On Sun, 9 Jan 2022 at 16:36, Warner Losh <i...@bsdimp.com> wrote: > > setup_frame sets up a signalled stack frame. Associated routines to > extract the pointer to the stack frame and to support alternate stacks. > > Signed-off-by: Stacey Son <s...@freebsd.org> > Signed-off-by: Kyle Evans <kev...@freebsd.org> > Signed-off-by: Warner Losh <i...@bsdimp.com> > --- > bsd-user/signal.c | 166 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++------ > 1 file changed, 144 insertions(+), 22 deletions(-) > > diff --git a/bsd-user/signal.c b/bsd-user/signal.c > index 8dadc9a39a7..8e1427553da 100644 > --- a/bsd-user/signal.c > +++ b/bsd-user/signal.c > @@ -30,11 +30,27 @@ > * fork. > */ > > +static target_stack_t target_sigaltstack_used = { > + .ss_sp = 0, > + .ss_size = 0, > + .ss_flags = TARGET_SS_DISABLE, > +};
sigaltstacks are per-thread, so this needs to be in the TaskState, not global. (We fixed this in linux-user in commit 5bfce0b74fbd5d5 in 2019: the change is relatively small.) > + > static struct target_sigaction sigact_table[TARGET_NSIG]; > static void host_signal_handler(int host_sig, siginfo_t *info, void *puc); > static void target_to_host_sigset_internal(sigset_t *d, > const target_sigset_t *s); > > +static inline int on_sig_stack(unsigned long sp) > +{ > + return sp - target_sigaltstack_used.ss_sp < > target_sigaltstack_used.ss_size; > +} > + > +static inline int sas_ss_flags(unsigned long sp) > +{ > + return target_sigaltstack_used.ss_size == 0 ? SS_DISABLE : > on_sig_stack(sp) > + ? SS_ONSTACK : 0; > +} > > int host_to_target_signal(int sig) > { > @@ -336,28 +352,6 @@ void queue_signal(CPUArchState *env, int sig, > target_siginfo_t *info) > return; > } > > -static int fatal_signal(int sig) > -{ > - > - switch (sig) { > - case TARGET_SIGCHLD: > - case TARGET_SIGURG: > - case TARGET_SIGWINCH: > - case TARGET_SIGINFO: > - /* Ignored by default. */ > - return 0; > - case TARGET_SIGCONT: > - case TARGET_SIGSTOP: > - case TARGET_SIGTSTP: > - case TARGET_SIGTTIN: > - case TARGET_SIGTTOU: > - /* Job control signals. */ > - return 0; > - default: > - return 1; > - } > -} There wasn't any need to move this function, I think ? > - > /* > * Force a synchronously taken QEMU_SI_FAULT signal. For QEMU the > * 'force' part is handled in process_pending_signals(). > @@ -484,6 +478,134 @@ static void host_signal_handler(int host_sig, siginfo_t > *info, void *puc) > cpu_exit(thread_cpu); > } > > +static int fatal_signal(int sig) > +{ > + > + switch (sig) { > + case TARGET_SIGCHLD: > + case TARGET_SIGURG: > + case TARGET_SIGWINCH: > + case TARGET_SIGINFO: > + /* Ignored by default. */ > + return 0; > + case TARGET_SIGCONT: > + case TARGET_SIGSTOP: > + case TARGET_SIGTSTP: > + case TARGET_SIGTTIN: > + case TARGET_SIGTTOU: > + /* Job control signals. */ > + return 0; > + default: > + return 1; > + } > +} > + > +static inline abi_ulong get_sigframe(struct target_sigaction *ka, > + CPUArchState *regs, size_t frame_size) > +{ > + abi_ulong sp; > + > + /* Use default user stack */ > + sp = get_sp_from_cpustate(regs); > + > + if ((ka->sa_flags & TARGET_SA_ONSTACK) && (sas_ss_flags(sp) == 0)) { > + sp = target_sigaltstack_used.ss_sp + > + target_sigaltstack_used.ss_size; > + } > + > +#if defined(TARGET_MIPS) || defined(TARGET_ARM) > + return (sp - frame_size) & ~7; > +#elif defined(TARGET_AARCH64) > + return (sp - frame_size) & ~15; > +#else > + return sp - frame_size; > +#endif We don't need to do it in this patchseries, but you should strongly consider pulling the architecture-specifics out in a way that avoids this kind of ifdef ladder. > +} > + > +/* compare to mips/mips/pm_machdep.c and sparc64/sparc64/machdep.c sendsig() > */ > +static void setup_frame(int sig, int code, struct target_sigaction *ka, > + target_sigset_t *set, target_siginfo_t *tinfo, CPUArchState *regs) > +{ > + struct target_sigframe *frame; > + abi_ulong frame_addr; > + int i; > + > + frame_addr = get_sigframe(ka, regs, sizeof(*frame)); > + trace_user_setup_frame(regs, frame_addr); > + if (!lock_user_struct(VERIFY_WRITE, frame, frame_addr, 0)) { > + goto give_sigsegv; FreeBSD for Arm (haven't checked