Re: in_compat_syscall() on x86
From: Eric W. Biederman
Date: Mon Jan 04 2021 - 15:42:53 EST
Al Viro <viro@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes:
> On Mon, Jan 04, 2021 at 12:16:56PM +0000, David Laight wrote:
>> On x86 in_compat_syscall() is defined as:
>> in_ia32_syscall() || in_x32_syscall()
>>
>> Now in_ia32_syscall() is a simple check of the TS_COMPAT flag.
>> However in_x32_syscall() is a horrid beast that has to indirect
>> through to the original %eax value (ie the syscall number) and
>> check for a bit there.
>>
>> So on a kernel with x32 support (probably most distro kernels)
>> the in_compat_syscall() check is rather more expensive than
>> one might expect.
I suggest you check the distro kernels. I suspect they don't compile in
support for x32. As far as I can tell x32 is an undead beast of a
subarchitecture that just enough people use that it can't be removed,
but few enough people use it likely has a few lurking scary bugs.
>> It would be muck better if both checks could be done together.
>> I think this would require the syscall entry code to set a
>> value in both the 64bit and x32 entry paths.
>> (Can a process make both 64bit and x32 system calls?)
>
> Yes, it bloody well can.
>
> And I see no benefit in pushing that logics into syscall entry,
> since anything that calls in_compat_syscall() more than once
> per syscall execution is doing the wrong thing. Moreover,
> in quite a few cases we don't call the sucker at all, and for
> all of those pushing that crap into syscall entry logics is
> pure loss.
The x32 system calls have their own system call table and it would be
trivial to set a flag like TS_COMPAT when looking up a system call from
that table. I expect such a change would be purely in the noise.
> What's the point, really?
Before we came up with the current games with __copy_siginfo_to_user
and x32_copy_siginfo_to_user I was wondering if we should make such
a change. The delivery of compat signal frames and core dumps which
do not go through the system call entry path could almost benefit from
a flag that could be set/tested when on those paths.
The fact that only SIGCHLD (which can not trigger a coredump) is
different saves the coredump code from needing such a test.
The fact that the signal frame code is simple enough it can directly
call x32_copy_siginfo_to_user or __copy_siginfo_to_user saves us there.
So I don't think we have any cases where we actually need a flag that
is independent of the system call but we have come very close.
For people who want to optimize I suggest tracking down the handful of
users of x32 and see if x32 can be made to just go away.
Eric