On Mon, May 3, 2021 at 8:42 PM Eric W. Biederman <ebiederm@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > Marco Elver <elver@xxxxxxxxxx> writes: > > > On Mon, 3 May 2021 at 23:04, Eric W. Biederman <ebiederm@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> "Eric W. Beiderman" <ebiederm@xxxxxxxxxxxx> writes: > >> > From: "Eric W. Biederman" <ebiederm@xxxxxxxxxxxx> > >> > > >> > The si_perf code really wants to add a u64 field. This change enables > >> > that by reorganizing the definition of siginfo_t, so that a 64bit > >> > field can be added without increasing the alignment of other fields. > > > > If you can, it'd be good to have an explanation for this, because it's > > not at all obvious -- some future archeologist will wonder how we ever > > came up with this definition of siginfo... > > > > (I see the trick here is that before the union would have changed > > alignment, introducing padding after the 3 ints -- but now because the > > 3 ints are inside the union the union's padding no longer adds padding > > for these ints. Perhaps you can explain it better than I can. Also > > see below.) > > Yes. The big idea is adding a 64bit field into the second union > in the _sigfault case will increase the alignment of that second > union to 64bit. > > In the 64bit case the alignment is already 64bit so it is not an > issue. > > In the 32bit case there are 3 ints followed by a pointer. When the > 64bit member is added the alignment of _segfault becomes 64bit. That > 64bit alignment after 3 ints changes the location of the 32bit pointer. > > By moving the 3 preceding ints into _segfault that does not happen. > > > > There remains one very subtle issue that I think isn't a problem > but I would appreciate someone else double checking me. > > > The old definition of siginfo_t on 32bit almost certainly had 32bit > alignment. With the addition of a 64bit member siginfo_t gains 64bit > alignment. This difference only matters if the 64bit field is accessed. > Accessing a 64bit field with 32bit alignment will cause unaligned access > exceptions on some (most?) architectures. > > For the 64bit field to be accessed the code needs to be recompiled with > the new headers. Which implies that when everything is recompiled > siginfo_t will become 64bit aligned. > > > So the change should be safe unless someone is casting something with > 32bit alignment into siginfo_t. How about if someone has a field of type siginfo_t as an element of a struct? For example: struct foo { int x; siginfo_t y; }; With this change wouldn't the y field move from offset 4 to offset 8? Peter