* [PATCH bpf v2] bpf: tcp: Fix use-after-free in bpf_iter_tcp_established_batch()
@ 2026-07-17 2:33 Jose Fernandez (Anthropic)
2026-07-17 2:52 ` sashiko-bot
0 siblings, 1 reply; 2+ messages in thread
From: Jose Fernandez (Anthropic) @ 2026-07-17 2:33 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Eric Dumazet, Neal Cardwell, Kuniyuki Iwashima, David S. Miller,
Jakub Kicinski, Paolo Abeni, Simon Horman, Andrii Nakryiko,
Yonghong Song, Martin KaFai Lau
Cc: netdev, linux-kernel, bpf, Daniel Borkmann, Jiayuan Chen,
Emil Tsalapatis, Jose Fernandez (Anthropic)
reqsk_queue_hash_req() publishes a TCP_NEW_SYN_RECV request_sock onto
the ehash chain, drops the bucket lock, and only afterwards sets
rsk_refcnt to 3.
Lockless readers such as __inet_lookup_established() handle this with
refcount_inc_not_zero(), but bpf_iter_tcp_established_batch() uses plain
sock_hold() while holding the bucket lock, on the assumption that the
lock guarantees sk_refcnt > 0. That assumption does not hold for
request_sock:
CPU 0 CPU 1
----- -----
tcp_conn_request()
reqsk_queue_hash_req()
inet_ehash_insert(req)
spin_lock(bucket)
__sk_nulls_add_node_rcu(req) // rsk_refcnt == 0
spin_unlock(bucket)
bpf_iter_tcp_established_batch()
spin_lock(bucket)
sock_hold(req) <-- addition on 0
spin_unlock(bucket)
refcount_set(&req->rsk_refcnt, 3) // clobbers saturated value
which surfaces as:
refcount_t: addition on 0; use-after-free.
WARNING: lib/refcount.c:25 at refcount_warn_saturate+0x48/0x90, CPU#1
Call Trace:
bpf_iter_tcp_established_batch+0x14e/0x170
bpf_iter_tcp_batch+0x53/0x200
bpf_iter_tcp_seq_next+0x27/0x70
bpf_seq_read+0x107/0x410
vfs_read+0xb9/0x380
The iterator's stolen reference is lost when the publishing CPU's
refcount_set() overwrites the count, leaving the socket one reference
short. When the last legitimate owner drops its reference the reqsk is
freed while still reachable, leading to use-after-free.
This reproduces in seconds with tcp_syncookies=0, a handful of threads
doing connect()/close() to a local listener while others read an
iter/tcp link in a tight loop.
Use refcount_inc_not_zero() and skip the socket on failure. A skipped
socket is still part of the bucket, so keep counting it in expected.
The reallocations are sized from expected, and a request sock whose
refcount gets published while the lock is held across the last realloc
must already have room.
A skipped socket is counted in expected but never batched, so end_sk
can be short of expected on a batch that is actually complete. Decide
completeness by whether the walk left any socket behind instead. The
WARN after the locked realloc checks the same, replacing an
end_sk == expected check that could not hold on that path since
cdec67a489d4.
If every matching socket in a bucket is mid-init (refcount 0), end_sk
stays 0. Advance to the next bucket rather than returning a batch entry
that was never filled this round.
Fixes: 04c7820b776f ("bpf: tcp: Bpf iter batching and lock_sock")
Assisted-by: Claude:unspecified
Signed-off-by: Jose Fernandez (Anthropic) <jose.fernandez@linux.dev>
---
Changes in v2:
- Count expected right after seq_sk_match() so the batch reallocations
are sized for the whole bucket, including request socks whose
refcount is not yet published (Kuniyuki)
- Signal batch completeness by the walk leaving no leftover socket
instead of end_sk == expected, and check the same condition in the
WARN after the locked reallocation
- Drop the Reviewed-by tags given the code changes
- Rebase onto bpf/master
- Link to v1: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20260620-bpf-iter-tcp-refcnt-v1-1-883bf9e69495@linux.dev
The pre-existing double-put on the realloc failure path (raised in the
v1 thread) will be addressed in a separate follow-up patch.
