On Mon, 2020-10-05 at 14:42 +0100, Dave Martin wrote: > On Tue, Sep 29, 2020 at 01:57:43PM -0700, Chang S. Bae wrote: > > > > +/* > > + * The FP state frame contains an XSAVE buffer which must be 64-byte aligned. > > + * If a signal frame starts at an unaligned address, extra space is required. > > + * This is the max alignment padding, conservatively. > > + */ > > +#define MAX_XSAVE_PADDING 63UL > > + > > +/* > > + * The frame data is composed of the following areas and laid out as: > > + * > > + * ------------------------- > > + * | alignment padding | > > + * ------------------------- > > + * | (f)xsave frame | > > + * ------------------------- > > + * | fsave header | > > + * ------------------------- > > + * | siginfo + ucontext | > > + * ------------------------- > > + */ > > + > > +/* max_frame_size tells userspace the worst case signal stack size. */ > > +static unsigned long __ro_after_init max_frame_size; > > + > > +void __init init_sigframe_size(void) > > +{ > > + /* > > + * Use the largest of possible structure formats. This might > > + * slightly oversize the frame for 64-bit apps. > > + */ > > + > > + if (IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_X86_32) || > > + IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_IA32_EMULATION)) > > + max_frame_size = max((unsigned long)SIZEOF_sigframe_ia32, > > + (unsigned long)SIZEOF_rt_sigframe_ia32); > > + > > + if (IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_X86_X32_ABI)) > > + max_frame_size = max(max_frame_size, (unsigned long)SIZEOF_rt_sigframe_x32); > > + > > + if (IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_X86_64)) > > + max_frame_size = max(max_frame_size, (unsigned long)SIZEOF_rt_sigframe); > > + > > + max_frame_size += fpu__get_fpstate_sigframe_size() + MAX_XSAVE_PADDING; > > For arm64, we round the worst-case padding up by one. > Yeah, I saw that. The ARM code adds the max padding, too: signal_minsigstksz = sigframe_size(&user) + round_up(sizeof(struct frame_record), 16) + 16; /* max alignment padding */ https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/arch/arm64/kernel/signal.c#n973 > I can't remember the full rationale for this, but it at least seemed a > bit weird to report a size that is not a multiple of the alignment. > Because the last state size of XSAVE may not be 64B aligned, the (reported) sum of xstate size here does not guarantee 64B alignment. > I'm can't think of a clear argument as to why it really matters, though. We care about the start of XSAVE buffer for the XSAVE instructions, to be 64B-aligned. Thanks, Chang