[PATCH v4 17/29] arm64: implement PKEYS support
Szabolcs Nagy
szabolcs.nagy at arm.com
Tue Jul 9 18:32:21 AEST 2024
The 07/08/2024 18:53, Catalin Marinas wrote:
> Hi Szabolcs,
>
> On Mon, Jun 17, 2024 at 03:51:35PM +0100, Szabolcs Nagy wrote:
> > The 06/17/2024 15:40, Florian Weimer wrote:
> > > >> A user can still set it by interacting with the register directly, but I guess
> > > >> we want something for the glibc interface..
> > > >>
> > > >> Dave, any thoughts here?
> > > >
> > > > adding Florian too, since i found an old thread of his that tried
> > > > to add separate PKEY_DISABLE_READ and PKEY_DISABLE_EXECUTE, but
> > > > it did not seem to end up upstream. (this makes more sense to me
> > > > as libc api than the weird disable access semantics)
> > >
> > > I still think it makes sense to have a full complenent of PKEY_* flags
> > > complementing the PROT_* flags, in a somewhat abstract fashion for
> > > pkey_alloc only. The internal protection mask register encoding will
> > > differ from architecture to architecture, but the abstract glibc
> > > functions pkey_set and pkey_get could use them (if we are a bit
> > > careful).
> >
> > to me it makes sense to have abstract
> >
> > PKEY_DISABLE_READ
> > PKEY_DISABLE_WRITE
> > PKEY_DISABLE_EXECUTE
> > PKEY_DISABLE_ACCESS
> >
> > where access is handled like
> >
> > if (flags&PKEY_DISABLE_ACCESS)
> > flags |= PKEY_DISABLE_READ|PKEY_DISABLE_WRITE;
> > disable_read = flags&PKEY_DISABLE_READ;
> > disable_write = flags&PKEY_DISABLE_WRITE;
> > disable_exec = flags&PKEY_DISABLE_EXECUTE;
> >
> > if there are unsupported combinations like
> > disable_read&&!disable_write then those are rejected
> > by pkey_alloc and pkey_set.
> >
> > this allows portable use of pkey apis.
> > (the flags could be target specific, but don't have to be)
>
> On powerpc, PKEY_DISABLE_ACCESS also disables execution. AFAICT, the
> kernel doesn't define a PKEY_DISABLE_READ, only PKEY_DISABLE_ACCESS so
> for powerpc there's no way to to set an execute-only permission via this
> interface. I wouldn't like to diverge from powerpc.
the exec permission should be documented in the man.
and i think it should be consistent across targets
to allow portable use.
now ppc and x86 are inconsistent, i think it's not
ideal, but ok to say that targets without disable-exec
support do whatever x86 does with PKEY_DISABLE_ACCESS
otherwise it means whatever ppc does.
>
> However, does it matter much? That's only for the initial setup, the
> user can then change the permissions directly via the sysreg. So maybe
> we don't need all those combinations upfront. A PKEY_DISABLE_EXECUTE
> together with the full PKEY_DISABLE_ACCESS would probably suffice.
this is ok.
a bit awkward in userspace when the register is directly
set to e.g write-only and pkey_get has to return something,
but we can handle settings outside of valid PKEY_* macros
as unspec, users who want that would use their own register
set/get code.
i would have designed the permission to use either existing
PROT_* flags or say that it is architectural and written to
the register directly and let the libc wrapper deal with
portable api, i guess it's too late now.
(the signal handling behaviour should have a control and it
is possible to fix e.g. via pkey_alloc flags, but that may
not be the best solution and this can be done later.)
>
> Give that on x86 the PKEY_ACCESS_MASK will have to stay as
> PKEY_DISABLE_ACCESS|PKEY_DISABLE_WRITE, we'll probably do the same as
> powerpc and define an arm64 specific PKEY_DISABLE_EXECUTE with the
> corresponding PKEY_ACCESS_MASK including it. We can generalise the masks
> with some ARCH_HAS_PKEY_DISABLE_EXECUTE but it's probably more hassle
> than just defining the arm64 PKEY_DISABLE_EXECUTE.
>
> I assume you'd like PKEY_DISABLE_EXECUTE to be part of this series,
> otherwise changing PKEY_ACCESS_MASK later will cause potential ABI
> issues.
yes i think we should figure this out in the initial support.
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