On Mon, 2023-04-17 at 01:33 +0800, WANG Xuerui wrote: > From: WANG Xuerui <git@xxxxxxxxxx> > > Hi, > > The LoongArch-64 base architecture is capable of performing > bounds-checking either before memory accesses or alone, with specialized > instructions generating BCEs (bounds-checking error) in case of failed > assertions (ISA manual Volume 1, Sections 2.2.6.1 [1] and 2.2.10.3 [2]). > This could be useful for managed runtimes, but the exception is not > being handled so far, resulting in SIGSYSes in these cases, which is > incorrect and warrants a fix in itself. > > During experimentation, it was discovered that there is already UAPI for > expressing such semantics: SIGSEGV with si_code=SEGV_BNDERR. This was > originally added for Intel MPX, and there is currently no user (!) after > the removal of MPX support a few years ago. Although the semantics is > not a 1:1 match to that of LoongArch, still it is better than > alternatives such as SIGTRAP or SIGBUS of BUS_OBJERR kind, due to being > able to convey both the value that failed assertion and the bound value. > > This patch series implements just this approach: translating BCEs into > SIGSEGVs with si_code=SEGV_BNDERR, si_value set to the offending value, > and si_lower and si_upper set to resemble a range with both lower and > upper bound while in fact there is only one. > > The instructions are not currently used anywhere yet in the fledgling > LoongArch ecosystem, so it's not very urgent and we could take the time > to figure out the best way forward (should SEGV_BNDERR turn out not > suitable). I don't think these instructions can be used in any systematic way within a Linux userspace in 2023. IMO they should not exist in LoongArch at all because they have all the same disadvantages of Intel MPX; MPX has been removed by Intel in 2019, and LoongArch is designed after 2019. If we need some hardware assisted memory safety facility, an extension similar to ARM TBI or Intel LAM would be much more useful. Back in the old MIPS-based Loongson CPUs, similar instructions (GSLE, GSGT, etc.) were included in LoongISA extension and the manual says they raises "address error" when assert fails. So SIGSEGV seems the "backward compatible" (quoted because we absolutely don't need to maintain any backward compatibility with old MIPS-based implementations) thing to do. -- Xi Ruoyao <xry111@xxxxxxxxxxx> School of Aerospace Science and Technology, Xidian University