---
net/ipv4/tcp_ipv4.c | 44 +++++++++++++++++++++++++-------------------
1 file changed, 25 insertions(+), 19 deletions(-)
diff --git a/net/ipv4/tcp_ipv4.c b/net/ipv4/tcp_ipv4.c
index 209ef7522508..d8640d114c0d 100644
--- a/net/ipv4/tcp_ipv4.c
+++ b/net/ipv4/tcp_ipv4.c
@@ -3073,24 +3073,24 @@ static unsigned int bpf_iter_tcp_established_batch(struct seq_file *seq,
{
struct bpf_tcp_iter_state *iter = seq->private;
struct hlist_nulls_node *node;
- unsigned int expected = 1;
- struct sock *sk;
+ unsigned int expected = 0;
+ struct sock *sk = *start_sk;
- sock_hold(*start_sk);
- iter->batch[iter->end_sk++].sk = *start_sk;
-
- sk = sk_nulls_next(*start_sk);
*start_sk = NULL;
sk_nulls_for_each_from(sk, node) {
- if (seq_sk_match(seq, sk)) {
- if (iter->end_sk < iter->max_sk) {
- sock_hold(sk);
- iter->batch[iter->end_sk++].sk = sk;
- } else if (!*start_sk) {
- /* Remember where we left off. */
- *start_sk = sk;
- }
- expected++;
+ if (!seq_sk_match(seq, sk))
+ continue;
+ expected++;
+ if (iter->end_sk < iter->max_sk) {
+ /* reqsk_queue_hash_req() inserts with sk_refcnt == 0
+ * and refcount_set()s it after the bucket lock drops.
+ */
+ if (unlikely(!refcount_inc_not_zero(&sk->sk_refcnt)))
+ continue;
+ iter->batch[iter->end_sk++].sk = sk;
+ } else if (!*start_sk) {
+ /* Remember where we left off. */
+ *start_sk = sk;
}
}
@@ -3128,12 +3128,14 @@ static struct sock *bpf_iter_tcp_batch(struct seq_file *seq)
struct sock *sk;
int err;
+again:
sk = bpf_iter_tcp_resume(seq);
if (!sk)
return NULL; /* Done */
expected = bpf_iter_fill_batch(seq, &sk);
- if (likely(iter->end_sk == expected))
+ /* sk carries the first socket that did not fit in the batch. */
+ if (likely(!sk))
goto done;
/* Batch size was too small. */
@@ -3149,7 +3151,7 @@ static struct sock *bpf_iter_tcp_batch(struct seq_file *seq)
return NULL; /* Done */
expected = bpf_iter_fill_batch(seq, &sk);
- if (likely(iter->end_sk == expected))
+ if (likely(!sk))
goto done;
/* Batch size was still too small. Hold onto the lock while we try
@@ -3162,10 +3164,14 @@ static struct sock *bpf_iter_tcp_batch(struct seq_file *seq)
return ERR_PTR(err);
}
- expected = bpf_iter_fill_batch(seq, &sk);
- WARN_ON_ONCE(iter->end_sk != expected);
+ bpf_iter_fill_batch(seq, &sk);
+ WARN_ON_ONCE(sk);
done:
bpf_iter_tcp_unlock_bucket(seq);
+ if (unlikely(!iter->end_sk)) {
+ ++iter->state.bucket;
+ goto again;
+ }
return iter->batch[0].sk;
}
---
base-commit: 7cbd0c4cebe4c9f678d15e6b9ba975e1155a107f
change-id: 20260619-bpf-iter-tcp-refcnt-107d52b238da
Best regards,
--
Jose Fernandez (Anthropic) <jose.fernandez@linux.dev>
^ permalink raw reply related [flat|nested] 2+ messages in thread
* Re: [PATCH bpf v2] bpf: tcp: Fix use-after-free in bpf_iter_tcp_established_batch()
2026-07-17 2:33 [PATCH bpf v2] bpf: tcp: Fix use-after-free in bpf_iter_tcp_established_batch() Jose Fernandez (Anthropic)
@ 2026-07-17 2:52 ` sashiko-bot
0 siblings, 0 replies; 2+ messages in thread
From: sashiko-bot @ 2026-07-17 2:52 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Jose Fernandez (Anthropic); +Cc: bpf
Thank you for your contribution! Sashiko AI review found 2 potential issue(s) to consider:
New issues:
- [Low] The patch introduces a multi-line comment that violates the BPF subsystem comment style guidelines.
