[PATCH v2 00/10] uaccess: better might_sleep/might_fault behavior
Arnd Bergmann
arnd at arndb.de
Thu May 23 00:04:48 EST 2013
On Wednesday 22 May 2013, Russell King - ARM Linux wrote:
> On Wed, May 22, 2013 at 11:25:36AM +0200, Arnd Bergmann wrote:
> > Given the most commonly used functions and a couple of architectures
> > I'm familiar with, these are the ones that currently call might_fault()
> >
> > x86-32 x86-64 arm arm64 powerpc s390 generic
> > copy_to_user - x - - - x x
> > copy_from_user - x - - - x x
> > put_user x x x x x x x
> > get_user x x x x x x x
> > __copy_to_user x x - - x - -
> > __copy_from_user x x - - x - -
> > __put_user - - x - x - -
> > __get_user - - x - x - -
> >
> > WTF?
>
> I think your table is rather screwed - especially on ARM. Tell me -
> how can __copy_to_user() use might_fault() but copy_to_user() not when
> copy_to_user() is implemented using __copy_to_user() ? Same for
> copy_from_user() but the reverse argument - there's nothing special
> in our copy_from_user() which would make it do might_fault() when
> __copy_from_user() wouldn't.
I think something went wrong with formatting of the tabstobs in
the table. I've tried to correct it above to the same version I
see on the mailing list.
> The correct position for ARM is: our (__)?(pu|ge)t_user all use
> might_fault(), but (__)?copy_(to|from)_user do not. Neither does
> (__)?clear_user. We might want to fix those to use might_fault().
Yes, that sounds like a good idea, especially since they are all
implemented out-of-line.
For __get_user()/__put_user(), I would probably do the reverse and make
them not call might_fault() though, like we do on most other architectures:
Look at the object code produced for setup_sigframe for instance, it calls
might_fault() around 25 times where one should really be enough. Using
__put_user() instead of put_user() is normally an indication that the
author of that function has made performance considerations and move the
(trivial) access_ok() call out, but now we add a more expensive
call instead.
Arnd
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