On 09/28/2015 06:38 PM, Andy Lutomirski wrote:
On Mon, Sep 28, 2015 at 2:54 PM, Chris Metcalf <cmetcalf@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On 09/28/2015 04:51 PM, Andy Lutomirski wrote:
On Mon, Sep 28, 2015 at 11:17 AM, Chris Metcalf <cmetcalf@xxxxxxxxxx>
@@ -35,8 +36,12 @@ static inline enum ctx_state exception_enter(void)
return 0;
prev_ctx = this_cpu_read(context_tracking.state);
- if (prev_ctx != CONTEXT_KERNEL)
- context_tracking_exit(prev_ctx);
+ if (prev_ctx != CONTEXT_KERNEL) {
+ if (context_tracking_exit(prev_ctx)) {
+ if (task_isolation_strict())
+ task_isolation_exception();
+ }
+ }
return prev_ctx;
}
x86 does not promise to call this function. In fact, x86 is rather
likely to stop ever calling this function in the reasonably near
future.
Yes, in which case we'd have to do it the same way we are doing
it for arm64 (see patch 09/11), by calling task_isolation_exception()
explicitly from within the relevant exception handlers. If we start
doing that, it's probably worth wrapping up the logic into a single
inline function to keep the added code short and sweet.
If in fact this might happen in the short term, it might be a good
idea to hook the individual exception handlers in x86 now, and not
hook the exception_enter() mechanism at all.
It's already like that in Linus' tree.
OK, I will restructure so that it doesn't rely on the context_tracking
code at all, but instead requires a line of code in every relevant
kernel exception handler.
FWIW, most of those exception handlers send signals, so it might pay
to do it in notify_die or die instead.
Well, the most interesting category is things that don't actually
trigger a signal (e.g. minor page fault) since those are things that
cause significant issues with task isolation processes
(kernel-induced jitter) but aren't otherwise user-visible,
much like an undiscovered syscall in a third-party library
can cause unexpected jitter.
For x86, the relevant info might be the actual hw error number
(error_code, which makes it into die) or the signal. If we send a
death signal, then reporting the error number the usual way might make
sense.
I may just choose to use a task_isolation_exception(fmt, ...)
signature so that code can printk a suitable one-liner before
delivering the SIGKILL (or whatever signal was configured).
--
Chris Metcalf, EZChip Semiconductor
http://www.ezchip.com
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