other BSDs or other archs) gives a SIGILL for the "can't write signal frame to stack" case, I think: https://github.com/freebsd/freebsd-src/blob/main/sys/arm/arm/exec_machdep.c#L316 I don't understand why they picked SIGILL, SIGSEGV seems much more logical to me, but we should follow the kernel behaviour. > + } > + > + memset(frame, 0, sizeof(*frame)); > +#if defined(TARGET_MIPS) > + int mflags = on_sig_stack(frame_addr) ? TARGET_MC_ADD_MAGIC : > + TARGET_MC_SET_ONSTACK | TARGET_MC_ADD_MAGIC; > +#else > + int mflags = 0; > +#endif > + if (get_mcontext(regs, &frame->sf_uc.uc_mcontext, mflags)) { > + goto give_sigsegv; The FreeBSD kernel get_mcontext() can't fail -- why can ours ? (This matters because SIGSEGV may not be the right response to whatever the failure case is.) > + } > + > + for (i = 0; i < TARGET_NSIG_WORDS; i++) { > + if (__put_user(set->__bits[i], &frame->sf_uc.uc_sigmask.__bits[i])) { > + goto give_sigsegv; __get_user() and __put_user() in QEMU can't fail, so you don't need to check for errors here, unlike the non-double-underscore versions. At some point you might want to take the current linux-user versions of these user-access functions/macros: it looks like bsd-user has an older version which doesn't handle the case where the guest has looser alignment restrictions than the host. The new ones actually expand to do { ... } while(0) statements which won't be valid inside an if() condition. (Historical note: the reason QEMU's __put_user/__get_user ever had return values at all is that the linux-user code was copy-and-pasted from the Linux kernel. In the Linux kernel handling of writing data to userspace is/was error-checked on every write, whereas QEMU does the "is this writable" test once with the lock_user function and then can assume all the writes to that area succeed. But we still started with a lot of copy-pasted code that was doing unnecessary checks on __put_user and __get_user return values. FreeBSD seems to handle write-checking in yet a third way, by assembling the struct in kernel-space and checking for writability once at the end when it copies the whole block out to userspace.) > + } > + } > + > + if (tinfo) { > + frame->sf_si.si_signo = tinfo->si_signo; > + frame->sf_si.si_errno = tinfo->si_errno; > + frame->sf_si.si_code = tinfo->si_code; > + frame->sf_si.si_pid = tinfo->si_pid; > + frame->sf_si.si_uid = tinfo->si_uid; > + frame->sf_si.si_status = tinfo->si_status; > + frame->sf_si.si_addr = tinfo->si_addr; > + > + if (TARGET_SIGILL == sig || TARGET_SIGFPE == sig || > + TARGET_SIGSEGV == sig || TARGET_SIGBUS == sig || > + TARGET_SIGTRAP == sig) { > + frame->sf_si._reason._fault._trapno = > tinfo->_reason._fault._trapno; > + } > + > + /* > + * If si_code is one of SI_QUEUE, SI_TIMER, SI_ASYNCIO, or > + * SI_MESGQ, then si_value contains the application-specified > + * signal value. Otherwise, the contents of si_value are > + * undefined. > + */ > + if (SI_QUEUE == code || SI_TIMER == code || SI_ASYNCIO == code || > + SI_MESGQ == code) { > + frame->sf_si.si_value.sival_int = tinfo->si_value.sival_int; > + } > + > + if (SI_TIMER == code) { > + frame->sf_si._reason._timer._timerid = > + tinfo->_reason._timer._timerid; > + frame->sf_si._reason._timer._overrun = > + tinfo->_reason._timer._overrun; > + } > + > +#ifdef SIGPOLL > + if (SIGPOLL == sig) { > + frame->sf_si._reason._band = tinfo->_reason._band; > + } > +#endif This seems to be yet a third set of the logic for handling target_siginfo_t's union, to go along with tswap_siginfo() and host_to_target_siginfo_noswap(), except that the logic here is different. linux-user calls tswap_siginfo() in its signal-frame setup code. > + > + } > + > + if (set_sigtramp_args(regs, sig, frame, frame_addr, ka)) { > + goto give_sigsegv; > + } set_sigtramp_args() can't fail. (Not sure why it has a non-void return type.) > + > + unlock_user_struct(frame, frame_addr, 1); > + return; > + > +give_sigsegv: > + unlock_user_struct(frame, frame_addr, 1); > + force_sig(TARGET_SIGSEGV); > +} > + > void signal_init(void) > { > TaskState *ts = (TaskState *)thread_cpu->opaque; > -- > 2.33.1 thanks -- PMM