Pre-existing issues:
- [High] Double-put and wild pointer dereference of batch sockets on the first bpf_iter_tcp_realloc_batch failure path.
--
--- Patch [1]: [PATCH bpf v2] bpf: tcp: Fix use-after-free in bpf_iter_tcp_established_batch() ---
commit c52d637a13758169d9dce0d7c05be97965d399d3
Author: Jose Fernandez (Anthropic) <jose.fernandez@linux.dev>
bpf: tcp: Fix use-after-free in bpf_iter_tcp_established_batch()
This commit fixes a use-after-free issue in the TCP iterator caused by
request sockets being published to the ehash chain with a refcount of 0
before being updated. The fix uses refcount_inc_not_zero() to safely handle
these sockets during batch iteration. It also refactors the batch completion
logic to rely on whether any sockets were left behind during the walk.
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20260620-bpf-iter-tcp-refcnt-v1-1-883bf9e69495@linux.dev
> --- a/net/ipv4/tcp_ipv4.c
> +++ b/net/ipv4/tcp_ipv4.c
> @@ -3073,24 +3073,24 @@ static unsigned int bpf_iter_tcp_established_batch(struct seq_file *seq,
[ ... ]
> sk_nulls_for_each_from(sk, node) {
> - if (seq_sk_match(seq, sk)) {
> - if (iter->end_sk < iter->max_sk) {
> - sock_hold(sk);
> - iter->batch[iter->end_sk++].sk = sk;
> - } else if (!*start_sk) {
> - /* Remember where we left off. */
> - *start_sk = sk;
> - }
> - expected++;
> + if (!seq_sk_match(seq, sk))
> + continue;
> + expected++;
> + if (iter->end_sk < iter->max_sk) {
> + /* reqsk_queue_hash_req() inserts with sk_refcnt == 0
> + * and refcount_set()s it after the bucket lock drops.
> + */
[Severity: Low]
Does this multi-line comment follow the BPF subsystem comment style?
The BPF subsystem guide expects the opening block to be on its own line:
/*
* reqsk_queue_hash_req() inserts with sk_refcnt == 0
...
> + if (unlikely(!refcount_inc_not_zero(&sk->sk_refcnt)))
> + continue;
[ ... ]
> @@ -3128,12 +3128,14 @@ static struct sock *bpf_iter_tcp_batch(struct seq_file *seq)
> struct sock *sk;
> int err;
>
> +again:
> sk = bpf_iter_tcp_resume(seq);
> if (!sk)
> return NULL; /* Done */
>
> expected = bpf_iter_fill_batch(seq, &sk);
> - if (likely(iter->end_sk == expected))
> + /* sk carries the first socket that did not fit in the batch. */
> + if (likely(!sk))
> goto done;
[Severity: High]
This is a pre-existing issue, but I wanted to ask about the reallocation
failure path that occurs just after this block in bpf_iter_tcp_batch().
If bpf_iter_tcp_realloc_batch() fails, the function calls
bpf_iter_tcp_put_batch() and returns an error without clearing iter->end_sk.
When this happens, bpf_iter_tcp_put_batch() overwrites item->sk with a
cookie:
net/ipv4/tcp_ipv4.c:bpf_iter_tcp_put_batch() {
...
while (cur_sk < iter->end_sk) {
...
sock_gen_put(item->sk);
item->cookie = cookie;
}
}
Because the seq framework subsequently calls bpf_iter_tcp_seq_stop(), it sees
iter->cur_sk < iter->end_sk and calls bpf_iter_tcp_put_batch() a second time.
Could this lead to a wild pointer dereference when sock_gen_put() tries
to use the cookie as a socket pointer during the second pass?
--
Sashiko AI review · https://sashiko.dev/#/patchset/20260717-bpf-iter-tcp-refcnt-v2-1-8e81f0ac6f3e@linux.dev?part=1
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 2+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2026-07-17 2:52 UTC | newest]
Thread overview: 2+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
2026-07-17 2:33 [PATCH bpf v2] bpf: tcp: Fix use-after-free in bpf_iter_tcp_established_batch() Jose Fernandez (Anthropic)
2026-07-17 2:52 ` sashiko-bot
This is an external index of several public inboxes,
see mirroring instructions on how to clone and mirror
all data and code used by this external index.