Re: [RFC, PATCHv2 29/29] mm, x86: introduce RLIMIT_VADDR

From: Andy Lutomirski
Date: Mon Dec 26 2016 - 21:14:04 EST


On Mon, Dec 26, 2016 at 5:54 PM, Kirill A. Shutemov
<kirill.shutemov@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> This patch introduces new rlimit resource to manage maximum virtual
> address available to userspace to map.
>
> On x86, 5-level paging enables 56-bit userspace virtual address space.
> Not all user space is ready to handle wide addresses. It's known that
> at least some JIT compilers use high bit in pointers to encode their
> information. It collides with valid pointers with 5-level paging and
> leads to crashes.
>
> The patch aims to address this compatibility issue.
>
> MM would use min(RLIMIT_VADDR, TASK_SIZE) as upper limit of virtual
> address available to map by userspace.
>
> The default hard limit will be RLIM_INFINITY, which basically means that
> TASK_SIZE limits available address space.
>
> The soft limit will also be RLIM_INFINITY everywhere, but the machine
> with 5-level paging enabled. In this case, soft limit would be
> (1UL << 47) - PAGE_SIZE. Itâs current x86-64 TASK_SIZE_MAX with 4-level
> paging which known to be safe
>
> New rlimit resource would follow usual semantics with regards to
> inheritance: preserved on fork(2) and exec(2). This has potential to
> break application if limits set too wide or too narrow, but this is not
> uncommon for other resources (consider RLIMIT_DATA or RLIMIT_AS).
>
> As with other resources you can set the limit lower than current usage.
> It would affect only future virtual address space allocations.
>
> Use-cases for new rlimit:
>
> - Bumping the soft limit to RLIM_INFINITY, allows current process all
> its children to use addresses above 47-bits.
>
> - Bumping the soft limit to RLIM_INFINITY after fork(2), but before
> exec(2) allows the child to use addresses above 47-bits.
>
> - Lowering the hard limit to 47-bits would prevent current process all
> its children to use addresses above 47-bits, unless a process has
> CAP_SYS_RESOURCES.
>
> - Itâs also can be handy to lower hard or soft limit to arbitrary
> address. User-mode emulation in QEMU may lower the limit to 32-bit
> to emulate 32-bit machine on 64-bit host.

I tend to think that this should be a personality or an ELF flag, not
an rlimit. That way setuid works right.