On 9/8/2020 10:57 AM, Dave Hansen wrote:
On 9/8/20 10:50 AM, Yu, Yu-cheng wrote:
What about this:

- Do not add any new syscall or arch_prctl for creating a new shadow stack.

- Add a new arch_prctl that can turn an anonymous mapping to a shadow
stack mapping.

This allows the application to do whatever is necessary.  It can even
allow GDB or JIT code to create or fix a call stack.

Fine with me.  But, it's going to effectively be

        arch_prctl(PR_CONVERT_TO_SHS..., addr, len);

when it could just as easily be:

        madvise(addr, len, MADV_SHSTK...);

Or a new syscall.  The only question in my mind is whether we want to do
something generic that we can use for other similar things in the
future, like:

        madvise2(addr, len, flags, MADV2_SHSTK...);

I don't really feel strongly about it, though.  Could you please share
your logic on why you want a prctl() as opposed to a whole new syscall?


A new syscall is more intrusive, I think. When creating a new shadow stack, the kernel also installs a restore token on the top of the new shadow stack, and it is somewhat x86-specific. So far no other arch's need this.

Yes, madvise is better if the kernel only needs to change the mapping. The application itself can create the restore token before calling madvise().

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