Re: [PATCH 03/11] fs: add new read_uptr and write_uptr file operations

From: Christoph Hellwig
Date: Wed Jun 24 2020 - 14:14:42 EST


On Wed, Jun 24, 2020 at 11:11:50AM -0700, Linus Torvalds wrote:
> What I mean was *not* something like uptr_t.
>
> Just keep the existing "set_fs()". It's not harmful if it's only used
> occasionally. We should rename it once it's rare enough, though.
>
> Then, make the following changes:
>
> - all the normal user access functions stop caring. They use
> TASK_SIZE_MAX and are done with it. They basically stop reacting to
> set_fs().
>
> - then, we can have a few *very* specific cases (like setsockopt,
> maybe some random read/write) that we teach to use the new set_fs()
> thing.
>
> So in *those* cases, we'd basically just do "oh, ok, we are supposed
> to use a kernel pointer" based on the setfs value.
>
> IOW, I mean tto do something much more gradual. No new interfaces, no
> new types, just a couple of (very clearly marked!) cases of the legacy
> set_fs() behavior.

So we'd need new user copy functions for just those cases, and make
sure everything below the potential get_fs-NG uses them. But without
any kind of tape safety to easily validate all users below actually
use them? I just don't see how that makes sense.

FYI, I think the only users where we really need it are setsockopt
and a s390-specific driver from my audits so far. Everything else
shouldn't need anything like that.