Why does do_syscal_user_dispatch call do_exit(SIGSEGV) and do_exit(SIGSYS) instead of force_sig(SIGSEGV) and force_sig(SIGSYS)? Looking at the code these cases are not expected to happen, so I would be surprised if userspace depends on any particular behaviour on the failure path so I think we can change this. Is using do_exit in this way something you copied from seccomp? The reason I am asking is that by using do_exit you deprive userspace of the change to catch the signal handler and try and fix things. Also by using do_exit only a single thread of a multi-thread application is terminated which seems wrong. I am asking because I am going through the callers of do_exit so I can refactor things and clean things up and this use just looks wrong. Gabriel Krisman Bertazi <krisman@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes: <snip> > +bool do_syscall_user_dispatch(struct pt_regs *regs) > +{ > + struct syscall_user_dispatch *sd = ¤t->syscall_dispatch; > + char state; > + > + if (likely(instruction_pointer(regs) - sd->offset < sd->len)) > + return false; > + > + if (unlikely(arch_syscall_is_vdso_sigreturn(regs))) > + return false; > + > + if (likely(sd->selector)) { > + /* > + * access_ok() is performed once, at prctl time, when > + * the selector is loaded by userspace. > + */ > + if (unlikely(__get_user(state, sd->selector))) > + do_exit(SIGSEGV); ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ I think it makes more sense if the code does: if (unlikely(__get_user(state, sd->selector))) { force_sig(SIGSEGV); return true; } > + > + if (likely(state == PR_SYS_DISPATCH_OFF)) > + return false; > + > + if (state != PR_SYS_DISPATCH_ON) > + do_exit(SIGSYS); ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ > + } > + > + sd->on_dispatch = true; > + syscall_rollback(current, regs); > + trigger_sigsys(regs); > + > + return true; > +} Eric