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authorAl Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk>2023-01-07 01:59:29 +0100
committerMatt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>2023-02-25 05:14:22 +0100
commitd3c51b701b1d3e618c7b158fb976aa648b1ac4ab (patch)
treec01aa0701c3eac7a5b4c85fd217dc879863e3e66 /arch/alpha
parentalpha: Avoid comma separated statements (diff)
downloadlinux-d3c51b701b1d3e618c7b158fb976aa648b1ac4ab.tar.xz
linux-d3c51b701b1d3e618c7b158fb976aa648b1ac4ab.zip
alpha: fix FEN fault handling
Type 3 instruction fault (FPU insn with FPU disabled) is handled by quietly enabling FPU and returning. Which is fine, except that we need to do that both for fault in userland and in the kernel; the latter *can* legitimately happen - all it takes is this: .global _start _start: call_pal 0xae lda $0, 0 ldq $0, 0($0) - call_pal CLRFEN to clear "FPU enabled" flag and arrange for a signal delivery (SIGSEGV in this case). Fixed by moving the handling of type 3 into the common part of do_entIF(), before we check for kernel vs. user mode. Incidentally, check for kernel mode is unidiomatic; the normal way to do that is !user_mode(regs). The difference is that the open-coded variant treats any of bits 63..3 of regs->ps being set as "it's user mode" while the normal approach is to check just the bit 3. PS is a 4-bit register and regs->ps always will have bits 63..4 clear, so the open-code variant here is actually equivalent to !user_mode(regs). Harder to follow, though... Reproducer above will crash any box where CLRFEN is not ignored by PAL (== any actual hardware, AFAICS; PAL used in qemu doesn't bother implementing that crap). Cc: stable@vger.kernel.org # all way back... Reviewed-by: Richard Henderson <rth@twiddle.net> Signed-off-by: Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk> Signed-off-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'arch/alpha')
-rw-r--r--arch/alpha/kernel/traps.c30
1 files changed, 15 insertions, 15 deletions
diff --git a/arch/alpha/kernel/traps.c b/arch/alpha/kernel/traps.c
index 8a66fe544c69..d9a67b370e04 100644
--- a/arch/alpha/kernel/traps.c
+++ b/arch/alpha/kernel/traps.c
@@ -233,7 +233,21 @@ do_entIF(unsigned long type, struct pt_regs *regs)
{
int signo, code;
- if ((regs->ps & ~IPL_MAX) == 0) {
+ if (type == 3) { /* FEN fault */
+ /* Irritating users can call PAL_clrfen to disable the
+ FPU for the process. The kernel will then trap in
+ do_switch_stack and undo_switch_stack when we try
+ to save and restore the FP registers.
+
+ Given that GCC by default generates code that uses the
+ FP registers, PAL_clrfen is not useful except for DoS
+ attacks. So turn the bleeding FPU back on and be done
+ with it. */
+ current_thread_info()->pcb.flags |= 1;
+ __reload_thread(&current_thread_info()->pcb);
+ return;
+ }
+ if (!user_mode(regs)) {
if (type == 1) {
const unsigned int *data
= (const unsigned int *) regs->pc;
@@ -366,20 +380,6 @@ do_entIF(unsigned long type, struct pt_regs *regs)
}
break;
- case 3: /* FEN fault */
- /* Irritating users can call PAL_clrfen to disable the
- FPU for the process. The kernel will then trap in
- do_switch_stack and undo_switch_stack when we try
- to save and restore the FP registers.
-
- Given that GCC by default generates code that uses the
- FP registers, PAL_clrfen is not useful except for DoS
- attacks. So turn the bleeding FPU back on and be done
- with it. */
- current_thread_info()->pcb.flags |= 1;
- __reload_thread(&current_thread_info()->pcb);
- return;
-
case 5: /* illoc */
default: /* unexpected instruction-fault type */
;