On Thu, 13 Jun 2019 15:37:24 +0530 Anshuman Khandual <anshuman.khandual@xxxxxxx> wrote: > Architectures which support kprobes have very similar boilerplate around > calling kprobe_fault_handler(). Use a helper function in kprobes.h to unify > them, based on the x86 code. > > This changes the behaviour for other architectures when preemption is > enabled. Previously, they would have disabled preemption while calling the > kprobe handler. However, preemption would be disabled if this fault was > due to a kprobe, so we know the fault was not due to a kprobe handler and > can simply return failure. > > This behaviour was introduced in the commit a980c0ef9f6d ("x86/kprobes: > Refactor kprobes_fault() like kprobe_exceptions_notify()") > > ... > > --- a/arch/arm/mm/fault.c > +++ b/arch/arm/mm/fault.c > @@ -30,28 +30,6 @@ > > #ifdef CONFIG_MMU > > -#ifdef CONFIG_KPROBES > -static inline int notify_page_fault(struct pt_regs *regs, unsigned int fsr) Some architectures make this `static inline'. Others make it `nokprobes_inline', others make it `static inline __kprobes'. The latter seems weird - why try to put an inline function into .kprobes.text? So.. what's the best thing to do here? You chose `static nokprobe_inline' - is that the best approach, if so why? Does kprobe_page_fault() actually need to be inlined? Also, some architectures had notify_page_fault returning int, others bool. You chose bool and that seems appropriate and all callers are OK with that.