Re: [PATCH] alpha: Fix personality flag propagation across an exec
From: Arnd Bergmann
Date: Thu Jan 09 2025 - 03:01:49 EST
On Fri, Jan 3, 2025, at 15:01, John Paul Adrian Glaubitz wrote:
>
> #define SET_PERSONALITY(EX) \
> - set_personality(((EX).e_flags & EF_ALPHA_32BIT) \
> - ? PER_LINUX_32BIT : PER_LINUX)
> + set_personality((((EX).e_flags & EF_ALPHA_32BIT) \
> + ? PER_LINUX_32BIT : PER_LINUX) | (current->personality & (~PER_MASK)))
This looks wrong to me: since ADDR_LIMIT_32BIT is not part of
PER_MASK, executing a regular binary from a taso binary no longer
reverts back to the entire 64-bit address space.
It seems that the behavior on most other architectures changed in 2012
commit 16f3e95b3209 ("cross-arch: don't corrupt personality flags upon
exec()").
At the time, the same bug existed on mips, parisc and tile, but those
got fixed quickly.
There are two related bits I don't quite understand:
- Do we still care about EF_ALPHA_32BIT? I see that it gets set by
"alpha-linux-ld.bfd --taso", but could not find any documentation
on what that flag is actually good for. On all other architectures,
the address space limit gets enforced through a per-thread setting
like TIF_32BIT, not through the personality that gets inherited
by the child processes.
- all architectures other than x86 mask out the lower byte. Why
not that one?
Arnd