[PATCH v6] ARM: Implement SLS mitigation
Linus Walleij
linus.walleij at linaro.org
Sat Mar 6 12:27:54 GMT 2021
On Fri, Mar 5, 2021 at 10:53 AM Will Deacon <will at kernel.org> wrote:
> I still don't see why SLS is worth a compiler mitigation which will affect
> all CPUs that run the kernel binary, but Spectre-v1 is not. In other words,
> the big thing missing from this is a justification as to why SLS is a
> problem worth working around for general C code.
I might be on the Dunning Kruger-scale of a little knowledge is dangerous
here, but AFAICT it is because it is mitigating all branches that result
from the compilation.
I think the people who devised this approach didn't think about the
kernel problem per se but about "any code".
They would have to go back to the compilers, have them introduce
a marker instead for each branch or return, and then emit symbols
that the kernel can run-time patch to mitigate the vulnerability.
Something like that. (I guess.)
Notice that these symbols/pointers would first have a
footprint impact, though maybe they could be discarded if
not applicable.
The patch says:
It inserts speculation barrier sequences (SB or DSB+ISB
depending on the target architecture) after RET and BR, and
replacing BLR with BL+BR sequence.
How would you do that at runtime? If you slot in NOPs
around the branch for mitigating, there will still be impact.
If you want to make the code look the same unless vulnerable,
you would have to patch the branch with a branch to another
place to do the barriers... that patched branch in turn could
be speculated? I feel stupid here. But I guess someone could
come up with something?
So instead of a simple straight-forward solution that becomes a
really complicated awkward solution that generate a few thousand
more man-hours and delays the mitigations. So I understand if
the authors would want to try the simple approach
first.
It may however be our job to say "no, go do the really
complicated thing", I guess that is what you're saying. :)
Yours,
Linus Walleij
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