Re: [PATCH v4 2/2] arm64: enable context tracking

From: Kevin Hilman
Date: Thu May 22 2014 - 20:11:48 EST


+Mark Rutland

Christopher Covington <cov@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes:

> Hi Larry,
>
> On 05/22/2014 03:27 PM, Larry Bassel wrote:
>> Make calls to ct_user_enter when the kernel is exited
>> and ct_user_exit when the kernel is entered (in el0_da,
>> el0_ia, el0_svc, el0_irq and all of the "error" paths).
>>
>> These macros expand to function calls which will only work
>> properly if el0_sync and related code has been rearranged
>> (in a previous patch of this series).
>>
>> The calls to ct_user_exit are made after hw debugging has been
>> enabled (enable_dbg_and_irq).
>>
>> The call to ct_user_enter is made at the beginning of the
>> kernel_exit macro.
>>
>> This patch is based on earlier work by Kevin Hilman.
>> Save/restore optimizations were also done by Kevin.
>
>> --- a/arch/arm64/kernel/entry.S
>> +++ b/arch/arm64/kernel/entry.S
>> @@ -30,6 +30,44 @@
>> #include <asm/unistd32.h>
>>
>> /*
>> + * Context tracking subsystem. Used to instrument transitions
>> + * between user and kernel mode.
>> + */
>> + .macro ct_user_exit, restore = 0
>> +#ifdef CONFIG_CONTEXT_TRACKING
>> + bl context_tracking_user_exit
>> + .if \restore == 1
>> + /*
>> + * Save/restore needed during syscalls. Restore syscall arguments from
>> + * the values already saved on stack during kernel_entry.
>> + */
>> + ldp x0, x1, [sp]
>> + ldp x2, x3, [sp, #S_X2]
>> + ldp x4, x5, [sp, #S_X4]
>> + ldp x6, x7, [sp, #S_X6]
>> + .endif
>> +#endif
>> + .endm
>> +
>> + .macro ct_user_enter, save = 0
>> +#ifdef CONFIG_CONTEXT_TRACKING
>> + .if \save == 1
>> + /*
>> + * Save/restore only needed on syscall fastpath, which uses
>> + * x0-x2.
>> + */
>> + push x2, x3
>
> Why is x3 saved?

I'll respond here since I worked with Larry on the context save/restore
part.

[insert rather embarassing disclamer of ignorance of arm64 assembly]

Based on my reading of the code, I figured only x0-x2 needed to be
saved. However, based on some experiments with intentionally clobbering
the registers[1] (as suggested by Mark Rutland) in order to make sure
we're saving/restoring the right things, I discovered x3 was needed too
(I missed updating the comment to mention x0-x3.)

Maybe Will/Catalin/Mark R. can shed some light here?

Kevin

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