Re: [RFC] prevent "dd if=/dev/mem" crash

From: Andrew Morton
Date: Fri Oct 17 2003 - 21:02:22 EST


David Mosberger <davidm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> >>>>> On Fri, 17 Oct 2003 17:49:55 -0700, Andrew Morton <akpm@xxxxxxxx> said:
>
> Andrew> We _want_ to be able to read mmio ranges via /dev/mem, don't
> Andrew> we? I guess it has never come up because everyone uses
> Andrew> kmem.
>
> I just don't see how making a "dd if=/dev/mem" safe and allowing
> access to arbitrary physical memory can go to together. Given that
> /dev/mem _is_ being used for accessing mmio space, is it really worth
> bothering trying to make such a "dd" safe?

Possibly not. I thought that simply oopsing the kernel was a bit rude, and
fixing ia32 to not do that was relatively simple.

We should, within reason, handle it as gracefully as possible, yes?

> Andrew> If the hardware doesn't give the system programmer a choice
> Andrew> then the hardware is poorly designed, surely?
>
> Emh, we're talking about _physical_ memory accesses here. AFAIK,
> failures on physical memory accesses are never signaled with
> synchronous faults (not on any reasonably modern high performance
> architecture, at least). Loads probably _could_ be signalled
> synchronously, but consider stores: would you really want to wait with
> retiring a store until it has made it all the way to some slow ISA
> device? I think not (IN/OUT do that). No, modern CPUs check the
> TLB/page-table and if that check passes, they'll _assume_ the memory
> access will complete without errors. If it doesn't, they signal an
> asynchronous failure (e.g., via an MCA).

If the not-present memory is marked cacheable and/or writeback then yes,
but that would be an odd thing to do, wouldn't it?

It the memory is mapped noncacheable then a synchronous error on a read
sounds reasonable. A synchronous error on a write would assume that the
noncacheability affects the write buffers and IIRC that usually doesn't
happen(?).

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