Re: [RFC PATCH v2 0/3] An alternative __vdso_sgx_enter_enclave() to allow enclave/host parameter passing using untrusted stack

From: Xing, Cedric
Date: Wed Jul 10 2019 - 19:39:06 EST


On 7/10/2019 4:15 PM, Jarkko Sakkinen wrote:
On Thu, Jul 11, 2019 at 01:46:28AM +0300, Jarkko Sakkinen wrote:
On Wed, Jul 10, 2019 at 11:08:37AM -0700, Xing, Cedric wrote:
With these conclusions I think the current vDSO API is sufficient for
Linux.

The new vDSO API is to support data exchange on stack. It has nothing to do
with debugging. BTW, the community has closed on this.

And how that is useful?

The CFI directives are for stack unwinding. They don't affect what the code
does so you can just treat them as NOPs if you don't understand what they
do. However, they are useful to not only debuggers but also exception
handling code. libunwind also has a setjmp()/longjmp() implementation based
on CFI directives.

Of course I won't merge code of which usefulness I don't understand.

I re-read the cover letter [1] because it usually is the place
to "pitch" a feature.

It fails to address two things:

1. How and in what circumstances is an untrusted stack is a better
vessel for handling exceptions than the register based approach
that we already have?

We are not judging which vessel is better (or the best) among all possible vessels. We are trying to enable more vessels. Every vessel has its pros and cons so there's *no* single best vessel.

2. How is it simpler approach? There is a strong claim of simplicity
and convenience without anything backing it.

The major benefits in terms of simplicity realize in user mode applications. It's always a trade-off. This vDSO API takes 10-20 more lines than the original one but would save hundreds or even thousands in user applications.

Again, I don't want to repeat everything as you can look back at the lengthy discussion to dig out the details.

3. Why we need both register and stack based approach co-exist? I'd go
with one approach for a new API without any legacy whatsoever.

Neither is a legacy to the other. Supporting both approaches is by design. Again, the goal is to enable more vessels because there's *no* single best vessel.

This really needs a better pitch before we can consider doing anything
to it.

Also, in [2] there is talk about the next revision. Maybe the way go
forward is to address the three issues I found in the cover letter
and fix whatever needed to be fixed in the actual patches?

[1] https://lkml.org/lkml/2019/4/24/84
[2] https://lkml.org/lkml/2019/4/25/1170

Let me update the commit message for the vDSO API and send you a patch.

/Jarkko