On Mon, Oct 31, 2022 at 12:44:59PM +0000, Szabolcs Nagy wrote: > and such fcntl call can happen with c code that just passes > F_SEAL_WRITE since it is an int and e.g. with aarch64 pcs rules > it is passed in a register where top bits can be non-zero > (unlikely in practice but valid). In Linux's aarch64 ABI, an int is a 4-byte value. It is *not* an 8-byte value. So passing in "F_SEAL_WRITE | 0xF00000000" as an int (as in your example) is simply not valid thing for the userspace program to do. Now, if there is a C program which has "int c = F_SEAL_WRITE", if the PCS allows the compiler to pass a function paramter c --- for example f(a, b, c) --- where the 4-byte paramter 'c' is placed in a 64-bit register where the high bits of the 64-bit register contains non-zero garbage values, I would argue that this is a bug in the PCS and/or the compiler. - Ted