[PATCH v3 2/4] x86/syscall: update and extend selftest syscall_numbering_64

From: H. Peter Anvin
Date: Fri May 14 2021 - 21:11:01 EST


From: "H. Peter Anvin (Intel)" <hpa@xxxxxxxxx>

Update the syscall_numbering_64 selftest to reflect that a system call
is to be extended from 32 bits. Add a mix of tests for valid and
invalid system calls in 64-bit and x32 space.

Use an explicit system call instruction, because we cannot know if the
glibc syscall() wrapper intercepts instructions, extends the system
call number independently, or anything similar.

Use long long instead of long to make it possible to compile this test
on x32 as well as 64 bits.

Signed-off-by: H. Peter Anvin (Intel) <hpa@xxxxxxxxx>
---
.../testing/selftests/x86/syscall_numbering.c | 274 ++++++++++++++----
1 file changed, 222 insertions(+), 52 deletions(-)

diff --git a/tools/testing/selftests/x86/syscall_numbering.c b/tools/testing/selftests/x86/syscall_numbering.c
index d6b09cb1aa2c..b578cd3c6b3c 100644
--- a/tools/testing/selftests/x86/syscall_numbering.c
+++ b/tools/testing/selftests/x86/syscall_numbering.c
@@ -1,6 +1,8 @@
/* SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 */
/*
- * syscall_arg_fault.c - tests faults 32-bit fast syscall stack args
+ * syscall_numbering.c - test calling the x86-64 kernel with various
+ * valid and invalid system call numbers.
+ *
* Copyright (c) 2018 Andrew Lutomirski
*/

@@ -11,79 +13,247 @@
#include <stdbool.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include <unistd.h>
-#include <syscall.h>
+#include <string.h>
+#include <fcntl.h>
+#include <limits.h>

-static int nerrs;
+/* Common system call numbers */
+#define SYS_READ 0
+#define SYS_WRITE 1
+#define SYS_GETPID 39
+/* x64-only system call numbers */
+#define X64_IOCTL 16
+#define X64_READV 19
+#define X64_WRITEV 20
+/* x32-only system call numbers (without X32_BIT) */
+#define X32_IOCTL 514
+#define X32_READV 515
+#define X32_WRITEV 516

-#define X32_BIT 0x40000000UL
+#define X32_BIT 0x40000000

-static void check_enosys(unsigned long nr, bool *ok)
+static unsigned int nerr = 0; /* Cumulative error count */
+static int nullfd = -1; /* File descriptor for /dev/null */
+
+/*
+ * Directly invokes the given syscall with nullfd as the first argument
+ * and the rest zero. Avoids involving glibc wrappers in case they ever
+ * end up intercepting some system calls for some reason, or modify
+ * the system call number itself.
+ */
+static inline long long probe_syscall(int msb, int lsb)
{
- /* If this fails, a segfault is reasonably likely. */
- fflush(stdout);
-
- long ret = syscall(nr, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0);
- if (ret == 0) {
- printf("[FAIL]\tsyscall %lu succeeded, but it should have failed\n", nr);
- *ok = false;
- } else if (errno != ENOSYS) {
- printf("[FAIL]\tsyscall %lu had error code %d, but it should have reported ENOSYS\n", nr, errno);
- *ok = false;
- }
+ register long long arg1 asm("rdi") = nullfd;
+ register long long arg2 asm("rsi") = 0;
+ register long long arg3 asm("rdx") = 0;
+ register long long arg4 asm("r10") = 0;
+ register long long arg5 asm("r8") = 0;
+ register long long arg6 asm("r9") = 0;
+ long long nr = ((long long)msb << 32) | (unsigned int)lsb;
+ long long ret;
+
+ asm volatile("syscall"
+ : "=a" (ret)
+ : "a" (nr), "r" (arg1), "r" (arg2), "r" (arg3),
+ "r" (arg4), "r" (arg5), "r" (arg6)
+ : "rcx", "r11", "memory", "cc");
+
+ return ret;
}

-static void test_x32_without_x32_bit(void)
+static const char *syscall_str(int msb, int start, int end)
{
- bool ok = true;
+ static char buf[64];
+ const char * const type = (start & X32_BIT) ? "x32" : "x64";
+ int lsb = start;

