On 2019/07/19 5:27, Andy Lutomirski wrote: > Hi all- > > I suspect that a bunch of the bugs you're all finding boil down to: > > - Nested debug exceptions could corrupt the outer exception's DR6. > - Nested debug exceptions in which *both* exceptions came from the > kernel were probably all kinds of buggy > - Data breakpoints in bad places in the kernel were bad news > > Could you give this not-quite-finished series a try? > > https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/luto/linux.git/ >
Though I'm still trying to find out other cases(other areas which could be buggy if we set hw breakpoints), as far as I tested, there is no problem so far. If I understand correctly, the call trace and the dr6 value will be: ==== debug() // dr6: 0xffff4ff0, user_mode: 1 TRACE_IRQS_OFF arch_stack_user_walk() debug() // dr6: 0xffff4ff1 == 0xffff4ff0 | 0xffff0ff1 ... (*) do_debug() WARN_ON_ONCE do_debug() // dr6: 0xffff0ff0(cleared in the above do_debug()) (*) : > * The Intel SDM says: > * > * Certain debug exceptions may clear bits 0-3. The remaining > * contents of the DR6 register are never cleared by the > * processor. To avoid confusion in identifying debug > * exceptions, debug handlers should clear the register before > * returning to the interrupted task. ==== Note: printk() in do_debug() can cause infinite loop(printk() -> irq_disable() -> do_debug() -> printk() ...), so printk_deferred() was preferable. Thanks Eiichi