----- On Apr 18, 2019, at 1:37 PM, Szabolcs Nagy Szabolcs.Nagy@xxxxxxx wrote: > On 18/04/2019 18:10, Mathieu Desnoyers wrote: >> >> ----- On Apr 18, 2019, at 12:07 PM, Szabolcs Nagy Szabolcs.Nagy@xxxxxxx wrote: >> >>> On 18/04/2019 16:41, Mathieu Desnoyers wrote: >>>> ----- On Apr 18, 2019, at 11:33 AM, Szabolcs Nagy Szabolcs.Nagy@xxxxxxx wrote: >>>> >>>>> On 18/04/2019 14:17, Mathieu Desnoyers wrote: >>>>>> ----- On Apr 17, 2019, at 3:56 PM, Mathieu Desnoyers >>>>>> mathieu.desnoyers@xxxxxxxxxxxx wrote: >>>>>>> ----- On Apr 17, 2019, at 12:17 PM, Joseph Myers joseph@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote: >>>>>>>> On Wed, 17 Apr 2019, Mathieu Desnoyers wrote: >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>> +/* RSEQ_SIG is a signature required before each abort handler code. >>>>>>>>>> + >>>>>>>>>> + It is a 32-bit value that maps to actual architecture code compiled >>>>>>>>>> + into applications and libraries. It needs to be defined for each >>>>>>>>>> + architecture. When choosing this value, it needs to be taken into >>>>>>>>>> + account that generating invalid instructions may have ill effects on >>>>>>>>>> + tools like objdump, and may also have impact on the CPU speculative >>>>>>>>>> + execution efficiency in some cases. */ >>>>>>>>>> + >>>>>>>>>> +#define RSEQ_SIG 0xd428bc00 /* BRK #0x45E0. */ >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> After further investigation, we should probably do the following >>>>>>>>> to handle compiling with -mbig-endian on aarch64, which generates >>>>>>>>> binaries with mixed code vs data endianness (little endian code, >>>>>>>>> big endian data): >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> First, the comment on RSEQ_SIG should specify whether it is to be >>>>>>>> interpreted in the code or the data endianness. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Right. The signature passed as argument to the rseq registration >>>>>>> system call needs to be in data endianness (currently exposed kernel >>>>>>> ABI). >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Ideally for userspace, we want to define a signature in code endianness >>>>>>> that happens to nicely match specific code patterns. >>>>> ... >>>>>> For aarch64, I think we can simply do: >>>>>> >>>>>> /* >>>>>> * aarch64 -mbig-endian generates mixed endianness code vs data: >>>>>> * little-endian code and big-endian data. Ensure the RSEQ_SIG signature >>>>>> * matches code endianness. >>>>>> */ >>>>>> #define RSEQ_SIG_CODE 0xd428bc00 /* BRK #0x45E0. */ >>>>>> >>>>>> #ifdef __ARM_BIG_ENDIAN >>>>>> #define RSEQ_SIG_DATA 0x00bc28d4 /* BRK #0x45E0. */ >>>>>> #else >>>>>> #define RSEQ_SIG_DATA RSEQ_SIG_CODE >>>>>> #endif >>>>>> >>>>>> #define RSEQ_SIG RSEQ_SIG_DATA >>>>>> >>>>>> Feedback is most welcome, >>>>> >>>>> so the RSEQ_SIG value is supposed to be used with .word >>>>> in asm instead of .inst? >>>> >>>> We want a .inst so it translates into a valid trap instruction. >>>> It's better to trap in case program execution reaches this >>>> by mistake (makes debugging easier). >>> >>> that does not make sense to me. >>> >>> ".inst" is an asm directive that requires a the value to >>> be the same on BE and LE (normal insn encoding). >>> >>> ".word" is an asm directive that requires the value to >>> use swapped encoding on BE (if it's used in the instruction >>> stream it will create a data mapping symbol and disasm to >>> .word value instead of the instruction mnemonics). >>> >>> so which one is it? >> >> We declare the signature with ".inst" in assembler. >> >> However, we also need to pass that 32-bit signature value as >> argument to the rseq system call when registering rseq. >> >> The signature comparison is performed by the kernel before >> moving the instruction pointer to the abort handler. It compares >> the signature received as parameter by sys_rseq (data) to the >> 4-byte signature preceding the abort IP. >> >> On aarch64 big endian, AFAIU the signature in the code is in >> little endian, and the signature value passed as argument to >> the rseq system call is in big endian. One way to handle this >> is to swap the byte order of the signature "data" representation >> passed as argument to sys_rseq. > > you have to add a documentation comment somewhere > explaining if RSEQ_SIG is the value that's passed to > the kernel and then aarch64 asm code has to use > > .inst endianfixup(RSEQ_SIG) // or > .word RSEQ_SIG Using ".word" won't allow objdump to show the instruction it maps to. It will consider it as data. So .inst is preferred here. > > or if RSEQ_SIG is used as > > .inst RSEQ_SIG > > in aarch64 asm and then endianfixup(RSEQ_SIG) should > be passed to the syscall. At this stage, we control the meaning of the definitions we publicly expose. They are part of glibc headers, not part of the kernel uapi. On architectures where data and code endianness match, RSEQ_SIG can be used both as argument to sys_rseq and as value for .inst in assembler. On architectures where data and code endianness differ, I am tempted to declare them separately: * RSEQ_SIG_CODE: for use with .inst in assembly, * RSEQ_SIG_DATA (mapping to RSEQ_SIG): to pass as parameter to sys_rseq. So those specific architectures would use "RSEQ_SIG_CODE" with .inst in assembly, and we can still pass the RSEQ_SIG as parameter to sys_rseq in generic rseq registration code. > either way it can be a brk 0x45e0 on both LE and BE, > but in the latter case you have to document this in > arch independent way, since the syscall api must be > portable (i assume "RSEQ_SIG" is part of the api). The RSEQ_SIG is defined by glibc bits/rseq.h which is included from sys/rseq.h. It's therefore not part of the Linux kernel uapi. So we can define whatever we need to at this point, but we won't be able to change it after it has been exposed for a given architecture. All the kernel ABI expects is a data-endian value of the signature it needs to compare to when it loads the 4 bytes prior to the abort ip. Thanks, Mathieu -- Mathieu Desnoyers EfficiOS Inc. http://www.efficios.com