/*
- * Syscalls 512-547 are "x32" syscalls. They are intended to be
- * called with the x32 (0x40000000) bit set. Calling them without
- * the x32 bit set is nonsense and should not work.
+ * Improve readability by stripping the x32 bit, but round
+ * toward zero so we don't display -1 as -1073741825.
*/
- printf("[RUN]\tChecking syscalls 512-547\n");
- for (int i = 512; i <= 547; i++)
- check_enosys(i, &ok);
+ if (lsb < 0)
+ lsb |= X32_BIT;
+ else
+ lsb &= ~X32_BIT;
+
+ if (start == end)
+ snprintf(buf, sizeof buf, "%s syscall %d:%d",
+ type, msb, lsb);
+ else
+ snprintf(buf, sizeof buf, "%s syscalls %d:%d..%d",
+ type, msb, lsb, lsb + (end-start));
+
+ return buf;
+}
+
+static unsigned int _check_for(int msb, int start, int end, long long expect,
+ const char *expect_str)
+{
+ unsigned int err = 0;
+
+ for (int nr = start; nr <= end; nr++) {
+ long long ret = probe_syscall(msb, nr);
+
+ if (ret != expect) {
+ printf("[FAIL]\t %s returned %lld, but it should have returned %s\n",
+ syscall_str(msb, nr, nr),
+ ret, expect_str);
+ err++;
+ }
+ }

+ if (err) {
+ nerr += err;
+ if (start != end)
+ printf("[FAIL]\t %s had %u failure%s\n",
+ syscall_str(msb, start, end),
+ err, (err == 1) ? "s" : "");
+ } else {
+ printf("[OK]\t %s returned %s as expected\n",
+ syscall_str(msb, start, end), expect_str);
+ }
+
+ return err;
+}
+
+#define check_for(msb,start,end,expect) \
+ _check_for(msb,start,end,expect,#expect)
+
+static bool check_zero(int msb, int nr)
+{
+ return check_for(msb, nr, nr, 0);
+}
+
+static bool check_enosys(int msb, int nr)
+{
+ return check_for(msb, nr, nr, -ENOSYS);
+}
+
+/*
+ * Anyone diagnosing a failure will want to know whether the kernel
+ * supports x32. Tell them. This can also be used to conditionalize
+ * tests based on existence or nonexistence of x32.
+ */
+static bool test_x32(void)
+{
+ long long ret;
+ long long mypid = getpid();
+
+ printf("[RUN]\tChecking for x32 by calling x32 getpid()\n");
+ ret = probe_syscall(0, SYS_GETPID | X32_BIT);
+
+ if (ret == mypid) {
+ printf("[INFO]\t x32 is supported\n");
+ return true;
+ } else if (ret == -ENOSYS) {
+ printf("[INFO]\t x32 is not supported\n");
+ return false;
+ } else {
+ printf("[FAIL]\t x32 getpid() returned %lld, but it should have returned either %lld or -ENOSYS\n", ret, mypid);
+ nerr++;
+ return true; /* Proceed as if... */
+ }
+}
+
+static void test_syscalls_common(int msb)
+{
+ printf("[RUN]\t Checking some common syscalls as 64 bit\n");
+ check_zero(msb, SYS_READ);
+ check_zero(msb, SYS_WRITE);
+
+ printf("[RUN]\t Checking some 64-bit only syscalls as 64 bit\n");
+ check_zero(msb, X64_READV);
+ check_zero(msb, X64_WRITEV);
+
+ printf("[RUN]\t Checking out of range system calls\n");
+ check_for(msb, -64, -1, -ENOSYS);
+ check_for(msb, X32_BIT-64, X32_BIT-1, -ENOSYS);
+ check_for(msb, -64-X32_BIT, -1-X32_BIT, -ENOSYS);
+ check_for(msb, INT_MAX-64, INT_MAX-1, -ENOSYS);
+}
+
+static void test_syscalls_with_x32(int msb)
+{
/*
- * Check that a handful of 64-bit-only syscalls are rejected if the x32
- * bit is set.
+ * Syscalls 512-547 are "x32" syscalls. They are
+ * intended to be called with the x32 (0x40000000) bit
+ * set. Calling them without the x32 bit set is
+ * nonsense and should not work.
*/
- printf("[RUN]\tChecking some 64-bit syscalls in x32 range\n");
- check_enosys(16 | X32_BIT, &ok); /* ioctl */
- check_enosys(19 | X32_BIT, &ok); /* readv */
- check_enosys(20 | X32_BIT, &ok); /* writev */
+ printf("[RUN]\t Checking x32 syscalls as 64 bit\n");
+ check_for(msb, 512 | X32_BIT, 547 | X32_BIT, -ENOSYS);
+
+ printf("[RUN]\t Checking some common syscalls as x32\n");
+ check_zero(msb, SYS_READ | X32_BIT);
+ check_zero(msb, SYS_WRITE | X32_BIT);
+
+ printf("[RUN]\t Checking some x32 syscalls as x32\n");
+ check_zero(msb, X32_READV | X32_BIT);
+ check_zero(msb, X32_WRITEV | X32_BIT);
+
+ printf("[RUN]\t Checking some 64-bit syscalls as x32\n");
+ check_enosys(msb, X64_IOCTL | X32_BIT);
+ check_enosys(msb, X64_READV | X32_BIT);
+ check_enosys(msb, X64_WRITEV | X32_BIT);
+}
+
+static void test_syscalls_without_x32(int msb)
+{
+ printf("[RUN]\t Checking for absence of x32 system calls\n");
+ check_for(msb, 0 | X32_BIT, 999 | X32_BIT, -ENOSYS);
+}
+
+static void test_syscall_numbering(void)
+{
+ static const int msbs[] = {
+ 0, 1, -1, X32_BIT-1, X32_BIT, X32_BIT-1, -X32_BIT, INT_MAX,
+ INT_MIN, INT_MIN+1
+ };
+ bool with_x32 = test_x32();

