nbd: Don't mishandle unaligned client requests

The NBD protocol does not (yet) force any alignment constraints
on clients.  Even though qemu NBD clients always send requests
that are aligned to 512 bytes, we must be prepared for non-qemu
clients that don't care about alignment (even if it means they
are less efficient).  Our use of blk_read() and blk_write() was
silently operating on the wrong file offsets when the client
made an unaligned request, corrupting the client's data (but
as the client already has control over the file we are serving,
I don't think it is a security hole, per se, just a data
corruption bug).

Note that in the case of NBD_CMD_READ, an unaligned length could
cause us to return up to 511 bytes of uninitialized trailing
garbage from blk_try_blockalign() - hopefully nothing sensitive
from the heap's prior usage is ever leaked in that manner.

Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Kevin Wolf <kwolf@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Fam Zheng <famz@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Kevin Wolf <kwolf@redhat.com>
Message-id: 1461249750-31928-1-git-send-email-eblake@redhat.com
Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
1 file changed
tree: 39fa13b93ee515257d1115af97ab5678ed065fd8
  1. audio/
  2. backends/
  3. block/
  4. bsd-user/
  5. contrib/
  6. crypto/
  7. default-configs/
  8. disas/
  9. docs/
  10. fpu/
  11. fsdev/
  12. gdb-xml/
  13. hw/
  14. include/
  15. io/
  16. libdecnumber/
  17. linux-headers/
  18. linux-user/
  19. migration/
  20. nbd/
  21. net/
  22. pc-bios/
  23. po/
  24. qapi/
  25. qga/
  26. qobject/
  27. qom/
  28. replay/
  29. roms/
  30. scripts/
  31. slirp/
  32. stubs/
  33. target-alpha/
  34. target-arm/
  35. target-cris/
  36. target-i386/
  37. target-lm32/
  38. target-m68k/
  39. target-microblaze/
  40. target-mips/
  41. target-moxie/
  42. target-openrisc/
  43. target-ppc/
  44. target-s390x/
  45. target-sh4/
  46. target-sparc/
  47. target-tilegx/
  48. target-tricore/
  49. target-unicore32/
  50. target-xtensa/
  51. tcg/
  52. tests/
  53. trace/
  54. ui/
  55. util/
  56. .dir-locals.el
  57. .exrc
  58. .gitignore
  59. .gitmodules
  60. .mailmap
  61. .travis.yml
  62. accel.c
  63. aio-posix.c
  64. aio-win32.c
  65. arch_init.c
  66. async.c
  67. balloon.c
  68. block.c
  69. blockdev-nbd.c
  70. blockdev.c
  71. blockjob.c
  72. bootdevice.c
  73. bt-host.c
  74. bt-vhci.c
  75. Changelog
  76. CODING_STYLE
  77. configure
  78. COPYING
  79. COPYING.LIB
  80. cpu-exec-common.c
  81. cpu-exec.c
  82. cpus.c
  83. cputlb.c
  84. device-hotplug.c
  85. device_tree.c
  86. disas.c
  87. dma-helpers.c
  88. dump.c
  89. exec.c
  90. gdbstub.c
  91. HACKING
  92. hmp-commands-info.hx
  93. hmp-commands.hx
  94. hmp.c
  95. hmp.h
  96. iohandler.c
  97. ioport.c
  98. iothread.c
  99. kvm-all.c
  100. kvm-stub.c
  101. LICENSE
  102. main-loop.c
  103. MAINTAINERS
  104. Makefile
  105. Makefile.objs
  106. Makefile.target
  107. memory.c
  108. memory_mapping.c
  109. module-common.c
  110. monitor.c
  111. numa.c
  112. os-posix.c
  113. os-win32.c
  114. page_cache.c
  115. qapi-schema.json
  116. qdev-monitor.c
  117. qdict-test-data.txt
  118. qemu-bridge-helper.c
  119. qemu-char.c
  120. qemu-doc.texi
  121. qemu-ga.texi
  122. qemu-img-cmds.hx
  123. qemu-img.c
  124. qemu-img.texi
  125. qemu-io-cmds.c
  126. qemu-io.c
  127. qemu-nbd.c
  128. qemu-nbd.texi
  129. qemu-options-wrapper.h
  130. qemu-options.h
  131. qemu-options.hx
  132. qemu-seccomp.c
  133. qemu-tech.texi
  134. qemu-timer.c
  135. qemu.nsi
  136. qemu.sasl
  137. qjson.c
  138. qmp-commands.hx
  139. qmp.c
  140. qtest.c
  141. README
  142. rules.mak
  143. softmmu_template.h
  144. spice-qemu-char.c
  145. tcg-runtime.c
  146. tci.c
  147. thread-pool.c
  148. thunk.c
  149. tpm.c
  150. trace-events
  151. translate-all.c
  152. translate-all.h
  153. translate-common.c
  154. user-exec.c
  155. VERSION
  156. version.rc
  157. vl.c
  158. xen-common-stub.c
  159. xen-common.c
  160. xen-hvm-stub.c
  161. xen-hvm.c
  162. xen-mapcache.c