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Message-ID: <20120523185610.GB6908@n2100.arm.linux.org.uk>
Date: Wed, 23 May 2012 19:56:10 +0100
From: Russell King - ARM Linux <linux@....linux.org.uk>
To: Will Drewry <wad@...omium.org>
Cc: wade_farnsworth@...tor.com, stevenrwalter@...il.com,
will.deacon@....com, Alexander Viro <viro@...iv.linux.org.uk>,
Olof Johansson <olof@...om.net>,
LKML <linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org>
Subject: Re: New ARM asm/syscall.h incompatible? (commit
bf2c9f9866928df60157bc4f1ab39f93a32c754e)
On Wed, May 23, 2012 at 11:01:50AM -0500, Will Drewry wrote:
> Hi Wade and Steven,
>
> I don't believe the syscall_get_arguments/syscall_set_arguments
> implementation that landed in 3.4 is correct or safe. I didn't see it
> get pulled in - sorry for not mailing sooner! :(
>
> The current implementation allows for _7_ arguments and allows the 0th
> index to be the ARM_ORIG_r0 instead of starting with ARM_r0 == 0. In
> the global description of syscall_*_arguments it says:
>
> * It's only valid to call this when @task is stopped for tracing on
> * entry to a system call, due to %TIF_SYSCALL_TRACE or %TIF_SYSCALL_AUDIT.
> * It's invalid to call this with @i + @n > 6; we only support system calls
> * taking up to 6 arguments.
>
> This means that the current implementation is broken when matching
> system call arguments for ftrace (unless there is an arch specific
> hack in there) and it breaks internal kernel API for any other
> consumers without arch knowledge (like seccomp mode=2). Is there a
> reason to expose ARM_ORIG_r0 this way? Am I misreading?
>
> My understanding of the arch register usage at syscall time is something like:
> - ORIG_r0 gets the syscall number
> - r0 becomes the first system call argument
> - system call proceeds
> - on return, r0 is the return value
Wrong. You're far too used to the x86 way of doing things.
For ARM, on entry to a system call, r0 _and_ orig_r0 are the first
syscall argument. For other exceptions, orig_r0 will be -1 (but you
can't rely upon that meaning anything, because a syscall can take -1
as the first argument.)
On exit from a system call, r0 will be the return value, and orig_r0
will _still_ be the first system call argument.
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