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* [RFC] endianness bugs in net/batman-adv/
@ 2012-04-13 19:46 Al Viro
       [not found] ` <20120413194629.GP6589-3bDd1+5oDREiFSDQTTA3OLVCufUGDwFn@public.gmane.org>
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 3+ messages in thread
From: Al Viro @ 2012-04-13 19:46 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: b.a.t.m.a.n; +Cc: netdev

	Let's start with net/batman-adv/translation-table.c:send_tt_request(). 
Its tt_crc argument gets stored into skb as-is and skb goes on the wire.
OK, so it's fixed-endian, right?

	That sucker comes straight from the (only) caller - tt_update_orig().
There it gets compared with ->tt_crc of struct orig_node instances.  Fine,
except that just prior to that comparison we assign to ->tt_crc the return
value of tt_global_crc().  Which is built on crc16_byte() and clearly
returns a host-endian value.  Additionally, orig_node ->tt_crc is getting
compared to tt_request->tt_data in send_other_tt_response(), which ultimately
comes from recv_tt_query() where it's flipped from net-endian to host-endian.

	It gets even funnier - we have 3 structures with ->tt_crc in them;
one is struct orig_node (see above), another is struct batman_ogv_packet and
then there's the weirdest one - struct bat_priv.  Where ->tt_crc is
atomic_t, of all things.  With exactly two things ever done to it:
        batman_ogm_packet->tt_crc = htons((uint16_t)
                                                atomic_read(&bat_priv->tt_crc));
in bat_iv_ogm_schedule() and
        atomic_set(&bat_priv->tt_crc, tt_local_crc(bat_priv));
in prepare_packet_buffer().  What the hell does that have to do with atomic_t?
At least that one is definitely host-endian all along (tt_local_crc() is
the same kind of built-on-crc16_byte() thing).

	And then there's batman_ogv_packet, where we flip the damn field
from net-endian to host-endian and back.  That's where the argument of
tt_update_orig() comes from, AFAICS always in host-endian form.

	IOW, unless I'm misreading that code we have
bat_priv ->tt_crc: host-endian, no need to make it atomic_t
orig_node ->tt_crc: host-endian
tt_update_orig()/send_tt_request() tt_crc argument: host-endian
the value put into the packet in send_tt_request(): broken; should be
net-endian, in reality it's host-endian.  Missing htons() at the very
least.

	Could somebody familiar with that code comment on that?

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 3+ messages in thread

* Re: [RFC] endianness bugs in net/batman-adv/
       [not found] ` <20120413194629.GP6589-3bDd1+5oDREiFSDQTTA3OLVCufUGDwFn@public.gmane.org>
@ 2012-04-14  9:34   ` Antonio Quartulli
       [not found]     ` <20120414093404.GA5300-E/2OGukznS5g9hUCZPvPmw@public.gmane.org>
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 3+ messages in thread
From: Antonio Quartulli @ 2012-04-14  9:34 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Al Viro
  Cc: netdev-u79uwXL29TY76Z2rM5mHXA,
	b.a.t.m.a.n-ZwoEplunGu2X36UT3dwllkB+6BGkLq7r

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On Fri, Apr 13, 2012 at 08:46:29 +0100, Al Viro wrote:
> 	Let's start with net/batman-adv/translation-table.c:send_tt_request(). 
> Its tt_crc argument gets stored into skb as-is and skb goes on the wire.
> OK, so it's fixed-endian, right?

ok, it's a bug. The tt_crc field must be stored in the skb by using htons().

> 
> 	That sucker comes straight from the (only) caller - tt_update_orig().
> There it gets compared with ->tt_crc of struct orig_node instances.  Fine,
> except that just prior to that comparison we assign to ->tt_crc the return
> value of tt_global_crc().  Which is built on crc16_byte() and clearly
> returns a host-endian value.  Additionally, orig_node ->tt_crc is getting
> compared to tt_request->tt_data in send_other_tt_response(), which ultimately
> comes from recv_tt_query() where it's flipped from net-endian to host-endian.
> 

We want to do every computation using host-endian data. There is no "fixed
endian" anywhere. As I wrote above, we forgot to use htons() before sending the
tt_crc over the wire.

