This summary will help to guide the proper use of the enabling model. Signed-off-by: Chang S. Bae <chang.seok.bae@xxxxxxxxx> Reviewed-by: Tony Luck <tony.luck@xxxxxxxxx> Cc: x86@xxxxxxxxxx Cc: linux-kernel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Cc: linux-doc@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx --- Changes from v4: * Re-write about the sigaltstack sizing (Dave Hansen). * Drop the second point as the case is not clear yet. Changes from v3: * Add as a new patch (Tony Luck). --- Documentation/x86/xstate.rst | 16 ++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 16 insertions(+) diff --git a/Documentation/x86/xstate.rst b/Documentation/x86/xstate.rst index 5cec7fb558d6..e954e79af4ce 100644 --- a/Documentation/x86/xstate.rst +++ b/Documentation/x86/xstate.rst @@ -11,6 +11,22 @@ are enabled by XCR0 as well, but the first use of related instruction is trapped by the kernel because by default the required large XSTATE buffers are not allocated automatically. +The purpose for dynamic features +-------------------------------- + +Legacy userspace libraries often have hard-coded, static sizes for +alternate signal stacks, often using MINSIGSTKSZ which is typically 2KB. +That stack must be able to store at *least* the signal frame that the +kernel sets up before jumping into the signal handler. That signal frame +must include an XSAVE buffer defined by the CPU. + +However, that means that the size of signal stacks is dynamic, not static, +because different CPUs have differently-sized XSAVE buffers. A compiled-in +size of 2KB with existing applications is too small for new CPU features +like AMX. Instead of universally requiring larger stack, with the dynamic +enabling, the kernel can enforce userspace applications to have +properly-sized altstacks. + Using dynamically enabled XSTATE features in user space applications -------------------------------------------------------------------- -- 2.17.1