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An NFS operation that creates a new symlink includes the symlink data, which is xdr-encoded as a length followed by the data plus 0 to 3 bytes of zero-padding as required to reach a 4-byte boundary. The vfs, on the other hand, wants null-terminated data. The simple way to handle this would be by copying the data into a newly allocated buffer with space for the final null. The current nfsd_symlink code tries to be more clever by skipping that step in the (likely) case where the byte following the string is already 0. But that assumes that the byte following the string is ours to look at. In fact, it might be the first byte of a page that we can't read, or of some object that another task might modify. Worse, the NFSv4 code tries to fix the problem by actually writing to that byte. In the NFSv2/v3 cases this actually appears to be safe: - nfs3svc_decode_symlinkargs explicitly null-terminates the data (after first checking its length and copying it to a new page). - NFSv2 limits symlinks to 1k. The buffer holding the rpc request is always at least a page, and the link data (and previous fields) have maximum lengths that prevent the request from reaching the end of a page. In the NFSv4 case the CREATE op is potentially just one part of a long compound so can end up on the end of a page if you're unlucky. The minimal fix here is to copy and null-terminate in the NFSv4 case. The nfsd_symlink() interface here seems too fragile, though. It should really either do the copy itself every time or just require a null-terminated string. Reported-by:Jeff Layton <jlayton@primarydata.com> Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org Signed-off-by:
J. Bruce Fields <bfields@redhat.com>
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