On Mon, Oct 14, 2024 at 06:10:23PM +0100, Will Deacon wrote: > Kevin, Joey, > > On Wed, Oct 09, 2024 at 03:43:01PM +0100, Will Deacon wrote: > > On Tue, Sep 24, 2024 at 01:27:58PM +0200, Kevin Brodsky wrote: > > > On 22/08/2024 17:11, Joey Gouly wrote: > > > > @@ -1178,6 +1237,9 @@ static void setup_return(struct pt_regs *regs, struct k_sigaction *ka, > > > > sme_smstop(); > > > > } > > > > > > > > + if (system_supports_poe()) > > > > + write_sysreg_s(POR_EL0_INIT, SYS_POR_EL0); > > > > > > At the point where setup_return() is called, the signal frame has > > > already been written to the user stack. In other words, we write to the > > > user stack first, and then reset POR_EL0. This may be problematic, > > > especially if we are using the alternate signal stack, which the > > > interrupted POR_EL0 may not grant access to. In that situation uaccess > > > will fail and we'll end up with a SIGSEGV. > > > > > > This issue has already been discussed on the x86 side, and as it happens > > > patches to reset PKRU early [1] have just landed. I don't think this is > > > a blocker for getting this series landed, but we should try and align > > > with x86. If there's no objection, I'm planning to work on a counterpart > > > to the x86 series (resetting POR_EL0 early during signal delivery). > > > > Did you get a chance to work on that? It would be great to land the > > fixes for 6.12, if possible, so that the first kernel release with POE > > support doesn't land with known issues. > > Looking a little more at this, I think we have quite a weird behaviour > on arm64 as it stands. It looks like we rely on the signal frame to hold > the original POR_EL0 so, if for some reason we fail to allocate space > for the POR context, I think we'll return back from the signal with > POR_EL0_INIT. That seems bad? If we don't allocate space for POR_EL0, I think the program recieves SIGSGEV? setup_sigframe_layout() if (system_supports_poe()) { err = sigframe_alloc(user, &user->poe_offset, sizeof(struct poe_context)); if (err) return err; } Through get_sigframe() and setup_rt_frame(), that eventually hets here: handle_signal() ret = setup_rt_frame(usig, ksig, oldset, regs); [..] signal_setup_done(ret, ksig, test_thread_flag(TIF_SINGLESTEP)); void signal_setup_done(int failed, struct ksignal *ksig, int stepping) { if (failed) force_sigsegv(ksig->sig); else signal_delivered(ksig, stepping); } So I think it's "fine"? Thanks, Joey