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The gadgetfs driver (drivers/usb/gadget/legacy/inode.c) was written before the UDC and composite frameworks were adopted; it is a legacy driver. As such, it expects that once bound to a UDC controller, it will not be unbound until it unregisters itself. However, the UDC framework does unbind function drivers while they are still registered. When this happens, it can cause the gadgetfs driver to misbehave or crash. For example, userspace can cause a crash by opening the device file and doing an ioctl call before setting up a configuration (found by Andrey Konovalov using the syzkaller fuzzer). This patch adds checks and synchronization to prevent these bad behaviors. It adds a udc_usage counter that the driver increments at times when it is using a gadget interface without holding the private spinlock. The unbind routine waits for this counter to go to 0 before returning, thereby ensuring that the UDC is no longer in use. The patch also adds a check in the dev_ioctl() routine to make sure the driver is bound to a UDC before dereferencing the gadget pointer, and it makes destroy_ep_files() synchronize with the endpoint I/O routines, to prevent the user from accessing an endpoint data structure after it has been removed. Signed-off-by: Alan Stern <stern@rowland.harvard.edu> Reported-by: Andrey Konovalov <andreyknvl@google.com> Tested-by: Andrey Konovalov <andreyknvl@google.com> CC: <stable@vger.kernel.org> Acked-by: Felipe Balbi <felipe.balbi@linux.intel.com> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
To understand all the Linux-USB framework, you'll use these resources: * This source code. This is necessarily an evolving work, and includes kerneldoc that should help you get a current overview. ("make pdfdocs", and then look at "usb.pdf" for host side and "gadget.pdf" for peripheral side.) Also, Documentation/usb has more information. * The USB 2.0 specification (from www.usb.org), with supplements such as those for USB OTG and the various device classes. The USB specification has a good overview chapter, and USB peripherals conform to the widely known "Chapter 9". * Chip specifications for USB controllers. Examples include host controllers (on PCs, servers, and more); peripheral controllers (in devices with Linux firmware, like printers or cell phones); and hard-wired peripherals like Ethernet adapters. * Specifications for other protocols implemented by USB peripheral functions. Some are vendor-specific; others are vendor-neutral but just standardized outside of the www.usb.org team. Here is a list of what each subdirectory here is, and what is contained in them. core/ - This is for the core USB host code, including the usbfs files and the hub class driver ("hub_wq"). host/ - This is for USB host controller drivers. This includes UHCI, OHCI, EHCI, and others that might be used with more specialized "embedded" systems. gadget/ - This is for USB peripheral controller drivers and the various gadget drivers which talk to them. Individual USB driver directories. A new driver should be added to the first subdirectory in the list below that it fits into. image/ - This is for still image drivers, like scanners or digital cameras. ../input/ - This is for any driver that uses the input subsystem, like keyboard, mice, touchscreens, tablets, etc. ../media/ - This is for multimedia drivers, like video cameras, radios, and any other drivers that talk to the v4l subsystem. ../net/ - This is for network drivers. serial/ - This is for USB to serial drivers. storage/ - This is for USB mass-storage drivers. class/ - This is for all USB device drivers that do not fit into any of the above categories, and work for a range of USB Class specified devices. misc/ - This is for all USB device drivers that do not fit into any of the above categories.