From: Rasmus Villemoes linux@rasmusvillemoes.dk
[ Upstream commit 148587a59f6b85831695e0497d9dd1af5f0495af ]
Qiang Zhao points out that these offsets get written to 16-bit registers, and there are some QE platforms with more than 64K muram. So it is possible that qe_muram_alloc() gives us an allocation that can't actually be used by the hardware, so detect and reject that.
Reported-by: Qiang Zhao qiang.zhao@nxp.com Reviewed-by: Timur Tabi timur@kernel.org Signed-off-by: Rasmus Villemoes linux@rasmusvillemoes.dk Acked-by: David S. Miller davem@davemloft.net Signed-off-by: Li Yang leoyang.li@nxp.com Signed-off-by: Sasha Levin sashal@kernel.org --- drivers/net/wan/fsl_ucc_hdlc.c | 5 +++++ 1 file changed, 5 insertions(+)
diff --git a/drivers/net/wan/fsl_ucc_hdlc.c b/drivers/net/wan/fsl_ucc_hdlc.c index af85a1b3135e2..87bf05a81db50 100644 --- a/drivers/net/wan/fsl_ucc_hdlc.c +++ b/drivers/net/wan/fsl_ucc_hdlc.c @@ -209,6 +209,11 @@ static int uhdlc_init(struct ucc_hdlc_private *priv) ret = -ENOMEM; goto free_riptr; } + if (riptr != (u16)riptr || tiptr != (u16)tiptr) { + dev_err(priv->dev, "MURAM allocation out of addressable range\n"); + ret = -ENOMEM; + goto free_tiptr; + }
/* Set RIPTR, TIPTR */ iowrite16be(riptr, &priv->ucc_pram->riptr);