Re: [PATCH v3 18/26] arm64: Introduce asm/vdso/processor.h
From: Catalin Marinas <catalin.marinas@arm.com>
Date: 2020-03-16 14:43:55
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On Mon, Mar 16, 2020 at 01:35:17PM +0000, Vincenzo Frascino wrote:
On 3/16/20 11:22 AM, Catalin Marinas wrote:quoted
As I said above, I don't see how removing 'if ((u32)ts >= (1UL << 32))' makes any difference. This check was likely removed by the compiler already. Also, userspace doesn't have a trivial way to figure out TASK_SIZE and I can't see anything that tests this in the vdsotest (though I haven't spent that much time looking). If it's hard-coded, note that arm32 TASK_SIZE is different from TASK_SIZE_32 on arm64. Can you tell what actually is failing in vdsotest if you remove the TASK_SIZE_32 checks in the arm64 compat vdso?To me does not seem optimized out. Which version of the compiler are you using?
I misread the #ifdef'ery in asm/processor.h. So with 4K pages,
TASK_SIZE_32 is (1UL<<32)-PAGE_SIZE. However, with 64K pages _and_
CONFIG_KUSER_HELPERS, TASK_SIZE_32 is 1UL<<32 and the check is removed
by the compiler.
With the 4K build, __vdso_clock_gettime starts as:
00000194 <__vdso_clock_gettime>:
194: f511 5f80 cmn.w r1, #4096 ; 0x1000
198: d214 bcs.n 1c4 <__vdso_clock_gettime+0x30>
19a: b5b0 push {r4, r5, r7, lr}
...
1c4: f06f 000d mvn.w r0, #13
1c8: 4770 bx lr
With 64K pages:
00000194 <__vdso_clock_gettime>:
194: b5b0 push {r4, r5, r7, lr}
...
1be: bdb0 pop {r4, r5, r7, pc}
I haven't tried but it's likely that the vdsotest fails with 64K pages
and compat enabled (requires EXPERT).
Please find below the list of errors for clock_gettime (similar for the other): passing UINTPTR_MAX to clock_gettime (VDSO): terminated by unexpected signal 7 clock-gettime-monotonic/abi: 1 failures/inconsistencies encountered
Ah, so it uses UINTPTR_MAX in the test. Fair enough but I don't think the arm64 check is entirely useful. On arm32, the check was meant to return -EFAULT for addresses beyond TASK_SIZE that may enter into the kernel or module space. On arm64 compat, the kernel space is well above the reach of the 32-bit code. If you want to preserve some compatibility for this specific test, what about checking for wrapping around 0, I think it would make more sense. Something like: if ((u32)ts > UINTPTR_MAX - sizeof(*ts) + 1) -- Catalin _______________________________________________ linux-arm-kernel mailing list linux-arm-kernel@lists.infradead.org http://lists.infradead.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-arm-kernel