Hi Michael,
On Fri, Jun 29, 2018 at 10:58 AM Michael Schmitz <[email protected]> wrote:
> Am 28.06.18 um 18:45 schrieb Geert Uytterhoeven:
> > On Thu, Jun 28, 2018 at 6:59 AM Michael Schmitz <[email protected]>
> > wrote:
> >> Am 28.06.2018 um 09:20 schrieb Martin Steigerwald:
> >>>>> And as stated in my other reply to the patch:
> >>>>> partition needs 64 bit disk device support in AmigaOS or AmigaOS
> >>>>> like
> >>>>> operating systems (NSD64, TD64 or SCSI direct)
> >>>> I'd probably leave it at 'disk needs 64 bit disk device support on
> >>>> native OS', and only print that warning once.
> >>> This is fine with me.
> >> OK, I'll go with that.
> > Do we really need the warning?
> > Once the parsing is fixed doing 64-bit math, it does not matter for Linux
> > anymore.
> >
> > Won't it make more sense to have the warning in the tool that created the
> > partition table in the first place?
> Sure, but we've seen one case of this in the wild, and the tool
> apparently did not issue a warning.
>
> I agree it's not an issue for Linux. If you think dropping a warning
> about something not actually relevant to Linux in the log would be
> confusing, or if convention is to limit warnings strictly to behaviour
> relevant to Linux, I can live without the warning. Joanne scared me a
> bit about Amigoids angry at data loss, but I suppose there can't be many
> around my neck of the woods.
>
> >
> >>> I would not name the kernel option "eat_my_rdb", but use a less
> >>> dramatizing name.
> >>>
> >>> Maybe just: "allow_64bit_rdb" or something like that.
> >> I don't expect to get away with that :-)
> > I still fail to see what's the added value of the kernel option...
> > Either the partition is usable, or not.
>
> The question is - can writes to the disk cause any damage to data on the
> disk, as seen by old OS versions? If the answer is no, we won't need the
> option after all.
You mean someone relying on the parameters of his RDB to overflow using
32-bit calculations, and still have valid offsets on the disk so it's usable?
I think that would need hand-crafting an RDB, if possible at all.
And writing to it on AmigaOS 4.0 or any other OS doing proper 64-bit
calculations would write to the wrong locations, too.
IMHO not something to consider.
> >>> How does the user come to know about this kernel option? Will you print
> >>> its name in kernel log?
> >> Depends on how easy we want to make it for users. If I put a BUG() trap
> >> with the check, the resulting log section will point to a specific line
> >> in block/partitions/amiga.c, from which the override option will be
> >> obvious. But that might be a little too opaque for some...
> > Please don't use BUG(), unless your goal is to attract attention (from
> > Linus, who dislikes BUG()!).
> I'd rather not abuse his patience. Thanks for the hint.
> > Using BUG() would be a nice way to DoS someones machine by plugging in
> > a USB stick with a malformed RDB.
> I guess I deserved that. But BUG() doesn't panic now, does it? The ones
> I saw did allow the kernel to happily carry on.
The one in asm-generic does call panic().
The m68k one calls __builtin_trap(), which may cause a trap (and panic?) or
do nothing, depending on gcc version, I think.
Gr{oetje,eeting}s,
Geert
--
Geert Uytterhoeven -- There's lots of Linux beyond ia32 -- [email protected]
In personal conversations with technical people, I call myself a hacker. But
when I'm talking to journalists I just say "programmer" or something like that.
-- Linus Torvalds
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