linux-stable/arch/arm64
Marco Elver aebc7b0d8d list: Introduce CONFIG_LIST_HARDENED
Numerous production kernel configs (see [1, 2]) are choosing to enable
CONFIG_DEBUG_LIST, which is also being recommended by KSPP for hardened
configs [3]. The motivation behind this is that the option can be used
as a security hardening feature (e.g. CVE-2019-2215 and CVE-2019-2025
are mitigated by the option [4]).

The feature has never been designed with performance in mind, yet common
list manipulation is happening across hot paths all over the kernel.

Introduce CONFIG_LIST_HARDENED, which performs list pointer checking
inline, and only upon list corruption calls the reporting slow path.

To generate optimal machine code with CONFIG_LIST_HARDENED:

  1. Elide checking for pointer values which upon dereference would
     result in an immediate access fault (i.e. minimal hardening
     checks).  The trade-off is lower-quality error reports.

  2. Use the __preserve_most function attribute (available with Clang,
     but not yet with GCC) to minimize the code footprint for calling
     the reporting slow path. As a result, function size of callers is
     reduced by avoiding saving registers before calling the rarely
     called reporting slow path.

     Note that all TUs in lib/Makefile already disable function tracing,
     including list_debug.c, and __preserve_most's implied notrace has
     no effect in this case.

  3. Because the inline checks are a subset of the full set of checks in
     __list_*_valid_or_report(), always return false if the inline
     checks failed.  This avoids redundant compare and conditional
     branch right after return from the slow path.

As a side-effect of the checks being inline, if the compiler can prove
some condition to always be true, it can completely elide some checks.

Since DEBUG_LIST is functionally a superset of LIST_HARDENED, the
Kconfig variables are changed to reflect that: DEBUG_LIST selects
LIST_HARDENED, whereas LIST_HARDENED itself has no dependency on
DEBUG_LIST.

Running netperf with CONFIG_LIST_HARDENED (using a Clang compiler with
"preserve_most") shows throughput improvements, in my case of ~7% on
average (up to 20-30% on some test cases).

Link: https://r.android.com/1266735 [1]
Link: https://gitlab.archlinux.org/archlinux/packaging/packages/linux/-/blob/main/config [2]
Link: https://kernsec.org/wiki/index.php/Kernel_Self_Protection_Project/Recommended_Settings [3]
Link: https://googleprojectzero.blogspot.com/2019/11/bad-binder-android-in-wild-exploit.html [4]
Signed-off-by: Marco Elver <elver@google.com>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20230811151847.1594958-3-elver@google.com
Signed-off-by: Kees Cook <keescook@chromium.org>
2023-08-15 14:57:25 -07:00
..
boot ARM: New SoC support for 6.5 2023-06-29 15:11:17 -07:00
configs ARM: SoC defconfig changes for 6.5 2023-06-29 15:26:45 -07:00
crypto
hyperv arm64/hyperv: Use CPUHP_AP_HYPERV_ONLINE state to fix CPU online sequencing 2023-06-17 23:09:47 +00:00
include tracing: arm64: Avoid missing-prototype warnings 2023-07-12 12:06:04 -04:00
kernel tracing: arm64: Avoid missing-prototype warnings 2023-07-12 12:06:04 -04:00
kvm list: Introduce CONFIG_LIST_HARDENED 2023-08-15 14:57:25 -07:00
lib
mm arch/arm64/mm/fault: Fix undeclared variable error in do_page_fault() 2023-07-03 19:04:32 -07:00
net
tools ARM64: 2023-07-03 15:32:22 -07:00
xen
Kbuild
Kconfig arm64: ftrace: Add direct call trampoline samples support 2023-07-10 17:51:54 -04:00
Kconfig.debug
Kconfig.platforms STM32 STM32MP25 for v6.5, round 1 2023-06-20 22:28:44 +02:00
Makefile