1_slave_release() is called to do the cleanup job.
In w1_slave_release(), sl->family->refcnt and sl->master->slave_count
have already been decremented. There is no need to decrement twice
in w1_attach_slave_device().
Fixes: 2c927c0c73fd ("w1: Fix slave count on 1-Wire bus (resend)")
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Haoxiang Li <lihaoxiang@isrc.iscas.ac.cn>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20251218111414.564403-1-lihaoxiang@isrc.iscas.ac.cn
Signed-off-by: Krzysztof Kozlowski <krzk@kernel.org>
After commit bdce162f2e57 ("riscv: Use 64-bit variable for output in
__get_user_asm"), there is a warning when building for 32-bit RISC-V:
In file included from include/linux/uaccess.h:13,
from include/linux/sched/task.h:13,
from include/linux/sched/signal.h:9,
from include/linux/rcuwait.h:6,
from include/linux/mm.h:36,
from include/linux/migrate.h:5,
from mm/migrate.c:16:
mm/migrate.c: In function 'do_pages_move':
arch/riscv/include/asm/uaccess.h:115:15: warning: cast to pointer from integer of different size [-Wint-to-pointer-cast]
115 | (x) = (__typeof__(x))__tmp; \
| ^
arch/riscv/include/asm/uaccess.h:198:17: note: in expansion of macro '__get_user_asm'
198 | __get_user_asm("lb", (x), __gu_ptr, label); \
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~
arch/riscv/include/asm/uaccess.h:218:9: note: in expansion of macro '__get_user_nocheck'
218 | __get_user_nocheck(x, ptr, __gu_failed); \
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
arch/riscv/include/asm/uaccess.h:255:9: note: in expansion of macro '__get_user_error'
255 | __get_user_error(__gu_val, __gu_ptr, __gu_err); \
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
arch/riscv/include/asm/uaccess.h:285:17: note: in expansion of macro '__get_user'
285 | __get_user((x), __p) : \
| ^~~~~~~~~~
mm/migrate.c:2358:29: note: in expansion of macro 'get_user'
2358 | if (get_user(p, pages + i))
| ^~~~~~~~
Add an intermediate cast to 'unsigned long', which is guaranteed to be the same
width as a pointer, before the cast to the type of the output variable to clear
up the warning.
Fixes: bdce162f2e57 ("riscv: Use 64-bit variable for output in __get_user_asm")
Reported-by: kernel test robot <lkp@intel.com>
Closes: https://lore.kernel.org/oe-kbuild-all/202601210526.OT45dlOZ-lkp@intel.com/
Signed-off-by: Nathan Chancellor <nathan@kernel.org>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260121-riscv-fix-int-to-pointer-cast-v1-1-b83eebe57c76@kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Paul Walmsley <pjw@kernel.org>
The fragile ordering between marking commands completed or failed so
that the error handler only wakes when the last running command
completes or times out has race conditions. These race conditions can
cause the SCSI layer to fail to wake the error handler, leaving I/O
through the SCSI host stuck as the error state cannot advance.
First, there is an memory ordering issue within scsi_dec_host_busy().
The write which clears SCMD_STATE_INFLIGHT may be reordered with reads
counting in scsi_host_busy(). While the local CPU will see its own
write, reordering can allow other CPUs in scsi_dec_host_busy() or
scsi_eh_inc_host_failed() to see a raised busy count, causing no CPU to
see a host busy equal to the host_failed count.
This race condition can be prevented with a memory barrier on the error
path to force the write to be visible before counting host busy
commands.
Second, there is a general ordering issue with scsi_eh_inc_host_failed(). By
counting busy commands before incrementing host_failed, it can race with a
final command in scsi_dec_host_busy(), such that scsi_dec_host_busy() does
not see host_failed incremented but scsi_eh_inc_host_failed() counts busy
commands before SCMD_STATE_INFLIGHT is cleared by scsi_dec_host_busy(),
resulting in neither waking the error handler task.
This needs the call to scsi_host_busy() to be moved after host_failed is
incremented to close the race condition.
Fixes: 6eb045e092ef ("scsi: core: avoid host-wide host_busy counter for scsi_mq")
Signed-off-by: David Jeffery <djeffery@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Bart Van Assche <bvanassche@acm.org>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260113161036.6730-1-djeffery@redhat.com
Signed-off-by: Martin K. Petersen <martin.petersen@oracle.com>
When the ISR thread wakes up late and finds that the timeout handler
has already processed the transfer (curr_xfer is NULL), return
IRQ_HANDLED instead of IRQ_NONE.
Use a similar approach to tegra_qspi_handle_timeout() by reading
QSPI_TRANS_STATUS and checking the QSPI_RDY bit to determine if the
hardware actually completed the transfer. If QSPI_RDY is set, the
interrupt was legitimate and triggered by real hardware activity.
The fact that the timeout path handled it first doesn't make it
spurious. Returning IRQ_NONE incorrectly suggests the interrupt
wasn't for this device, which can cause issues with shared interrupt
lines and interrupt accounting.
