Re: [libseccomp-discuss] Making a universal list of syscalls?

From: Eric Paris
Date: Thu Feb 27 2014 - 15:54:00 EST


On Thu, 2014-02-27 at 12:40 -0800, Andy Lutomirski wrote:
> Currently, dealing with Linux syscalls in an architecture-independent
> way is a mess. Here are some issues:
>
> 1. There's no clean way to map between syscall names and numbers on
> different architectures. The kernel contains a number of tables (that
> work differently for different architectures). strace has some arcane
> mechanism. libseccomp has another.

userspace audit a 3rd.

> I'd like to see a master list in the kernel that lists, for every
> syscall, the name, the number for each architecture that implements it
> (using the AUDIT_ARCH semantics, probably), and the signature. The
> build process could parse this table to replace the current per-arch
> mess.

I know for audit it would be huge if userspace didn't try to organically
grow this knowledge on their own! So +1 from me!

>
> Issues here: some syscalls have different signatures on different
> architectures. Maybe we could require that a canonical syscall name
> would have the same signature everywhere, but architectures could
> specify alternate names. So, for things like clone (?), there could
> actually be a few syscalls that all have alternate names of "clone".
>
> More importantly, we could add a library in tools that exposes this
> information to userspace. Useful operations:
>
> - For a given (arch, nr), indicate, for each logical argument, which
> physical argument slot is used or, if the argument is split into a
> high and low part, which pair of slots is used.
>
> - For a given (nr, logical args), issue the syscall for the
> architecture that build the library.
>
> - For a given (arch, nr, logical args), issue the syscall if
> possible. An x86_32 build could issue x86_64 syscalls with some
> effort, and an x86_64 build could easily issue 32-bit syscalls.
>
> - For a given arch, map between name and nr, and give access to the signature.
>
> If this happened, presumably all architectures that supported it would
> have to have valid AUDIT_ARCH support. That means that someone would
> have to fix ARM OABI (sigh).
>
> Thoughts?

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