Re: [PATCH 4/4] sigaltstack: allow disabling and re-enabling sas within sighandler

From: Andy Lutomirski
Date: Mon Feb 01 2016 - 13:29:27 EST


On Mon, Feb 1, 2016 at 10:16 AM, Stas Sergeev <stsp@xxxxxxx> wrote:
> 01.02.2016 21:04, Oleg Nesterov ÐÐÑÐÑ:
>> Yes, and SS_FORCE means "I know what I do", looks very simple.
> But to me its not because I don't know what to do with
> uc_stack after SS_FORCE is applied.
>
>> I won't argue, but to me it would be better to keep this EPERM if !force.
>> Just because we should avoid the incompatible changes if possible.
>
> Ok then. Lets implement SS_FORCE.
> What semantic should it have wrt uc_stack?
>
> sigaltstack(SS_DISABLE | SS_FORCE);
> swapcontext();
> sigaltstack(set up new_sas);
> rt_sigreturn();
>
> What's at the end? Do we want a surprise for the user
> that he's new_sas got ignored?

More detail please. What context are you returning to with
rt_sigreturn? What's in uc_stack?

Presumably we should continue to honor uc_stack in rt_sigreturn. I'm
less clear on whether we should have an implicit SS_FORCE when
restoring uc_stack. I'm also not clear on why uc_stack exists in the
first place.

If I were designing this from scratch, I'd have signal delivery for an
SA_ONSTACK signal save away the altstack information and clear it so
that nested signals work without checking sp during signal delivery.
But I'm not designing it from scratch, and I haven't spotted uc_stack
or similar mentioned in POSIX or the man page, so I'm not really clear
on what it's for.

--Andy