On Thu, Oct 31, 2019 at 05:46:53PM +0100, Oleg Nesterov wrote: > On 10/31, Christian Brauner wrote: > > > > --- a/include/uapi/linux/sched.h > > +++ b/include/uapi/linux/sched.h > > @@ -51,6 +51,10 @@ > > * sent when the child exits. > > * @stack: Specify the location of the stack for the > > * child process. > > + * Note, @stack is expected to point to the > > + * lowest address. The stack direction will be > > + * determined by the kernel and set up > > + * appropriately based on @stack_size. > > I can't review this patch, I have no idea what does stack_size mean > if !arch/x86. In short: nothing at all if it weren't for ia64 (and maybe parisc). But let me provide some (hopefully useful) context. (Probably most of that is well-know, so sorry for superflous info. :)) The stack and stack_size argument are used in copy_thread_tls() and in copy_thread(). What the arch will end up calling depends on CONFIG_HAVE_COPY_THREAD. Afaict, mips, powerpc, s390, and x86 call copy_thread_tls(). The other arches call copy_thread(). On all arches _except_ IA64 copy_thread{_tls}() just assigns "stack" to the right register and is done with it. On all arches _except_ parisc "stack" needs to point to the highest address. On parisc it needs to point to the lowest (CONFIG_STACK_GROWSUP). IA64 has a downwards growing stack like all the other architectures but it expects "stack" to poin to the _lowest_ address nonetheless. In contrast to all the other arches it does: child_ptregs->r12 = user_stack_base + user_stack_size - 16; so ia64 sets up the stack pointer itself. So now we have: parisc -> upwards growing stack, stack_size _unused_ for user stacks !parisc -> downwards growing stack, stack_size _unused_ for user stacks ia64 -> downwards growing stack, stack_size _used_ for user stacks Now it gets more confusing since the clone() syscall layout is arch dependent as well. Let's ignore the case of arches that have a clone syscall version with switched flags and stack argument and only focus on arches with an _additional_ stack_size argument: microblaze -> clone(stack, stack_size) Then there's clone2() for ia64 which is a _separate_ syscall with an additional stack_size argument: ia64 -> clone2(stack, stack_size) Now, contrary to what you'd expect, microblaze ignores the stack_size argument. So the stack_size argument _would_ be completely meaningless if it weren't for ia64 and parisc. > > x86 doesn't use stack_size unless a kthread does kernel_thread(), so > this change is probably fine... > > Hmm. Off-topic question, why did 7f192e3cd3 ("fork: add clone3") add > "& ~CSIGNAL" in kernel_thread() ? This looks pointless and confusing > to me... (Can we discuss this over a patch that removes this restriction if we think this is pointless?) > > > +static inline bool clone3_stack_valid(struct kernel_clone_args *kargs) > > +{ > > + if (kargs->stack == 0) { > > + if (kargs->stack_size > 0) > > + return false; > > + } else { > > + if (kargs->stack_size == 0) > > + return false; > > So to implement clone3_wrapper(void *bottom_of_stack) you need to do > > clone3_wrapper(void *bottom_of_stack) > { > struct clone_args args = { > ... > // make clone3_stack_valid() happy > .stack = bottom_of_stack - 1, > .stack_size = 1, > }; > } > > looks a bit strange. OK, I agree, this example is very artificial. > But why do you think clone3() should nack stack_size == 0 ? In short, consistency. I think prior clone() versions (on accident) have exposed the stack direction as an implementation detail to userspace. Userspace clone() code wrapping code is _wild_ and buggy partially because of that. The best thing imho, is to clearly communicate to userspace that stack needs to point to the lowest address and stack_size to the initial range of the stack pointer or both are 0. The alternative is to let userspace either give us a stack pointer that we expect to be setup correctly by userspace or a stack pointer to the lowest address and a stack_size argument. That's just an invitation for more confusion and we have proof with legacy clone that this is not a good idea. > > > + if (!access_ok((void __user *)kargs->stack, kargs->stack_size)) > > + return false; > > Why? It's nice of us to tell userspace _before_ we have created a thread that it messed up its parameters instead of starting a thread that then immediately crashes. Christian