n Fri, Feb 18, 2022 at 3:21 AM Al Viro <viro@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Thu, Feb 17, 2022 at 08:49:59AM +0100, Arnd Bergmann wrote: > > > Same here: architectures can already provide a __put_user_fn() > > and __get_user_fn(), to get the generic versions of the interface, > > but few architectures use that. You can actually get all the interfaces > > by just providing raw_copy_from_user() and raw_copy_to_user(), > > but the get_user/put_user versions you get from that are fairly > > inefficient. > > FWIW, __{get,put}_user_{8,16,32,64} would probably make it easier to > unify. That's where the really variable part tends to be, anyway. > IMO __get_user_fn() had been a mistake. I've prototyped this now, to see what this might look like, see https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/arnd/playground.git/commit/?h=generic-get_user-prototype This adds generic inline version of {__get,get,__put,put}_user() and converts x86 to (optionally) use it. This builds with gcc-5 through gcc-11 on 32-bit and 64-bit x86, using asm-goto with outputs where possible, and requiring a minimum set of macro definitions from the architecture. Compiling with clang produces no warnings but does cause a linker issue at the moment, so there is probably at least one bug in it. Aside from compile-testing, I have not tried to verify if this is correct or efficient, but let me know if you think this is headed in the right direction. > One thing I somewhat dislike about the series is the boilerplate in > asm/uaccess.h instances - #include <asm-generic/access-ok.h> in > a lot of them might make sense as a transitory state, but getting > stuck with those indefinitely... Christoph also complained about it, the problem for now is that asm-generic/access_ok.h must first see the macro definitions for architectures that override any of the contents, but access_ok() itself is used at least in some of the asm/uaccess.h files as well, so it must be included in the middle of it, until more of the uaccess.h implementation is moved to linux/uaccess.h in an architecture independent way. Would you prefer having an asm/access_ok.h that falls back to the asm-generic version but can have an architecture specific override when needed (ia64, arm64, x86, um)? > BTW, do we need user_addr_max() anymore? The definition in > asm-generic/access-ok.h is the only one, so ifndef around it is pointless. Right, the v2 changes got rid of the last override, so it could get hardcoded to TASK_SIZE_MAX, or we can convert the five references to just use that instead and remove it altogether: arch/arm64/kernel/traps.c: if (address >= user_addr_max()) { \ arch/parisc/kernel/signal.c: if (start >= user_addr_max() - sigframe_size) arch/parisc/kernel/signal.c: if (A(&usp[0]) >= user_addr_max() - 5 * sizeof(int)) lib/strncpy_from_user.c: max_addr = user_addr_max(); lib/strnlen_user.c: max_addr = user_addr_max(); user_addr_max() first showed up in architecture-independent code in c5389831cda3 ("sparc: Fix user_addr_max() definition."), and from that I think the original intent is no longer useful. Arnd