[PATCH v2 20/31] arm64: User access library function

Arnd Bergmann arnd at arndb.de
Wed Aug 15 10:49:54 EDT 2012


On Tuesday 14 August 2012, Catalin Marinas wrote:

> +/*
> + * Single-value transfer routines.  They automatically use the right
> + * size if we just have the right pointer type.  Note that the functions
> + * which read from user space (*get_*) need to take care not to leak
> + * kernel data even if the calling code is buggy and fails to check
> + * the return value.  This means zeroing out the destination variable
> + * or buffer on error.  Normally this is done out of line by the
> + * fixup code, but there are a few places where it intrudes on the
> + * main code path.  When we only write to user space, there is no
> + * problem.
> + */
> +extern long __get_user_1(void *);
> +extern long __get_user_2(void *);
> +extern long __get_user_4(void *);
> +extern long __get_user_8(void *);
> +
> +#define __get_user_x(__r2,__p,__e,__s,__i...)				\
> +	   asm volatile(						\
> +		__asmeq("%0", "x0") __asmeq("%1", "x2")			\
> +		"bl	__get_user_" #__s				\
> +		: "=&r" (__e), "=r" (__r2)				\
> +		: "0" (__p)						\
> +		: __i, "cc")
> +
> +#define get_user(x,p)							\
> +	({								\
> +		register const typeof(*(p)) __user *__p asm("x0") = (p);\
> +		register unsigned long __r2 asm("x2");			\
> +		register long __e asm("x0");				\
> +		switch (sizeof(*(__p))) {				\
> +		case 1:							\
> +			__get_user_x(__r2, __p, __e, 1, "x30");		\
> +			break;						\
> +		case 2:							\
> +			__get_user_x(__r2, __p, __e, 2, "x3", "x30");	\
> +			break;						\
> +		case 4:							\
> +			__get_user_x(__r2, __p, __e, 4, "x30");		\
> +			break;						\
> +		case 8:							\
> +			__get_user_x(__r2, __p, __e, 8, "x30");		\
> +			break;						\
> +		default: __e = __get_user_bad(); break;			\
> +		}							\
> +		x = (typeof(*(p))) __r2;				\
> +		__e;							\
> +	})

It's fairly unusual to have out of line get_user/put_user functions.
What is the reason for this, other than copying from ARM?

> +
> +__get_user_bad:
> +	mov	x2, #0
> +	mov	x0, #-EFAULT
> +	ret
> +ENDPROC(__get_user_bad)

> +__put_user_bad:
> +	mov	x0, #-EFAULT
> +	ret
> +ENDPROC(__put_user_bad)
> +

The purpose of these symbols is to provoke a link error when you
pass the wrong data into get_user/put_user. Actually defining them
completely breaks this logic, so you should remove these!

	Arnd



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