Re: [PATCH] x86-64: espfix for 64-bit mode *PROTOTYPE*

From: Andrew Lutomirski
Date: Tue Apr 22 2014 - 13:11:33 EST


On Tue, Apr 22, 2014 at 10:04 AM, Linus Torvalds
<torvalds@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> On Tue, Apr 22, 2014 at 10:00 AM, Andrew Lutomirski <amluto@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>
>> My point is that it may be safe to remove the special espfix fixup
>> from #PF, which is probably the most performance-critical piece here,
>> aside from iret itself.
>
> Actually, even that is unsafe.
>
> Why?
>
> The segment table is shared for a process. So you can have one thread
> doing a load_ldt() that invalidates a segment, while another thread is
> busy taking a page fault. The segment was valid at page fault time and
> is saved on the kernel stack, but by the time the page fault returns,
> it is no longer valid and the iretq will fault.

Let me try that again: I think it should be safe to remove the check
for "did we fault from the espfix stack" from the #PF entry. You can
certainly have all kinds of weird things happen on return from #PF,
but the overhead that I'm talking about is a test on exception *entry*
to see whether the fault happened on the espfix stack so that we can
switch back to running on a real stack.

If the espfix code and the iret at the end can't cause #PF, then the
check in #PF entry can be removed, I think.

>
> Anyway, if done correctly, this whole espfix should be totally free
> for normal processes, since it should only trigger if SS is a LDT
> entry (bit #2 set in the segment descriptor). So the normal fast-path
> should just have a simple test for that.

How? Doesn't something still need to check whether SS is funny before
doing iret?

--Andy
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