On 4/12/21 8:58 AM, Jethro Beekman wrote: > On 2021-04-12 17:36, Dave Hansen wrote: >> On 4/12/21 1:59 AM, Raoul Strackx wrote: >>> This patch set adds a new ioctl to enable userspace to execute EEXTEND >>> leaf functions per 256 bytes of enclave memory. With this patch in place, >>> Linux will be able to build all valid SGXv1 enclaves. >> This didn't cover why we need a *NEW* ABI for this instead of relaxing >> the page alignment rules in the existing one. >> > In executing the ECREATE, EADD, EEXTEND, EINIT sequence, you currently have 2 options for EADD/EEXTEND using the SGX_IOC_ENCLAVE_ADD_PAGES ioctl: > - execute EADD on any address > - execute EADD on any address followed by 16× EEXTEND for that address span I think you forgot a key piece of the explanation here. The choice as to whether you just EADD or EADD+16xEEXTEND is governed by the addition of the: SGX_PAGE_MEASURE flag. > Could you be more specific on how you're suggesting that the current ioctl is modified to in addition support the following? > - execute EEXTEND on any address I'm still not convinced you *NEED* EEXTEND on arbitrary addresses. Right now, we have (roughly): ioctl(ADD_PAGES, ptr, PAGE_SIZE, MEASURE) which translates in the kernel to: __eadd(ptr, epc) if (flags & MEASURE) { for (i = 0; i < PAGE_SIZE/256; i++) __eextend(epc + i*256); } Instead, we could allow add_arg.src and add_arg.offset to be non-page-aligned. Then, we still do the same __eadd(), but modify the __eextend() loop to only cover the actual range referred to by 'add_arg'. The downside is that you only get a single range of measured data per page. Let's say a 'X' means measured (EEXTEND'ed) and '_' means not. You could have patterns like: XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX or XXXXXXXXXXXXXXX_ or ____XXXXXXXXXXXX but not: _X_X_X_X_X_X_X_X or _XXXXXXXXXXXXXX_ Is that a problem?