When running a RISC-V test kernel under QEMU, we need an OpenSBI BIOS file. In the original QEMU support patchset, kunit_tool would optionally download this file from GitHub if it didn't exist, using wget.
These days, it can usually be found in the distro's qemu-system-riscv package, and is located in /usr/share/qemu on all the distros I tried (Debian, Arch, OpenSUSE). Use this file, and thereby don't do any downloading in kunit_tool.
In addition, we used to shell out to whatever 'wget' was in the path, which could have potentially been used to trick the developer into running another binary. By not using wget at all, we nicely sidestep this issue.
Cc: Xu Panda xu.panda@zte.com.cn Fixes: 87c9c1631788 ("kunit: tool: add support for QEMU") Reported-by: Zeal Robot zealci@zte.com.cn Signed-off-by: David Gow davidgow@google.com ---
This is a replacement for "kunit: tool: use absolute path for wget": https://lore.kernel.org/linux-kselftest/20220922083610.235936-1-xu.panda@zte...
Instead of just changing the path to wget, it removes the download option completely and grabs the opensbi-riscv64-generic-fw_dynamic.bin from the /usr/share/qemu directory, where the distro package manager should have put it.
I _think_ this should be okay to treat as a fix: we were always grabbing this from the QEMU GitHub repository, so it should be widely available. And if you want to treat the wget use as a security issue, getting rid of it everywhere would be nice.
Thoughts?
-- David
--- tools/testing/kunit/qemu_configs/riscv.py | 18 +++++++----------- 1 file changed, 7 insertions(+), 11 deletions(-)
diff --git a/tools/testing/kunit/qemu_configs/riscv.py b/tools/testing/kunit/qemu_configs/riscv.py index 6207be146d26..12a1d525978a 100644 --- a/tools/testing/kunit/qemu_configs/riscv.py +++ b/tools/testing/kunit/qemu_configs/riscv.py @@ -3,17 +3,13 @@ import os import os.path import sys
-GITHUB_OPENSBI_URL = 'https://github.com/qemu/qemu/raw/master/pc-bios/opensbi-riscv64-generic-fw_d...' -OPENSBI_FILE = os.path.basename(GITHUB_OPENSBI_URL) +OPENSBI_FILE = 'opensbi-riscv64-generic-fw_dynamic.bin' +OPENSBI_PATH = '/usr/share/qemu/' + OPENSBI_FILE
-if not os.path.isfile(OPENSBI_FILE): - print('\n\nOpenSBI file is not in the current working directory.\n' - 'Would you like me to download it for you from:\n' + GITHUB_OPENSBI_URL + ' ?\n') - response = input('yes/[no]: ') - if response.strip() == 'yes': - os.system('wget ' + GITHUB_OPENSBI_URL) - else: - sys.exit() +if not os.path.isfile(OPENSBI_PATH): + print('\n\nOpenSBI bios was not found in "' + OPENSBI_PATH + '".\n' + 'Please ensure that qemu-system-riscv is installed, or edit the path in "qemu_configs/riscv.py"\n') + sys.exit()
QEMU_ARCH = QemuArchParams(linux_arch='riscv', kconfig=''' @@ -29,4 +25,4 @@ CONFIG_SERIAL_EARLYCON_RISCV_SBI=y''', extra_qemu_params=[ '-machine', 'virt', '-cpu', 'rv64', - '-bios', 'opensbi-riscv64-generic-fw_dynamic.bin']) + '-bios', OPENSBI_PATH])
On Thu, Sep 22, 2022 at 10:01 PM David Gow davidgow@google.com wrote:
When running a RISC-V test kernel under QEMU, we need an OpenSBI BIOS file. In the original QEMU support patchset, kunit_tool would optionally download this file from GitHub if it didn't exist, using wget.
These days, it can usually be found in the distro's qemu-system-riscv package, and is located in /usr/share/qemu on all the distros I tried
Note: I actually had the BIOS file, but didn't have the qemu-system-riscv64 binary.
(Debian, Arch, OpenSUSE). Use this file, and thereby don't do any downloading in kunit_tool.
In addition, we used to shell out to whatever 'wget' was in the path, which could have potentially been used to trick the developer into running another binary. By not using wget at all, we nicely sidestep this issue.
