> On Dec 1, 2018, at 7:28 AM, Eric W. Biederman <ebiederm@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > It just occurs to me that the simple way to implement > procfd_sigqueueinfo info is like: > > int copy_siginfo_from_user_any(kernel_siginfo_t *info, siginfo_t *uinfo) > { > #ifdef CONFIG_COMPAT > if (in_compat_syscall) > return copy_siginfo_from_user32(info, uinfo); > #endif > return copy_siginfo_from_user(info, uinfo); > } > > long procfd_sigqueueinfo(int fd, siginfo_t *uinfo) > { > kernel_siginfo info; > > if (copy_siginfo_from_user_any(&info, uinfo)) > return -EFAULT; > ...; > } > > It looks like there is already a place in ptrace.c that already > hand rolls copy_siginfo_from_user_any. > > So while I would love to figure out the subset of siginfo_t tha we can > just pass through, as I think that would make a better more forward > compatible copy_siginfo_from_user32. Seems reasonable to me. It’s less code overall than any other suggestion, too. > I think for this use case we just > add the in_compat_syscall test and then we just need to ensure this new > system call is placed in the proper places in the syscall table. > > Because we will need 3 call sights: x86_64, x32 and ia32. As the layout > changes between those three subarchitecuters. > > If it’s done this way, it can just be “common” in the 64-bit table. And we kick the can a bit farther down the road :) I’m working on patches to clean up x86’s syscall mess. It’s slow because I keep finding new messes. So far I have rt_sigreturn working like every other syscall — whee. Also, Eric, for your edification, I have a draft patch set to radically simplify x86’s signal delivery and return. Once that’s done, I can trivially speed up delivery by a ton by using sysret.