libbtrfsutil: fix accidentally closing fd passed to subvolume iterator

For an unprivileged subvolume iterator, append_to_search_stack() closes
cur_fd. On the first call to btrfs_util_subvolume_iterator_next(),
cur_fd is equal to the fd that was passed to
btrfs_util_create_subvolume_iterator_fd(). We're not supposed to close
that. We didn't notice it because it's more common to use it through
btrfs_util_create_subvolume_iterator(), which opens its own fd that
should be closed, and because the fd number is often reused internally
by the subvolume iterator.

pop_search_stack() already has a check to avoid closing the passed fd;
add the same check to append_to_search_stack(). Also add a regression
test.

Signed-off-by: Omar Sandoval <osandov@fb.com>
Signed-off-by: David Sterba <dsterba@suse.com>
This commit is contained in:
Omar Sandoval 2024-06-21 11:53:30 -07:00 committed by David Sterba
parent 4e95d7d028
commit e3e10fc8c6
2 changed files with 20 additions and 1 deletions

View File

@ -561,3 +561,21 @@ class TestSubvolume(BtrfsTestCase):
self._test_subvolume_iterator_race()
finally:
os.chdir(pwd)
def test_subvolume_iterator_fd_unprivileged(self):
pwd = os.getcwd()
try:
os.chdir(self.mountpoint)
btrfsutil.create_subvolume('subvol')
with drop_privs():
fd = os.open('.', os.O_RDONLY | os.O_DIRECTORY)
try:
with btrfsutil.SubvolumeIterator(fd) as it:
for _ in it:
break
finally:
# A bug in SubvolumeIterator previously made it close the
# passed in fd, so this would fail with EBADF.
os.close(fd)
finally:
os.chdir(pwd)

View File

@ -930,6 +930,7 @@ static enum btrfs_util_error append_to_search_stack(struct btrfs_util_subvolume_
return err;
}
if (iter->cur_fd != iter->fd)
close(iter->cur_fd);
iter->cur_fd = fd;
}