> 	It gets even funnier - we have 3 structures with ->tt_crc in them;
> one is struct orig_node (see above), another is struct batman_ogv_packet and
> then there's the weirdest one - struct bat_priv.  Where ->tt_crc is
> atomic_t, of all things.  With exactly two things ever done to it:
>         batman_ogm_packet->tt_crc = htons((uint16_t)
>                                                 atomic_read(&bat_priv->tt_crc));
> in bat_iv_ogm_schedule() and
>         atomic_set(&bat_priv->tt_crc, tt_local_crc(bat_priv));
> in prepare_packet_buffer().  What the hell does that have to do with atomic_t?

Thank you for spotting this. It was defined as atomic_t in the early development
phase of this new tt framework, but, then, I'd say that we forgot to convert it
to uint16_t once atomic_t was not needed anymore.

> At least that one is definitely host-endian all along (tt_local_crc() is
> the same kind of built-on-crc16_byte() thing).
> 
> 	And then there's batman_ogv_packet, where we flip the damn field
> from net-endian to host-endian and back.  That's where the argument of
> tt_update_orig() comes from, AFAICS always in host-endian form.
> 
> 	IOW, unless I'm misreading that code we have
> bat_priv ->tt_crc: host-endian, no need to make it atomic_t

I agree.

> orig_node ->tt_crc: host-endian

I agree. As I said before we want to use host-endian everywhere. We just want to
convert the data to net-endian before sending it over the wire (like people
should normally do).

> tt_update_orig()/send_tt_request() tt_crc argument: host-endian

I agree.

> the value put into the packet in send_tt_request(): broken; should be
> net-endian, in reality it's host-endian.  Missing htons() at the very
> least.
> 

Exactly. This is the bug I was talking about in my first inline response.

All the problems come from a missing htons() before sending the tt_request
packet.

Thank you very much. I'll fix it.


Best regards,


-- 
Antonio Quartulli

..each of us alone is worth nothing..
Ernesto "Che" Guevara

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^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 3+ messages in thread

* Re: [RFC] endianness bugs in net/batman-adv/
       [not found]     ` <20120414093404.GA5300-E/2OGukznS5g9hUCZPvPmw@public.gmane.org>
@ 2012-04-14 13:07       ` Antonio Quartulli
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 3+ messages in thread
From: Antonio Quartulli @ 2012-04-14 13:07 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Al Viro
  Cc: netdev-u79uwXL29TY76Z2rM5mHXA,
	b.a.t.m.a.n-ZwoEplunGu2X36UT3dwllkB+6BGkLq7r

[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 570 bytes --]

Hello,

On Sat, Apr 14, 2012 at 11:34:05AM +0200, Antonio Quartulli wrote:

....

> 
> Thank you very much. I'll fix it.


I sent two patches to the batman-adv mailing list that will fix the bugs you
have found.

If you would like to have a look at the patches, you can find them on the list
archive:

https://lists.open-mesh.org/pipermail/b.a.t.m.a.n/2012-April/006692.html
https://lists.open-mesh.org/pipermail/b.a.t.m.a.n/2012-April/006693.html


Regards,

-- 
Antonio Quartulli

..each of us alone is worth nothing..
Ernesto "Che" Guevara

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^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 3+ messages in thread

end of thread, other threads:[~2012-04-14 13:07 UTC | newest]

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2012-04-13 19:46 [RFC] endianness bugs in net/batman-adv/ Al Viro
     [not found] ` <20120413194629.GP6589-3bDd1+5oDREiFSDQTTA3OLVCufUGDwFn@public.gmane.org>
2012-04-14  9:34   ` Antonio Quartulli
     [not found]     ` <20120414093404.GA5300-E/2OGukznS5g9hUCZPvPmw@public.gmane.org>
2012-04-14 13:07       ` Antonio Quartulli

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