On Mon, Aug 07, 2023 at 11:00:08PM +0100, Mark Brown wrote: > +2. Enabling and disabling Guarded Control Stacks > +------------------------------------------------- > + > +* GCS is enabled and disabled for a thread via the PR_SET_SHADOW_STACK_STATUS > + prctl(), this takes a single flags argument specifying which GCS features > + should be used. > + > +* When set PR_SHADOW_STACK_ENABLE flag allocates a Guarded Control Stack for The 'for' at the end of the line above is not needed. > + and enables GCS for the thread, enabling the functionality controlled by > + GCSPRE0_EL1.{nTR, RVCHKEN, PCRSEL}. This should be GCSCRE0_EL1. > +* When set the PR_SHADOW_STACK_PUSH flag enables the functionality controlled > + by GCSCRE0_EL1.PUSHMEn, allowing explicit GCS pushes. > + > +* When set the PR_SHADOW_STACK_WRITE flag enables the functionality controlled > + by GCSCRE0_EL1.STREn, allowing explicit stores to the Guarded Control Stack. > + > +* Any unknown flags will cause PR_SET_SHADOW_STACK_STATUS to return -EINVAL. > + > +* PR_LOCK_SHADOW_STACK_STATUS is passed a bitmask of features with the same > + values as used for PR_SET_SHADOW_STACK_STATUS. Any future changes to the > + status of the specified GCS mode bits will be rejected. > + > +* PR_LOCK_SHADOW_STACK_STATUS allows any bit to be locked, this allows > + userspace to prevent changes to any future features. I presume a new lock prctl() won't allow unlocking but can only extend the lock. I haven't looked at the patches yet but it may be worth spelling this out. > +* PR_SET_SHADOW_STACK_STATUS and PR_LOCK_SHADOW_STACK_STATUS affect only the > + thread the called them, any other running threads will be unaffected. s/the called/that called/ > +* New threads inherit the GCS configuration of the thread that created them. > + > +* GCS is disabled on exec(). > + > +* The current GCS configuration for a thread may be read with the > + PR_GET_SHADOW_STACK_STATUS prctl(), this returns the same flags that > + are passed to PR_SET_SHADOW_STACK_STATUS. > + > +* If GCS is disabled for a thread after having previously been enabled then > + the stack will remain allocated for the lifetime of the thread. Sorry if this has been discussed in other threads. What is the issue with unmapping/freeing of the shadow stack? > At present > + any attempt to reenable GCS for the thread will be rejected, this may be > + revisited in future. What's the rationale here? Is it that function returns won't work? > +3. Allocation of Guarded Control Stacks > +---------------------------------------- > + > +* When GCS is enabled for a thread a new Guarded Control Stack will be > + allocated for it of size RLIMIT_STACK / 2 or 2 gigabytes, whichever is > + smaller. Is this number based on the fact that a function call would only push the LR to GCS while standard function prologue pushes at least two registers? > +* When GCS is disabled for a thread the Guarded Control Stack initially > + allocated for that thread will be freed. Note carefully that if the > + stack has been switched this may not be the stack currently in use by > + the thread. Does this not contradict an earlier statement that the GCS is not freed for a thread when disabled? > +4. Signal handling > +-------------------- > + > +* A new signal frame record gcs_context encodes the current GCS mode and > + pointer for the interrupted context on signal delivery. This will always > + be present on systems that support GCS. > + > +* The record contains a flag field which reports the current GCS configuration > + for the interrupted context as PR_GET_SHADOW_STACK_STATUS would. > + > +* The signal handler is run with the same GCS configuration as the interrupted > + context. > + > +* When GCS is enabled for the interrupted thread a signal handling specific > + GCS cap token will be written to the GCS, this is an architectural GCS cap > + token with bit 63 set. The GCSPR_EL0 reported in the signal frame will > + point to this cap token. I lost track of the GCS spec versions. Has the valid cap token format been updated? What I have in my spec (though most likely old) is: An entry in the Guarded control stack is defined as a Valid cap entry, if bits [63:12] of the value are same as bits [63:12] of the address where the entry is stored and bits [11:0] contain a Valid cap token. The other bits in the code look fine to me so far but I haven't looked at the code yet. -- Catalin