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authorDaniel Borkmann <dborkman@redhat.com>2014-10-09 22:55:32 +0200
committerDavid S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>2014-10-14 18:46:22 +0200
commitb69040d8e39f20d5215a03502a8e8b4c6ab78395 (patch)
treea3367d545be53156bce834449c6698b01ae0a80a /include/net/sctp
parentnet: sctp: fix skb_over_panic when receiving malformed ASCONF chunks (diff)
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net: sctp: fix panic on duplicate ASCONF chunks
When receiving a e.g. semi-good formed connection scan in the form of ... -------------- INIT[ASCONF; ASCONF_ACK] -------------> <----------- INIT-ACK[ASCONF; ASCONF_ACK] ------------ -------------------- COOKIE-ECHO --------------------> <-------------------- COOKIE-ACK --------------------- ---------------- ASCONF_a; ASCONF_b -----------------> ... where ASCONF_a equals ASCONF_b chunk (at least both serials need to be equal), we panic an SCTP server! The problem is that good-formed ASCONF chunks that we reply with ASCONF_ACK chunks are cached per serial. Thus, when we receive a same ASCONF chunk twice (e.g. through a lost ASCONF_ACK), we do not need to process them again on the server side (that was the idea, also proposed in the RFC). Instead, we know it was cached and we just resend the cached chunk instead. So far, so good. Where things get nasty is in SCTP's side effect interpreter, that is, sctp_cmd_interpreter(): While incoming ASCONF_a (chunk = event_arg) is being marked !end_of_packet and !singleton, and we have an association context, we do not flush the outqueue the first time after processing the ASCONF_ACK singleton chunk via SCTP_CMD_REPLY. Instead, we keep it queued up, although we set local_cork to 1. Commit 2e3216cd54b1 changed the precedence, so that as long as we get bundled, incoming chunks we try possible bundling on outgoing queue as well. Before this commit, we would just flush the output queue. Now, while ASCONF_a's ASCONF_ACK sits in the corked outq, we continue to process the same ASCONF_b chunk from the packet. As we have cached the previous ASCONF_ACK, we find it, grab it and do another SCTP_CMD_REPLY command on it. So, effectively, we rip the chunk->list pointers and requeue the same ASCONF_ACK chunk another time. Since we process ASCONF_b, it's correctly marked with end_of_packet and we enforce an uncork, and thus flush, thus crashing the kernel. Fix it by testing if the ASCONF_ACK is currently pending and if that is the case, do not requeue it. When flushing the output queue we may relink the chunk for preparing an outgoing packet, but eventually unlink it when it's copied into the skb right before transmission. Joint work with Vlad Yasevich. Fixes: 2e3216cd54b1 ("sctp: Follow security requirement of responding with 1 packet") Signed-off-by: Daniel Borkmann <dborkman@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Vlad Yasevich <vyasevich@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Diffstat (limited to 'include/net/sctp')
-rw-r--r--include/net/sctp/sctp.h5
1 files changed, 5 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/include/net/sctp/sctp.h b/include/net/sctp/sctp.h
index 9fbd856e6713..856f01cb51dd 100644
--- a/include/net/sctp/sctp.h
+++ b/include/net/sctp/sctp.h
@@ -426,6 +426,11 @@ static inline void sctp_assoc_pending_pmtu(struct sock *sk, struct sctp_associat
asoc->pmtu_pending = 0;
}
+static inline bool sctp_chunk_pending(const struct sctp_chunk *chunk)
+{
+ return !list_empty(&chunk->list);
+}
+
/* Walk through a list of TLV parameters. Don't trust the
* individual parameter lengths and instead depend on
* the chunk length to indicate when to stop. Make sure