
It allocates the extended area for outbound streams only on sendmsg calls, if they are not yet allocated. When using the priority stream scheduler, this initialization may imply into a subsequent allocation, which may fail. In this case, it was aborting the stream scheduler initialization but leaving the ->ext pointer (allocated) in there, thus in a partially initialized state. On a subsequent call to sendmsg, it would notice the ->ext pointer in there, and trip on uninitialized stuff when trying to schedule the data chunk. The fix is undo the ->ext initialization if the stream scheduler initialization fails and avoid the partially initialized state. Although syzkaller bisected this to commit4ff40b8626
("sctp: set chunk transport correctly when it's a new asoc"), this bug was actually introduced on the commit I marked below. Reported-by: syzbot+c1a380d42b190ad1e559@syzkaller.appspotmail.com Fixes:5bbbbe32a4
("sctp: introduce stream scheduler foundations") Tested-by: Xin Long <lucien.xin@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Marcelo Ricardo Leitner <marcelo.leitner@gmail.com> Acked-by: Neil Horman <nhorman@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
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