Cc: Xu Panda xu.panda@zte.com.cn Fixes: 87c9c1631788 ("kunit: tool: add support for QEMU") Reported-by: Zeal Robot zealci@zte.com.cn Signed-off-by: David Gow davidgow@google.com
Tested-by: Daniel Latypov dlatypov@google.com
This is a replacement for "kunit: tool: use absolute path for wget": https://lore.kernel.org/linux-kselftest/20220922083610.235936-1-xu.panda@zte...
Instead of just changing the path to wget, it removes the download option completely and grabs the opensbi-riscv64-generic-fw_dynamic.bin from the /usr/share/qemu directory, where the distro package manager should have put it.
I _think_ this should be okay to treat as a fix: we were always grabbing this from the QEMU GitHub repository, so it should be widely available. And if you want to treat the wget use as a security issue, getting rid of it everywhere would be nice.
Thoughts?
-- David
tools/testing/kunit/qemu_configs/riscv.py | 18 +++++++----------- 1 file changed, 7 insertions(+), 11 deletions(-)
diff --git a/tools/testing/kunit/qemu_configs/riscv.py b/tools/testing/kunit/qemu_configs/riscv.py index 6207be146d26..12a1d525978a 100644 --- a/tools/testing/kunit/qemu_configs/riscv.py +++ b/tools/testing/kunit/qemu_configs/riscv.py @@ -3,17 +3,13 @@ import os import os.path import sys
-GITHUB_OPENSBI_URL = 'https://github.com/qemu/qemu/raw/master/pc-bios/opensbi-riscv64-generic-fw_d...' -OPENSBI_FILE = os.path.basename(GITHUB_OPENSBI_URL) +OPENSBI_FILE = 'opensbi-riscv64-generic-fw_dynamic.bin' +OPENSBI_PATH = '/usr/share/qemu/' + OPENSBI_FILE
-if not os.path.isfile(OPENSBI_FILE):
print('\n\nOpenSBI file is not in the current working directory.\n'
'Would you like me to download it for you from:\n' + GITHUB_OPENSBI_URL + ' ?\n')
response = input('yes/[no]: ')
if response.strip() == 'yes':
os.system('wget ' + GITHUB_OPENSBI_URL)
else:
sys.exit()
+if not os.path.isfile(OPENSBI_PATH):
print('\n\nOpenSBI bios was not found in "' + OPENSBI_PATH + '".\n'
'Please ensure that qemu-system-riscv is installed, or edit the path in "qemu_configs/riscv.py"\n')
sys.exit()
QEMU_ARCH = QemuArchParams(linux_arch='riscv', kconfig=''' @@ -29,4 +25,4 @@ CONFIG_SERIAL_EARLYCON_RISCV_SBI=y''', extra_qemu_params=[ '-machine', 'virt', '-cpu', 'rv64',
'-bios', 'opensbi-riscv64-generic-fw_dynamic.bin'])
'-bios', OPENSBI_PATH])
Note: OPENSBI_FILE also works for me (i.e. the old behavior). But I don't care enough to ask that we change what this patch does.
My understanding is that qemu will automatically look in all of these directories $ qemu-system-riscv64 -L help /usr/share/qemu /usr/share/seabios /usr/lib/ipxe/qemu
The first one (the one we're using here) is the only one that has the file for me, so going with this LGTM.
The alternative is to drop the check entirely and just let QEMU figure out if the file is missing or not, but I think this does give a substantially nicer error message, so I think this is reasonable to keep.
Daniel
On Fri, Sep 23, 2022 at 1:01 AM 'David Gow' via KUnit Development kunit-dev@googlegroups.com wrote:
When running a RISC-V test kernel under QEMU, we need an OpenSBI BIOS file. In the original QEMU support patchset, kunit_tool would optionally download this file from GitHub if it didn't exist, using wget.
These days, it can usually be found in the distro's qemu-system-riscv package, and is located in /usr/share/qemu on all the distros I tried (Debian, Arch, OpenSUSE). Use this file, and thereby don't do any downloading in kunit_tool.
In addition, we used to shell out to whatever 'wget' was in the path, which could have potentially been used to trick the developer into running another binary. By not using wget at all, we nicely sidestep this issue.
Cc: Xu Panda xu.panda@zte.com.cn Fixes: 87c9c1631788 ("kunit: tool: add support for QEMU") Reported-by: Zeal Robot zealci@zte.com.cn Signed-off-by: David Gow davidgow@google.com
Reviewed-by: Brendan Higgins brendanhiggins@google.com
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