Re: MIPS: bug: gettimeofday syscall broken on CI20 board

From: H. Nikolaus Schaller
Date: Thu Nov 28 2019 - 08:48:59 EST



> Am 28.11.2019 um 14:29 schrieb Maarten ter Huurne <maarten@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>:
>
> On Thursday, 28 November 2019 13:33:17 CET H. Nikolaus Schaller wrote:
>> Hi Vincenzo,
>>
>>> Am 28.11.2019 um 13:21 schrieb Vincenzo Frascino
>>> <vincenzo.frascino@xxxxxxx>:>
>>> [...]
>>> The the lib that provides the gettimeofday() changes accordingly
>>> with vdso_data. 5.4 and 4.19 have 2 different vdso libraries as
>>> well.
>>
>> Yes, that is what I have assumed what happens. How do these libs go
>> into an existing and working root-file-system with Debian Stretch?
>
> I'm a novice when it comes to vDSO, so someone please correct me if I'm
> wrong.
>
> From what I read vDSO is a library in the sense that it exports ELF
> symbols that applications and other libraries (libc in particular) can
> use, but it is not a file on disk.

Ah, ok. This would mean that the libc providing the gettimeofday()
should be able to find out a modified changed vdso_data format by
inspecting these ELF symbols.

>
> As such, which rootfs you use shouldn't matter, since the vDSO is not in
> the rootfs. Instead, it is contained in the kernel image. Searching for
> "linux-vdso.so.1" on packages.debian.org indeed returns no hits.
>
> There is a check in arch/mips/vdso/Makefile that disables vDSO on MIPS
> when building the kernel with binutils < 2.25. I don't know if that is
> in any way related to this issue.

What still does not fit into the picture is the errno = 1 i.e. EPERM.
Maybe I have to study the libc code that tries to read the ELF symbols
you have mentioned. It may fail for unknown reasons.

BR and thanks,
Nikolaus