Re: [git pull] core, x86: make LIST_POISON less deadly

From: Ingo Molnar
Date: Mon Jul 14 2008 - 11:13:17 EST



* Linus Torvalds <torvalds@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

> On Mon, 14 Jul 2008, Ingo Molnar wrote:
> >
> > +config ILLEGAL_POINTER_VALUE
> > + hex
> > + default 0 if X86_32
> > + default 0xffffc10000000000 if X86_64
>
> This looks like a singularly bad pointer value on x86-64.
>
> Why not pick something that is *guaranteed* to fault? The above looks
> like any future setup that supports 41 bits of addressing and has
> extended the page tables (yes, it will happen eventually) will find
> that to be a perfectly valid address?
>
> It's also visually confusing, since it's visually very close to a real
> kernel pointer too.
>
> Grr.
>
> Why not use something sane like 0xdead000000000000, which has the high
> bit set but very fundamentally isn't a valid pointer, and never will
> be? And which is a *lot* more visually obvious too!

initially i suggested that too - but such addresses raise a #GP instead
of a page fault so their decoding is a bit harder.

We dont do any instruction decoding in #GP handlers to figure out what
happened, while in the pagefault case we know which address faulted,
etc.

Perhaps we could try to make #GP handlers a bit more informative -
although decoding instructions will make things a bit more fragile
inevitably.

Perhaps make it 0xffffcdead0000000 ?

in any case, please ignore this topic until it's all worked out - no
other topics depend on this one so it can be skipped safely.

Ingo
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