Le 15/02/2022 à 10:12, Arnd Bergmann a écrit :
On Tue, Feb 15, 2022 at 9:17 AM Ard Biesheuvel <ardb@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Mon, 14 Feb 2022 at 17:37, Arnd Bergmann <arnd@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
From: Arnd Bergmann <arnd@xxxxxxxx>
With set_fs() out of the picture, wouldn't it be sufficient to check
that bit #55 is clear? (the bit that selects between TTBR0 and TTBR1)
That would also remove the need to strip the tag from the address.
Something like
asm goto("tbnz %0, #55, %2 \n"
"tbnz %1, #55, %2 \n"
:: "r"(addr), "r"(addr + size - 1) :: notok);
return 1;
notok:
return 0;
with an additional sanity check on the size which the compiler could
eliminate for compile-time constant values.
That should work, but I don't see it as a clear enough advantage to
have a custom implementation. For the constant-size case, it probably
isn't better than a compiler-scheduled comparison against a
constant limit, but it does hurt maintainability when the next person
wants to change the behavior of access_ok() globally.
If we want to get into micro-optimizing uaccess, I think a better target
would be a CONFIG_CC_HAS_ASM_GOTO_OUTPUT version
of __get_user()/__put_user as we have on x86 and powerpc.
There is also the user block accesses with
user_access_begin()/user_access_end() together with unsafe_put_user()
and unsafe_get_user() which allowed us to optimise user accesses on
powerpc, especially in the signal code.
Christophe