From: Cyrill Gorcunov <gorcunov@gmail.com>
To: Andy Lutomirski <luto@amacapital.net>
Cc: Christopher Covington <cov@codeaurora.org>,
Maxim Kuvyrkov <maxim.kuvyrkov@linaro.org>,
Linaro Dev Mailman List <linaro-dev@lists.linaro.org>,
Arnd Bergmann <arnd.bergmann@linaro.org>,
Mark Brown <broonie@linaro.org>,
"linux-mm@kvack.org" <linux-mm@kvack.org>,
Dmitry Safonov <dsafonov@virtuozzo.com>
Subject: Re: JITs and 52-bit VA
Date: Wed, 22 Jun 2016 22:18:43 +0300 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <20160622191843.GA2045@uranus.lan> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <CALCETrWQi1n4nbk1BdEnvXy1u3-4fX7kgWn6OerqOxHM6OCgXA@mail.gmail.com>
On Wed, Jun 22, 2016 at 08:13:29AM -0700, Andy Lutomirski wrote:
...
> >
> > However based on the above discussion, it appears that some sort of
> > prctl(PR_GET_TASK_SIZE, ...) and prctl(PR_SET_TASK_SIZE, ...) may be
> > preferable for AArch64. (And perhaps other justifications for the new
> > calls influences the x86 decisions.) What do folks think?
>
> I would advocate a slightly different approach:
>
> - Keep TASK_SIZE either unconditionally matching the hardware or keep
> TASK_SIZE as the actual logical split between user and kernel
> addresses. Don't let it change at runtime under any circumstances.
> The reason is that there have been plenty of bugs and
> overcomplications that result from letting it vary. For example, if
> (addr < TASK_SIZE) really ought to be the correct check (assuming
> USER_DS, anyway) for whether dereferencing addr will access user
> memory, at least on architectures with a global address space (which
> is most of them, I think).
>
> - If needed, introduce a clean concept of the maximum address that
> mmap will return, but don't call it TASK_SIZE. So, if a user program
> wants to limit itself to less than the full hardware VA space (or less
> than 63 bits, for that matter), it can.
>
> As an example, a 32-bit x86 program really could have something mapped
> above the 32-bit boundary. It just wouldn't be useful, but the kernel
> should still understand that it's *user* memory.
>
> So you'd have PR_SET_MMAP_LIMIT and PR_GET_MMAP_LIMIT or similar instead.
+1. Also it might be (not sure though, just guessing) suitable to do such
thing via memory cgroup controller, instead of carrying this limit per
each process (or task structure/vma or mm).
> Also, before getting *too* excited about this kind of VA limit, keep
> in mind that SPARC has invented this thingly called "Application Data
> Integrity". It reuses some of the high address bits in hardware for
> other purposes. I wouldn't be totally shocked if other architectures
> followed suit. (Although no one should copy SPARC's tagging scheme,
> please: it's awful. these things should be controlled at the MMU
> level, not the cache tag level. Otherwise aliased mappings get very
> confused.)
Cyrill
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next prev parent reply other threads:[~2016-06-22 19:18 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 15+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
[not found] <4A8E6E6D-6CF7-4964-A62E-467AE287D415@linaro.org>
2016-06-22 14:53 ` JITs and 52-bit VA Christopher Covington
2016-06-22 15:13 ` Andy Lutomirski
2016-06-22 19:18 ` Cyrill Gorcunov [this message]
2016-06-22 19:20 ` Andy Lutomirski
2016-06-22 19:44 ` Cyrill Gorcunov
2016-06-22 20:46 ` Andy Lutomirski
2016-06-22 21:38 ` Cyrill Gorcunov
2016-06-22 19:56 ` Dave Hansen
2016-06-22 20:10 ` Cyrill Gorcunov
2016-06-22 20:17 ` Cyrill Gorcunov
2016-06-22 20:24 ` Kirill A. Shutemov
2016-06-22 20:41 ` Dave Hansen
2016-06-22 21:06 ` Cyrill Gorcunov
2016-06-23 8:20 ` Dmitry Safonov
2016-06-22 15:40 ` Kirill A. Shutemov
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