On Thu, Nov 29, 2018 at 11:13:57PM -0600, Eric W. Biederman wrote: > Arnd Bergmann <arnd@xxxxxxxx> writes: > > > On Thu, Nov 29, 2018 at 9:14 PM Andy Lutomirski <luto@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> > On Nov 29, 2018, at 11:55 AM, Christian Brauner <christian@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> >> On Thu, Nov 29, 2018 at 11:22:58AM -0800, Andy Lutomirski wrote: > >> >>> On Thu, Nov 29, 2018 at 11:17 AM Christian Brauner <christian@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> >>>> On November 30, 2018 5:54:18 AM GMT+13:00, Andy Lutomirski <luto@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> >> > >> >> The #1 fix would add a copy_siginfo_from_user64() or similar. > >> > > >> > Thanks very much! That all helped a bunch already! I'll try to go the > >> > copy_siginfo_from_user64() way first and see if I can make this work. If > >> > we do this I would however only want to use it for the new syscall first > >> > and not change all other signal syscalls over to it too. I'd rather keep > >> > this patchset focussed and small and do such conversions caused by the > >> > new approach later. Does that sound reasonable? > >> > >> Absolutely. I don’t think we can change old syscalls — the ABI is set in stone. > >> But for new syscalls, I think the always-64-bit behavior makes sense. > > > > It looks like we already have a 'struct signalfd_siginfo' that is defined in a > > sane architecture-independent way, so I'd suggest we use that. > > Unfortunately it isn't maintained very well. What you can > express with signalfd_siginfo is a subset what you can express with > siginfo. Many of the linux extensions to siginfo for exception > information add pointers and have integers right after those pointers. > Not all of those linux specific extentions for exceptions are handled > by signalfd_siginfo (it needs new fields). > > As originally defined siginfo had the sigval_t union at the end so it > was perfectly fine on both 32bit and 64bit as it only had a single > pointer in the structure and the other fields were 32bits in size. > > Although I do feel the pain as x86_64 has to deal with 3 versions > of siginfo. A 64bit one. A 32bit one for ia32. A 32bit one for x32 > with a 64bit si_clock_t. > > > We may then also want to make sure that any system call that takes a > > siginfo has a replacement that takes a signalfd_siginfo, and that this > > replacement can be used to implement the old version purely in > > user space. > > If you are not implementing CRIU and reinserting exceptions to yourself. > At most user space wants the ability to implement sigqueue: > > AKA: > sigqueue(pid_t pid, int sig, const union sigval value); > > Well sigqueue with it's own si_codes so the following would cover all > the use cases I know of: > int sendnewsig(pid_t pid, int sig, int si_code, const union sigval value); > > The si_code could even be set to SI_USER to request that the normal > trusted SI_USER values be filled in. si_code values of < 0 if not > recognized could reasonably safely be treated as the _rt member of > the siginfo union. Or perhaps better we error out in such a case. > > If we want to be flexible and not have N kinds of system calls that > is the direction I would go. That is simple, and you don't need any of > the rest. > > > Alternatively we abandon the mistake of sigqueueinfo and not allow > a signal number in the arguments that differs from the si_signo in the > siginfo and allow passing the entire thing unchanged from sender to > receiver. That is maximum flexibility. > > signalfd_siginfo just sucks in practice. It is larger that siginfo 104 > bytes versus 48. We must deliver it to userspace as a siginfo so it > must be translated. Because of the translation signalfd_siginfo adds > no flexiblity in practice, because it can not just be passed through. > Finallay signalfd_siginfo does not have encodings for all of the > siginfo union members, so it fails to be fully general. > > Personally if I was to define signalfd_siginfo today I would make it: > struct siginfo_subset { > __u32 sis_signo; > __s32 sis_errno; > __s32 sis_code; > __u32 sis_pad; > __u32 sis_pid; > __u32 sis_uid; > __u64 sis_data (A pointer or integer data field); > }; > > That is just 32bytes, and is all that is needed for everything > except for synchronous exceptions. Oh and that happens to be a proper > subset of a any sane siginfo layout, on both 32bit and 64bit. > > This is one of those rare times where POSIX is sane and what linux > has implemented is not. Thanks for the in-depth explanation. So your point is that we are better off if we stick with siginfo_t instead of struct signalfd_siginfo in procfd_signal()?