linuxppc-dev.lists.ozlabs.org archive mirror
 help / color / mirror / Atom feed
From: Jean Delvare <khali@linux-fr.org>
To: benh@kernel.crashing.org
Cc: parabelboi@bopserverein.de, Christian Krafft <krafft@de.ibm.com>,
	linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org, linuxppc-dev@ozlabs.org
Subject: Re: [Patch 0/2] powerpc: avoid userspace poking to legacy ioports
Date: Mon, 18 Feb 2008 21:58:42 +0100	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <20080218215842.66bb004f@hyperion.delvare> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <1203367323.6740.21.camel@pasglop>

On Tue, 19 Feb 2008 07:42:03 +1100, Benjamin Herrenschmidt wrote:
> 
> > Maybe Christian's patch can be improved to not do the check on these?
> > As long as /dev/port exists, it seems reasonable that the kernel should
> > behave, no matter what I/O ports are accessed from user-space.
> 
> nonsense.
> 
>  /dev/mem exists for example, but you are still not supposed to go
> bang all over the place in it.

You should at least be able to read from it without crashing the
machine. Of course writing is a different story.

> > > I hate that sensors_detect.. or for that matter any other userland code
> > > that pokes random ports like that. It should die.
> > 
> > What do you propose as a replacement?
> 
> Dunno, something less scary, like knowing where your sensors are on a
> given machine...

You mean, having a complete database for the, what, 4000 PC
motherboards out there? And maintaining it day after day? _This_ sounds
much scarier to me than the current situation.

> honestly, it's just scary the risk you guys are taking
> by banging random IO ports.

I don't remember anyone reporting problems with this in the past 3 or 4
years, so it doesn't seem to be a big problem in practice.

> At the very least, that shouldn't be done on non-x86.

I am surprised that anyone would actually run sensors-detect on
non-x86... Non-PC hardware usually doesn't have sensors driven by
"hwmon" drivers anyway, or people know what they have and do not need
detection. But I would be totally fine with updating sensors-detect to
skip some of the probes on non-x86 hardware. There are basically
3 /dev/port probes that are done currently:

* Super-I/O chips at 0x2e/0x2f and 0x4e/0x4f.

* Legacy PC hardware monitoring chips at 0x290-0x297.

* IPMI interface at 0x0ca3 and 0x0cab (read-only).

Please tell me which ones should be skipped on PowerPC.

Christian, can you tell me which of these probes caused trouble for you?

> > And how is userland code poking at random ports different from kernel
> > code poking at random ports? We could move sensors-detect inside the
> > kernel (and I have some plan to do that) but I fail to see how this
> > would solve this particular problem.
> 
> It wouldn't, but at least I could NAK it or make it CONFIG_X86 :-)

The same could be done for user-space (or at the /dev/port level.)

-- 
Jean Delvare

  reply	other threads:[~2008-02-18 20:58 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 11+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2008-02-13 17:28 [Patch 0/2] add check_legacy_ioport calls to prevent oops Christian Krafft
2008-02-13 17:35 ` [Patch 0/2] powerpc: avoid userspace poking to legacy ioports Christian Krafft
2008-02-13 20:42   ` Benjamin Herrenschmidt
2008-02-13 23:07     ` Arnd Bergmann
2008-02-18 20:15     ` Jean Delvare
2008-02-18 20:42       ` Benjamin Herrenschmidt
2008-02-18 20:58         ` Jean Delvare [this message]
2008-02-18 21:04           ` Arjan van de Ven
2008-02-18 21:05           ` Benjamin Herrenschmidt
2008-02-13 17:37 ` [Patch 2/2] powerpc: i2c-isa: add access check " Christian Krafft
2008-02-18 13:31   ` Jean Delvare

Reply instructions:

You may reply publicly to this message via plain-text email
using any one of the following methods:

* Save the following mbox file, import it into your mail client,
  and reply-to-all from there: mbox

  Avoid top-posting and favor interleaved quoting:
  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Posting_style#Interleaved_style

* Reply using the --to, --cc, and --in-reply-to
  switches of git-send-email(1):

  git send-email \
    --in-reply-to=20080218215842.66bb004f@hyperion.delvare \
    --to=khali@linux-fr.org \
    --cc=benh@kernel.crashing.org \
    --cc=krafft@de.ibm.com \
    --cc=linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org \
    --cc=linuxppc-dev@ozlabs.org \
    --cc=parabelboi@bopserverein.de \
    /path/to/YOUR_REPLY

  https://kernel.org/pub/software/scm/git/docs/git-send-email.html

* If your mail client supports setting the In-Reply-To header
  via mailto: links, try the mailto: link
Be sure your reply has a Subject: header at the top and a blank line before the message body.
This is a public inbox, see mirroring instructions
for how to clone and mirror all data and code used for this inbox;
as well as URLs for NNTP newsgroup(s).