On Wed, Oct 10, 2018 at 04:36:56PM +0100, Catalin Marinas wrote: > On Wed, Oct 10, 2018 at 04:10:21PM +0200, Eugene Syromiatnikov wrote: > > I have some questions regarding AArch64 ILP32 implementation for which I > > failed to find an answer myself: > > * How ptrace() tracer is supposed to distinguish between ILP32 and LP64 > > tracees? For MIPS N32 and x32 this is possible based on syscall > > number, but for AArch64 ILP32 I do not see such a sign. There's also > > ARM_ip is employed for signalling entering/exiting, I wonder whether > > it's possible to employ it also for signalling tracee's personality. > > With the current implementation, I don't think you can distinguish. From > the kernel perspective, the register set is the same. What is the > use-case for this? Err, a ptrace()-based tracer trying to trace a process, for example? > We could add a new regset to expose the ILP32 state (NT_ARM_..., I can't > think of a name now but probably not PER* as this implies PER_LINUX_... > which is independent from TIF_32BIT_*). So that would require an additional ptrace() call on each syscall stop, is that correct? > > * What's the reasoning behind capping syscall arguments to 32 bit? x32 > > and MIPS N32 do not have such a restriction (and do not need special > > wrappers for syscalls that pass 64-bit values as a result, except > > when they do, as it is the case for preadv2 on x32); moreover, that > > would lead to insurmountable difficulties for AArch64 ILP32 tracers > > that try to trace LP64 tracees, as it would be impossible to pass > > 64-bit addresses to process_vm_{read,write} or ptrace PEEK/POKE. > > We've attempted in earlier versions to allow a mix of 32 and 64-bit > register values from ILP32 but it got pretty complicated. The entry code > would need to know which registers need zeroing of the top 32-bit If kernel specifies 64-bit wide registers for syscalls, then it's the caller's (libc's) responsibility to properly sign-extend arguments when needed, and glibc, for example, already has proper type definitions that aimed to handle this. > and the generic unistd.h wrapper hacks were not very nice. They are already implemented in glibc during x32 introduction period. > Some past discussions: > > https://www.mail-archive.com/linux-kernel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx/msg1211716.html > > -- > Catalin