/*
- * Check some syscalls with high bits set.
+ * The MSB is supposed to be ignored, so we loop over a few
+ * to test that out.
*/
- printf("[RUN]\tChecking numbers above 2^32-1\n");
- check_enosys((1UL << 32), &ok);
- check_enosys(X32_BIT | (1UL << 32), &ok);
+ for (size_t i = 0; i < sizeof(msbs)/sizeof(msbs[0]); i++) {
+ int msb = msbs[i];
+ printf("[RUN]\tChecking system calls with msb = %d (0x%x)\n",
+ msb, msb);

- if (!ok)
- nerrs++;
- else
- printf("[OK]\tThey all returned -ENOSYS\n");
+ test_syscalls_common(msb);
+ if (with_x32)
+ test_syscalls_with_x32(msb);
+ else
+ test_syscalls_without_x32(msb);
+ }
}

-int main()
+int main(void)
{
/*
- * Anyone diagnosing a failure will want to know whether the kernel
- * supports x32. Tell them.
+ * It is quite likely to get a segfault on a failure, so make
+ * sure the message gets out by setting stdout to nonbuffered.
*/
- printf("\tChecking for x32...");
- fflush(stdout);
- if (syscall(39 | X32_BIT, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0) >= 0) {
- printf(" supported\n");
- } else if (errno == ENOSYS) {
- printf(" not supported\n");
- } else {
- printf(" confused\n");
- }
+ setvbuf(stdout, NULL, _IONBF, 0);

- test_x32_without_x32_bit();
+ /*
+ * Harmless file descriptor to work on...
+ */
+ nullfd = open("/dev/null", O_RDWR);
+ if (nullfd < 0) {
+ printf("[FAIL]\tUnable to open /dev/null: %s\n",
+ strerror(errno));
+ printf("[SKIP]\tCannot execute test\n");
+ return 71; /* EX_OSERR */
+ }

- return nerrs ? 1 : 0;
+ test_syscall_numbering();
+ if (!nerr) {
+ printf("[OK]\tAll system calls succeeded or failed as expected\n");
+ return 0;
+ } else {
+ printf("[FAIL]\tA total of %u system call%s had incorrect behavior\n",
+ nerr, nerr != 1 ? "s" : "");
+ return 1;
+ }
}
--
2.31.1