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authorVladimir Oltean2021-08-24 20:15:01 +0300
committerDavid S. Miller2021-08-25 11:14:33 +0100
commitb0b8c67eaa5c65f8426017e78fcce12dc7d85110 (patch)
tree4cab45c20439cf61720c66dbc0340e3bad9ca604 /include
parent73ceab8326522cc06af9036c15fa2c21fdbdf4b0 (diff)
net: dsa: sja1105: drop untagged packets on the CPU and DSA ports
The sja1105 driver is a bit special in its use of VLAN headers as DSA tags. This is because in VLAN-aware mode, the VLAN headers use an actual TPID of 0x8100, which is understood even by the DSA master as an actual VLAN header. Furthermore, control packets such as PTP and STP are transmitted with no VLAN header as a DSA tag, because, depending on switch generation, there are ways to steer these control packets towards a precise egress port other than VLAN tags. Transmitting control packets as untagged means leaving a door open for traffic in general to be transmitted as untagged from the DSA master, and for it to traverse the switch and exit a random switch port according to the FDB lookup. This behavior is a bit out of line with other DSA drivers which have native support for DSA tagging. There, it is to be expected that the switch only accepts DSA-tagged packets on its CPU port, dropping everything that does not match this pattern. We perhaps rely a bit too much on the switches' hardware dropping on the CPU port, and place no other restrictions in the kernel data path to avoid that. For example, sja1105 is also a bit special in that STP/PTP packets are transmitted using "management routes" (sja1105_port_deferred_xmit): when sending a link-local packet from the CPU, we must first write a SPI message to the switch to tell it to expect a packet towards multicast MAC DA 01-80-c2-00-00-0e, and to route it towards port 3 when it gets it. This entry expires as soon as it matches a packet received by the switch, and it needs to be reinstalled for the next packet etc. All in all quite a ghetto mechanism, but it is all that the sja1105 switches offer for injecting a control packet. The driver takes a mutex for serializing control packets and making the pairs of SPI writes of a management route and its associated skb atomic, but to be honest, a mutex is only relevant as long as all parties agree to take it. With the DSA design, it is possible to open an AF_PACKET socket on the DSA master net device, and blast packets towards 01-80-c2-00-00-0e, and whatever locking the DSA switch driver might use, it all goes kaput because management routes installed by the driver will match skbs sent by the DSA master, and not skbs generated by the driver itself. So they will end up being routed on the wrong port. So through the lens of that, maybe it would make sense to avoid that from happening by doing something in the network stack, like: introduce a new bit in struct sk_buff, like xmit_from_dsa. Then, somewhere around dev_hard_start_xmit(), introduce the following check: if (netdev_uses_dsa(dev) && !skb->xmit_from_dsa) kfree_skb(skb); Ok, maybe that is a bit drastic, but that would at least prevent a bunch of problems. For example, right now, even though the majority of DSA switches drop packets without DSA tags sent by the DSA master (and therefore the majority of garbage that user space daemons like avahi and udhcpcd and friends create), it is still conceivable that an aggressive user space program can open an AF_PACKET socket and inject a spoofed DSA tag directly on the DSA master. We have no protection against that; the packet will be understood by the switch and be routed wherever user space says. Furthermore: there are some DSA switches where we even have register access over Ethernet, using DSA tags. So even user space drivers are possible in this way. This is a huge hole. However, the biggest thing that bothers me is that udhcpcd attempts to ask for an IP address on all interfaces by default, and with sja1105, it will attempt to get a valid IP address on both the DSA master as well as on sja1105 switch ports themselves. So with IP addresses in the same subnet on multiple interfaces, the routing table will be messed up and the system will be unusable for traffic until it is configured manually to not ask for an IP address on the DSA master itself. It turns out that it is possible to avoid that in the sja1105 driver, at least very superficially, by requesting the switch to drop VLAN-untagged packets on the CPU port. With the exception of control packets, all traffic originated from tag_sja1105.c is already VLAN-tagged, so only STP and PTP packets need to be converted. For that, we need to uphold the equivalence between an untagged and a pvid-tagged packet, and to remember that the CPU port of sja1105 uses a pvid of 4095. Now that we drop untagged traffic on the CPU port, non-aggressive user space applications like udhcpcd stop bothering us, and sja1105 effectively becomes just as vulnerable to the aggressive kind of user space programs as other DSA switches are (ok, users can also create 8021q uppers on top of the DSA master in the case of sja1105, but in future patches we can easily deny that, but it still doesn't change the fact that VLAN-tagged packets can still be injected over raw sockets). Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <vladimir.oltean@nxp.com> Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Diffstat (limited to 'include')
-rw-r--r--include/linux/dsa/sja1105.h2
1 files changed, 2 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/include/linux/dsa/sja1105.h b/include/linux/dsa/sja1105.h
index 6b0dc9ff92d1..8c5601f1c979 100644
--- a/include/linux/dsa/sja1105.h
+++ b/include/linux/dsa/sja1105.h
@@ -16,6 +16,8 @@
#define ETH_P_SJA1105_META 0x0008
#define ETH_P_SJA1110 0xdadc
+#define SJA1105_DEFAULT_VLAN (VLAN_N_VID - 1)
+
/* IEEE 802.3 Annex 57A: Slow Protocols PDUs (01:80:C2:xx:xx:xx) */
#define SJA1105_LINKLOCAL_FILTER_A 0x0180C2000000ull
#define SJA1105_LINKLOCAL_FILTER_A_MASK 0xFFFFFF000000ull