On 2014-10-24, Thomas Gleixner wrote:
> On Sun, 12 Oct 2014, Qiaowei Ren wrote:
>> +int mpx_enable_management(struct task_struct *tsk) {
>> +    struct mm_struct *mm = tsk->mm;
>> +    void __user *bd_base = MPX_INVALID_BOUNDS_DIR;
> 
> What's the point of initializing bd_base here. I had to look twice to
> figure out that it gets overwritten by task_get_bounds_dir()
> 

I just want to put task_get_bounds_dir() outside mm->mmap_sem holding.

>> @@ -285,6 +285,7 @@ dotraplinkage void do_bounds(struct pt_regs
>> *regs,
> long error_code)
>>      struct xsave_struct *xsave_buf;
>>      struct task_struct *tsk = current;
>>      siginfo_t info;
>> +    int ret = 0;
>> 
>>      prev_state = exception_enter();
>>      if (notify_die(DIE_TRAP, "bounds", regs, error_code, @@ -312,8
>> +313,35 @@ dotraplinkage void do_bounds(struct pt_regs *regs, long
> error_code)
>>       */
>>      switch (status & MPX_BNDSTA_ERROR_CODE) {
>>      case 2: /* Bound directory has invalid entry. */
>> -            if (do_mpx_bt_fault(xsave_buf))
>> +            down_write(&current->mm->mmap_sem);
> 
> The handling of mm->mmap_sem here is horrible. The only reason why you
> want to hold mmap_sem write locked in the first place is that you want
> to cover the allocation and the mm->bd_addr check.
> 
> I think it's wrong to tie this to mmap_sem in the first place. If MPX
> is enabled then you should have mm->bd_addr and an explicit mutex to protect 
> it.
> 
> So the logic would look like this:
> 
>    mutex_lock(&mm->bd_mutex);
>    if (!kernel_managed(mm))
>       do_trap(); else if (do_mpx_bt_fault()) force_sig();
>    mutex_unlock(&mm->bd_mutex);
> No tricks with mmap_sem, no special return value handling. Straight
> forward code instead of a convoluted and error prone mess.
> 
> Hmm?
> 
I guess this is a good solution. If so, new field 'bd_sem' have to be added 
into struct mm_struct.

Thanks,
Qiaowei
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