From 1b528181b2ffa14721fb28ad1bd539fe1732c583 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Roland McGrath Date: Tue, 7 Sep 2010 19:35:49 -0700 Subject: setup_arg_pages: diagnose excessive argument size The CONFIG_STACK_GROWSDOWN variant of setup_arg_pages() does not check the size of the argument/environment area on the stack. When it is unworkably large, shift_arg_pages() hits its BUG_ON. This is exploitable with a very large RLIMIT_STACK limit, to create a crash pretty easily. Check that the initial stack is not too large to make it possible to map in any executable. We're not checking that the actual executable (or intepreter, for binfmt_elf) will fit. So those mappings might clobber part of the initial stack mapping. But that is just userland lossage that userland made happen, not a kernel problem. Signed-off-by: Roland McGrath Reviewed-by: KOSAKI Motohiro Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds --- fs/exec.c | 5 +++++ 1 file changed, 5 insertions(+) (limited to 'fs/exec.c') diff --git a/fs/exec.c b/fs/exec.c index 2d945528274..1b63237fc6d 100644 --- a/fs/exec.c +++ b/fs/exec.c @@ -594,6 +594,11 @@ int setup_arg_pages(struct linux_binprm *bprm, #else stack_top = arch_align_stack(stack_top); stack_top = PAGE_ALIGN(stack_top); + + if (unlikely(stack_top < mmap_min_addr) || + unlikely(vma->vm_end - vma->vm_start >= stack_top - mmap_min_addr)) + return -ENOMEM; + stack_shift = vma->vm_end - stack_top; bprm->p -= stack_shift; -- cgit v1.2.3