On 03/06/2017 05:13 PM, Anthony Yznaga wrote:

On Feb 28, 2017, at 10:35 AM, Khalid Aziz <khalid.a...@oracle.com> wrote:

diff --git a/arch/sparc/kernel/etrap_64.S b/arch/sparc/kernel/etrap_64.S
index 1276ca2..7be33bf 100644
--- a/arch/sparc/kernel/etrap_64.S
+++ b/arch/sparc/kernel/etrap_64.S
@@ -132,7 +132,33 @@ etrap_save:        save    %g2, -STACK_BIAS, %sp
                stx     %g6, [%sp + PTREGS_OFF + PT_V9_G6]
                stx     %g7, [%sp + PTREGS_OFF + PT_V9_G7]
                or      %l7, %l0, %l7
-               sethi   %hi(TSTATE_TSO | TSTATE_PEF), %l0
+661:           sethi   %hi(TSTATE_TSO | TSTATE_PEF), %l0
+               /*
+                * If userspace is using ADI, it could potentially pass
+                * a pointer with version tag embedded in it. To maintain
+                * the ADI security, we must enable PSTATE.mcde. Userspace
+                * would have already set TTE.mcd in an earlier call to
+                * kernel and set the version tag for the address being
+                * dereferenced. Setting PSTATE.mcde would ensure any
+                * access to userspace data through a system call honors
+                * ADI and does not allow a rogue app to bypass ADI by
+                * using system calls. Setting PSTATE.mcde only affects
+                * accesses to virtual addresses that have TTE.mcd set.
+                * Set PMCDPER to ensure any exceptions caused by ADI
+                * version tag mismatch are exposed before system call
+                * returns to userspace. Setting PMCDPER affects only
+                * writes to virtual addresses that have TTE.mcd set and
+                * have a version tag set as well.
+                */
+               .section .sun_m7_1insn_patch, "ax"
+               .word   661b
+               sethi   %hi(TSTATE_TSO | TSTATE_PEF | TSTATE_MCDE), %l0
+               .previous
+661:           nop
+               .section .sun_m7_1insn_patch, "ax"
+               .word   661b
+               .word 0xaf902001        /* wrpr %g0, 1, %pmcdper */

Since PMCDPER is never cleared, setting it here is quickly going to set it on all CPUs 
and then become an expensive "nop" that burns ~50 cycles each time through 
etrap.  Consider setting it at boot time and when a CPU is DR'd into the system.

Anthony


I considered that possibility. What made me uncomfortable with that is there is no way to prevent a driver/module or future code elsewhere in kernel from clearing PMCDPER with possibly good reason. If that were to happen, setting PMCDPER here ensures kernel will always see consistent behavior with system calls. It does come at a cost. Is that cost unacceptable to ensure consistent behavior?

--
Khalid
--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-doc" in
the body of a message to majord...@vger.kernel.org
More majordomo info at  http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html

Reply via email to