[PATCH v5 04/10] ARM: syscall: always store thread_info->abi_syscall
Kees Cook
keescook at chromium.org
Thu Aug 3 16:17:24 PDT 2023
On Mon, Jul 26, 2021 at 04:11:35PM +0200, Arnd Bergmann wrote:
> From: Arnd Bergmann <arnd at arndb.de>
>
> The system call number is used in a a couple of places, in particular
> ptrace, seccomp and /proc/<pid>/syscall.
*thread necromancy*
Hi!
So, it seems like the seccomp selftests broke in a few places due to
this change (back in v5.15). I really thought kernelci.org was running
the seccomp tests, but it seems like the coverage is spotty.
Specifically, the syscall_restart selftest fails, as well as syscall_errno
and syscall_faked (both via seccomp and PTRACE), starting with this patch.
> The last one apparently never worked reliably on ARM for tasks that are
> not currently getting traced.
>
> Storing the syscall number in the normal entry path makes it work,
> as well as allowing us to see if the current system call is for OABI
> compat mode, which is the next thing I want to hook into.
>
> Since the thread_info->syscall field is not just the number any more, it
> is now renamed to abi_syscall. In kernels that enable both OABI and EABI,
> the upper bits of this field encode 0x900000 (__NR_OABI_SYSCALL_BASE)
> for OABI tasks, while normal EABI tasks do not set the upper bits. This
> makes it possible to implement the in_oabi_syscall() helper later.
>
> All other users of thread_info->syscall go through the syscall_get_nr()
> helper, which in turn filters out the ABI bits.
While I've reproducing the bisect done by mediatek, I'm still poking
around in here to figure out what's gone wrong. There was a recent patch
to fix this, but it looks like it's not complete:
https://lore.kernel.org/all/20230724121655.7894-1-lecopzer.chen@mediatek.com/
With the above applied, syscall_errno and syscall_faked start working
again, but not the syscall_restart test.
> Note that the ABI information is lost with PTRACE_SET_SYSCALL, so one
> cannot set the internal number to a particular version, but this was
> already the case. We could change it to let gdb encode the ABI type along
> with the syscall in a CONFIG_OABI_COMPAT-enabled kernel, but that itself
> would be a (backwards-compatible) ABI change, so I don't do it here.
>
> Signed-off-by: Arnd Bergmann <arnd at arndb.de>
Another issue of note, which may just be "by design" for arm32, is that
an invalid syscall (or, at least, a negative syscall) results in SIGILL,
rather than a errno=ENOSYS failure. This seems to have been true at least
as far back as v5.8 (where this was cleaned up for at least arm64 and
s390). There was a seccomp test added for it in v5.9, but it has been
failing for arm32 since then. :(
I mention this because the behavior of the syscall_restart test looks
like an invalid syscall: on restart a SIGILL is caught instead of the
syscall correctly continuing.
Anyway, I'll keep debugging this, but figured I'd mention it in case
anyone else had been seeing issues in here.
-Kees
--
Kees Cook
More information about the linux-arm-kernel
mailing list