On Sat, Sep 19, 2020 at 6:21 PM Andy Lutomirski <luto@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Fri, Sep 18, 2020 at 8:16 AM Christoph Hellwig <hch@xxxxxx> wrote: > > On Fri, Sep 18, 2020 at 02:58:22PM +0100, Al Viro wrote: > > > Said that, why not provide a variant that would take an explicit > > > "is it compat" argument and use it there? And have the normal > > > one pass in_compat_syscall() to that... > > > > That would help to not introduce a regression with this series yes. > > But it wouldn't fix existing bugs when io_uring is used to access > > read or write methods that use in_compat_syscall(). One example that > > I recently ran into is drivers/scsi/sg.c. Ah, so reading /dev/input/event* would suffer from the same issue, and that one would in fact be broken by your patch in the hypothetical case that someone tried to use io_uring to read /dev/input/event on x32... For reference, I checked the socket timestamp handling that has a number of corner cases with time32/time64 formats in compat mode, but none of those appear to be affected by the problem. > Aside from the potentially nasty use of per-task variables, one thing > I don't like about PF_FORCE_COMPAT is that it's one-way. If we're > going to have a generic mechanism for this, shouldn't we allow a full > override of the syscall arch instead of just allowing forcing compat > so that a compat syscall can do a non-compat operation? The only reason it's needed here is that the caller is in a kernel thread rather than a system call. Are there any possible scenarios where one would actually need the opposite? Arnd