The unaligned local in __aeabi_uidivmod leads to a store to a 64bit
value at an address that is not divisible by 8 (in grub_divmod64).
The compiler most likely generates a STRD instruction to store it and
this causes an exception.
Fixes Savannah bug #43632.
This includes improvements done by Leif Lindholm.
util/grub-mkconfig_lib.in(version_test_gt): "echo -n" is not really needed,
final newline is stripped by command substitution.
util/grub.d/10_kfreebsd.in, util/grub.d/10_linux.in,
util/grub.d/20_linux_xen.in: change how list is built, to avoid echo -n
completely.
util/grub.d/30_os-prober.in: add spaces to printed line directly
Closes 43668.
Using the http module to download config files, produces memory errors,
after the config file is downloaded.
The error was traced to the tcp stack in grub-core/net/tcp.c. The wrong
netbuff pointer was being freed in the clean up loop.
Changing the code to free the correct netbuff pointer removes the runtime
error.
Closes 42765.
grub_pubkey_open closed original file after it was read; it set
io->device to NULL to prevent grub_file_close from trying to close device.
But network device itself is stacked (net -> bufio); and bufio preserved
original netfs file which hold reference to device. grub_file_close(io)
called grub_bufio_close which called grub_file_close for original file.
grub_file_close(netfs-file) now also called grub_device_close which
freed file->device->net. So file structure returned by grub_pubkey_open
now had device->net pointed to freed memory. When later file was closed,
it was attempted to be freed again.
Change grub_pubkey_open to behave like other filters - preserve original
parent file and pass grub_file_close down to parent. In this way only the
original file will close device. We really need to move this logic into
core instead.
Also plug memory leaks in error paths on the way.
Reported-By: Robert Kliewer <robert.kliewer@gmail.com>
Closes: bug #43601
Tests file access with all filters enabled. It does it both for local
and network access, due to regression in signature checking over network.
This includes all files in distribution to not depend on existence
of compression tools and gpg. Test preloads all required modules to
avoid having to provide signatures for them.
Still not implemented is file offset filter (is not available in grub
script, needs extra module)
configure_ciphers:
- several memory leaks where allocated ciphers were not freed. CID: 73813,
73710
- use after free. It is probably quite innocent as grub is single threaded,
but could potentially be a problem with memory allocator debugger turned on.
CID: 73730
luks_recover_key:
- memory leak. CID: 73854
The EFI version of grub_machine_get_bootlocation crops the boot image
name back to the last / in order to get a directory path. However, it
does not check that *name is actually set before calling grub_strrchr
to do this, and neither does grub_strrchr before dereferencing a NULL
pointer.
Parent function, grub_set_prefix_and_root, does check the pointer
before using.
The structure size used in grub_netbuff_pull to get the pointer to
option header is apparently wrong, which leads to subsequent range check
failed and therefore not responding to any neighbor solicit message in my
testing.
struct ... foo = { 0, } is valid initializer, but older GCC emits
warning which is fatal error due to -Werror=missing-field-initializer.
So simply use full initializer to avoid these errors. This was fixed
probably in GCC 4.7.
See https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=36750
This makes it possible to build generally-useful utilities such as
grub-mount even if the rest of GRUB has not been ported to the target
CPU.
* configure.ac: Add "none" platform. Default to it for unsupported
CPUs rather than stopping with a fatal error. Don't downgrade
x86_64-none to i386. Define COND_real_platform Automake conditional
if the platform is anything other than "none". Don't do any include
directory linking for "none".
* Makefile.am: Skip building grub-core and all bootcheck targets if
!COND_real_platform.
* include/grub/time.h: Don't include <grub/cpu/time.h> if GRUB_UTIL
is defined.
The AML parser implements only a small subset of possible AML
opcodes. On the Fujitsu Lifebook E744 this and another bug in
the parser (incorrect handling of TermArg data types) would lead
to the laptop not turning off (_S5 not found).
* grub-core/commands/acpihalt.c: Support OpAlias in the AML parser;
in skip_ext_op(), handle some Type2Opcodes more correctly (TermArgs
aren't always simply strings!); Add function to skip TermArgs
* include/grub/acpi.h: Add new opcodes
Currently, if "linux" fails, the "goto fail;" in grub_cmd_initrd sends us
into grub_initrd_close() without grub_initrd_init() being called, and thus
it never clears initrd_ctx->components. grub_initrd_close() then frees that
address, which is stale data from the stack. If the stack happens to have a
stale *address* there that matches a recent allocation, then you'll get a
double free later.
So initialize the memory up front.
Signed-off-by: Peter Jones <pjones@redhat.com>
We encountered a weird random kernel initrd unpacking error on btrfs
and finally found it was caused by incorrect address reference in range
check for type GRUB_BTRFS_EXTENT_REGULAR and the entire result is
unpredictable.
This is a quick fix to make the address reference to the
grub_btrfs_extent_data structure correctly, not the pointer variable
to it.
Any suggestions to this patch is welcome.
* configure.ac: Remove -m64 from checks for -mcmodel=large and
-mno-red-zone. These are always either unnecessary (x86_64-emu) or
already in TARGET_CFLAGS at this point, and they produce incorrect
results when building for x32.
* grub-core/kern/x86_64/dl.c (grub_arch_dl_relocate_symbols): Cast
pointers to Elf64_Xword via grub_addr_t, in order to work on x32.
* include/grub/x86_64/types.h (GRUB_TARGET_SIZEOF_VOID_P,
GRUB_TARGET_SIZEOF_LONG): Define to 4 on x32.