Re: [PATCH v4 0/3] m68k: Improved switch stack handling

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 



Hi Eric,

Am 18.07.2021 um 06:52 schrieb Eric W. Biederman:
I should have looked more closely at skeleton.S - most FPU exceptions
handled there call trap_c the same way as is done for generic traps,
i.e. SAVE_ALL_INT before, ret_from_exception after.

Instead of adding code to entry.S, much better to add it in
skeleton.S. I'll try to come up with a way to test this code path
(calling fpsp040_die from the dz exception hander seems much the
easiest way) to make sure this doesn't have side effects.

Does do_exit() ever return?

No.  The function do_exit never returns.

Fine - nothing to worry about as regards restoring the stack pointer correctly then.

If it is not too much difficulty I would be in favor of having the code
do force_sigsegv(SIGSEGV), instead of calling do_exit directly.

That _would_ force a return, right? The exception handling in skeleton.S won't be set up for that.

Looking at that code I have not been able to figure out the call paths
that get into skeleton.S.  I am not certain saving all of the registers
on an the exceptions that reach there make sense.  In practice I suspect

The registers are saved only so trap_c has a stack frame to work with. In that sense, adding a stack frame before calling fpsp040_die is no different.

taking an exception is much more expensive than saving the registers so it
might not make any difference.  But this definitely looks like code that
is performance sensitive.

We're only planning to add a stack frame save before calling out of the user access exception handler, right? I doubt that will be called very often.

My sense when I was reading through skeleton.S was just one or two
registers were saved before the instruction emulation was called.

skeleton.S only contains the entry points for code to handle FPU exceptions, from what I've seen (plus the user space access code).

Wherever that exception handling requires calling into the C exception handler (trap_c), a stack frame is added.

Cheers,

	Michael





[Index of Archives]     [Video for Linux]     [Yosemite News]     [Linux S/390]     [Linux Kernel]     [Linux SCSI]

  Powered by Linux