[PATCH] ARM: add get_user() support for 8 byte types

Rob Clark rob.clark at linaro.org
Mon Nov 12 16:31:50 PST 2012


On Mon, Nov 12, 2012 at 5:53 PM, Russell King - ARM Linux
<linux at arm.linux.org.uk> wrote:
> On Mon, Nov 12, 2012 at 05:33:41PM -0600, Rob Clark wrote:
>> I'm sort of thinking maybe we want to change 'switch (sizeof(*(__p)))'
>> with 'switch (sizeof(typeof(x)))' in case someone ignores the compiler
>> warning when they try something like:
>
> Definitely not.  Ttype of access is controlled by the pointer, not by the
> size of what it's being assigned to.  Switching that around is likely to
> break stuff hugely.  Consider this:
>
>         unsigned char __user *p;
>         int val;
>
>         get_user(val, p);
>
> If the pointer type is used to determine the access size, a char will be
> accessed.  This is legal - because we end up assigning an unsigned character
> to an int.
>
> If the size of the destination was used, we'd access an int instead, which
> is larger than the pointer, and probably the wrong thing to do anyway.
>
> Think of get_user(a, b) as being a special accessor having the ultimate
> semantics of: "a = *b;" but done in a safe way with error checking.
>
>>    uint32_t x;
>>    uint64_t *p = ...;
>>    get_user(x, p);
>>
>> that was my one concern about 'register typeof(x) __r2 ...', but I
>> think just changing the switch condition is enough.  But maybe good to
>> have some eyes on in case there is something else I'm not thinking of.
>
> And what should happen in the above is exactly the same as what happens
> if you do:
>
>         x = *p;
>
> with those types.  For ARM, that would be a 64-bit access (if the
> compiler decides not to optimize away the upper 32-bit access) followed
> by a narrowing cast down to 32-bit.  With get_user() of course, there's
> no option not to optimize it away.
>
> However, this _does_ reveal a bug with your approach.  With sizeof(*p)
> being 8, and the type of __r2 being a 32-bit quantity, the compiler will
> choose the 64-bit accessor, which will corrupt r3 - and the compiler
> won't know that r3 has been corrupted.

right, that is what I was worried about..  but what about something
along the lines of:

		case 8: {						\
			if (sizeof(x) < 8)				\
				__get_user_x(__r2, __p, __e, __l, 4);	\
			else						\
				__get_user_x(__r2, __p, __e, __l, 8);	\
			break;						\
		}							\

maybe we need a special variant of __get_user_8() instead to get the
right 32bits on big vs little endian systems, but I think something
roughly along these lines could work.

Or maybe in sizeof(x)<8 case, we just __get_user_bad()..  I'm not 100%
sure on whether this is supposed to be treated as an error case at
compile time or not.

BR,
-R

> That's too unsafe.
>
> I just tried a variant of your approach, but got lots of warnings again:
>         register unsigned long long __r2 asm("r2");
>         __get_user_x(__r2, __p, __e, 8, "lr");
>         x = (typeof(*(__p))) ((typeof(x))__r2);
> because typeof(x) in the test_ptr() case ends up being a pointer itself.
>
> So, back to the drawing board, and I think back to the original position
> of "we don't support this".
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