Richard Palethorpe <rpalethorpe@xxxxxxx> writes: > Hello Arnd, > > Arnd Bergmann <arnd@xxxxxxxx> writes: > >> On Tue, Sep 21, 2021 at 3:01 PM Richard Palethorpe <rpalethorpe@xxxxxxxx> wrote: >>> >>> The LTP test io_pgetevents02 fails in 32bit compat mode because an >>> nr_max of -1 appears to be treated as a large positive integer. This >>> causes pgetevents_time64 to return an event. The test expects the call >>> to fail and errno to be set to EINVAL. >>> >>> Using the compat syscall fixes the issue. >>> >>> Fixes: 7a35397f8c06 ("io_pgetevents: use __kernel_timespec") >>> Signed-off-by: Richard Palethorpe <rpalethorpe@xxxxxxxx> >> >> Thanks a lot for finding this, indeed there is definitely a mistake that >> this function is defined and not used, but I don't yet see how it would >> get to the specific failure you report. >> >> Between the two implementations, I can see a difference in the >> handling of the signal mask, but that should only affect architectures >> with incompatible compat_sigset_t, i.e. big-endian or >> _COMPAT_NSIG_WORDS!=_NSIG_WORDS, and the latter is >> never true for currently supported architectures. On x86, there is >> no difference in the sigset at all. >> >> The negative 'nr' and 'min_nr' arguments that you list as causing >> the problem /should/ be converted by the magic >> SYSCALL_DEFINE6() definition. If this is currently broken, I would >> expect other syscalls to be affected as well. > > That is what I thought, but I couldn't think of another explanation for > it. > >> >> Have you tried reproducing this on non-x86 architectures? If I >> misremembered how the compat conversion in SYSCALL_DEFINE6() >> works, then all architectures that support CONFIG_COMPAT have >> to be fixed. >> >> Arnd > > No, but I suppose I can try it on ARM or PowerPC. I suppose printing the > arguments would be a good idea too. It appears it really is failing to sign extend the s32 to s64. I added the following printks modified fs/aio.c @@ -2054,6 +2054,7 @@ static long do_io_getevents(aio_context_t ctx_id, long ret = -EINVAL; if (likely(ioctx)) { + printk("comparing %ld <= %ld\n", min_nr, nr); if (likely(min_nr <= nr && min_nr >= 0)) ret = read_events(ioctx, min_nr, nr, events, until); percpu_ref_put(&ioctx->users); @@ -2114,6 +2115,8 @@ SYSCALL_DEFINE6(io_pgetevents, bool interrupted; int ret; + printk("io_pgetevents(%lx, %ld, %ld, ...)\n", ctx_id, min_nr, nr); + if (timeout && unlikely(get_timespec64(&ts, timeout))) return -EFAULT; Then the output is: [ 11.252268] io_pgetevents(f7f19000, 4294967295, 1, ...) [ 11.252401] comparing 4294967295 <= 1 io_pgetevents02.c:114: TPASS: invalid min_nr: io_pgetevents() failed as expected: EINVAL (22) [ 11.252610] io_pgetevents(f7f19000, 1, 4294967295, ...) [ 11.252748] comparing 1 <= 4294967295 io_pgetevents02.c:103: TFAIL: invalid max_nr: io_pgetevents() passed unexpectedly -- Thank you, Richard.