Fixes: b4e002d8a7ce ("spi: tegra210-quad: Fix timeout handling")
Signed-off-by: Breno Leitao <leitao@debian.org>
Signed-off-by: Usama Arif <usamaarif642@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Jon Hunter <jonathanh@nvidia.com>
Acked-by: Jon Hunter <jonathanh@nvidia.com>
Acked-by: Thierry Reding <treding@nvidia.com>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260126-tegra_xfer-v2-1-6d2115e4f387@debian.org
Signed-off-by: Mark Brown <broonie@kernel.org>
Pull dma-mapping fixes from Marek Szyprowski:
"Two minor fixes for the DMA-mapping subsystem:
- check for the rare case of the allocation failure of the global CMA
pool (Shanker Donthineni)
- avoid perf buffer overflow when tracing large scatter-gather lists
(Deepanshu Kartikey)"
* tag 'dma-mapping-6.19-2026-02-06' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/mszyprowski/linux:
dma: contiguous: Check return value of dma_contiguous_reserve_area()
tracing/dma: Cap dma_map_sg tracepoint arrays to prevent buffer overflow
The CephFS kernel client has regression starting from 6.18-rc1.
We have issue in ceph_mds_auth_match() if fs_name == NULL:
const char fs_name = mdsc->fsc->mount_options->mds_namespace;
...
if (auth->match.fs_name && strcmp(auth->match.fs_name, fs_name)) {
/ fsname mismatch, try next one */
return 0;
}
Patrick Donnelly suggested that: In summary, we should definitely start
decoding `fs_name` from the MDSMap and do strict authorizations checks
against it. Note that the `-o mds_namespace=foo` should only be used for
selecting the file system to mount and nothing else. It's possible
no mds_namespace is specified but the kernel will mount the only
file system that exists which may have name "foo".
This patch reworks ceph_mdsmap_decode() and namespace_equals() with
the goal of supporting the suggested concept. Now struct ceph_mdsmap
contains m_fs_name field that receives copy of extracted FS name
by ceph_extract_encoded_string(). For the case of "old" CephFS file
systems, it is used "cephfs" name.
[ idryomov: replace redundant %*pE with %s in ceph_mdsmap_decode(),
get rid of a series of strlen() calls in ceph_namespace_match(),
drop changes to namespace_equals() body to avoid treating empty
mds_namespace as equal, drop changes to ceph_mdsc_handle_fsmap()
as namespace_equals() isn't an equivalent substitution there ]
Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org
Fixes: 22c73d52a6d0 ("ceph: fix multifs mds auth caps issue")
Link: https://tracker.ceph.com/issues/73886
Signed-off-by: Viacheslav Dubeyko <Slava.Dubeyko@ibm.com>
Reviewed-by: Patrick Donnelly <pdonnell@ibm.com>
Tested-by: Patrick Donnelly <pdonnell@ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Ilya Dryomov <idryomov@gmail.com>
When realloc() fails in add_string(), the function returns -1 but leaves
*vals pointing to the previously allocated memory. This can cause memory
leaks in callers like make_trace_array() that return on error without
freeing the partially built array.
Fix this by freeing *vals and setting it to NULL when realloc() fails.
This makes the error handling self-contained in add_string() so callers
don't need to handle cleanup on failure.
This bug is found by my static analysis tool and my code review.
Cc: Masami Hiramatsu <mhiramat@kernel.org>
Cc: Mathieu Desnoyers <mathieu.desnoyers@efficios.com>
Fixes: e30f8e61e2518 ("tracing: Add a tracepoint verification check at build time")
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/20260119114542.1714405-1-geoffreyhe2@gmail.com
Signed-off-by: Weigang He <geoffreyhe2@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Steven Rostedt (Google) <rostedt@goodmis.org>
liveupdate is used to enable Live Update Orchestrator (LUO) early during
boot. Add it to kernel-parameters.txt so users can discover and use it.
Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20260130112036.359806-1-me@linux.beauty
Signed-off-by: Li Chen <me@linux.beauty>
Acked-by: Mike Rapoport (Microsoft) <rppt@kernel.org>
Cc: Arnd Bergmann <arnd@arndb.de>
Cc: "Borislav Petkov (AMD)" <bp@alien8.de>
Cc: Frank van der Linden <fvdl@google.com>
Cc: Ingo Molnar <mingo@kernel.org>
Cc: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net>
Cc: Kees Cook <kees@kernel.org>
Cc: Li RongQing <lirongqing@baidu.com>
Cc: Pawan Gupta <pawan.kumar.gupta@linux.intel.com>
Cc: Randy Dunlap <rdunlap@infradead.org>
Cc: Pratyush Yadav <ptyadav@amazon.de>
Cc: Pasha Tatashin <pasha.tatashin@soleen.com>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
Some special sections specify their ELF section entsize, for example:
.pushsection section, "M", @progbits, 8
The entsize (8 in this example) is needed by objtool klp-diff for
extracting individual entries.
Clang assembler versions older than 20 silently ignore the above
construct and set entsize to 0, resulting in the following error:
.discard.annotate_data: missing special section entsize or annotations
Add a klp-build check to prevent the use of Clang assembler versions
prior to 20.
Fixes: 24ebfcd65a87 ("livepatch/klp-build: Introduce klp-build script for generating livepatch modules")
Reported-by: Song Liu <song@kernel.org>
Acked-by: Song Liu <song@kernel.org>
Link: https://patch.msgid.link/957fd52e375d0e2cfa3ac729160da995084a7f5e.1769562556.git.jpoimboe@kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Josh Poimboeuf <jpoimboe@kernel.org>
Pull SCSI fixes from James Bottomley:
"Small changes in drivers only, no core changes.
The firewire one fixes a user controlled overflow (but I still can't
see how it could be exploited)"
* tag 'scsi-fixes' of git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/jejb/scsi:
scsi: ufs: amd-versal2: Fix PHY initialization in HCE enable notify
scsi: firewire: sbp-target: Fix overflow in sbp_make_tpg()
scsi: be2iscsi: Fix a memory leak in beiscsi_boot_get_sinfo()
scsi: qla2xxx: edif: Fix dma_free_coherent() size