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author | Sergey Bugaev <bugaevc@gmail.com> | 2023-04-14 22:36:56 +0300 |
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committer | Samuel Thibault <samuel.thibault@ens-lyon.org> | 2023-04-17 21:00:02 +0200 |
commit | e411e31b7b74f4b2326b65544994c89d84d2cdd8 (patch) | |
tree | a930610a47f85447e45be356deb2151c2b96392a | |
parent | 060cadaab64083b415054508fb6f221be74d95d2 (diff) | |
download | glibc-e411e31b7b74f4b2326b65544994c89d84d2cdd8.tar.gz glibc-e411e31b7b74f4b2326b65544994c89d84d2cdd8.tar.xz glibc-e411e31b7b74f4b2326b65544994c89d84d2cdd8.zip |
hurd: Fix restoring reply port in sigreturn
We must not use the user's reply port (scp->sc_reply_port) for any of our own RPCs, otherwise various things break. So, use MACH_PORT_DEAD as a reply port when destroying our reply port, and make sure to do this after _hurd_sigstate_unlock (), which may do a gsync_wake () RPC. Signed-off-by: Sergey Bugaev <bugaevc@gmail.com>
-rw-r--r-- | sysdeps/mach/hurd/i386/sigreturn.c | 35 |
1 files changed, 23 insertions, 12 deletions
diff --git a/sysdeps/mach/hurd/i386/sigreturn.c b/sysdeps/mach/hurd/i386/sigreturn.c index 4f19671069..a0fc8891b7 100644 --- a/sysdeps/mach/hurd/i386/sigreturn.c +++ b/sysdeps/mach/hurd/i386/sigreturn.c @@ -26,11 +26,29 @@ register int *sp asm ("%esp"); /* This is run on the thread stack after restoring it, to be able to unlock SS off sigstack. */ static void -__sigreturn2 (int *usp) +__sigreturn2 (int *usp, struct sigcontext *scp) { + mach_port_t reply_port; struct hurd_sigstate *ss = _hurd_self_sigstate (); _hurd_sigstate_unlock (ss); + /* Destroy the MiG reply port used by the signal handler, and restore the + reply port in use by the thread when interrupted. + + We cannot use the original reply port for our RPCs that we do here, since + we could unexpectedly receive/consume a reply message meant for the user + (in particular, msg_sig_post_reply), and also since we would deallocate + the port if *our* RPC fails, which we don't want to do since the user + still has the old name. And so, temporarily set MACH_PORT_DEAD as our + reply name, and make sure destroying the port is the very last RPC we + do. */ + reply_port = THREAD_GETMEM (THREAD_SELF, reply_port); + THREAD_SETMEM (THREAD_SELF, reply_port, MACH_PORT_DEAD); + if (MACH_PORT_VALID (reply_port)) + (void) __mach_port_mod_refs (__mach_task_self (), reply_port, + MACH_PORT_RIGHT_RECEIVE, -1); + THREAD_SETMEM (THREAD_SELF, reply_port, scp->sc_reply_port); + sp = usp; #define A(line) asm volatile (#line) /* The members in the sigcontext are arranged in this order @@ -58,7 +76,6 @@ __sigreturn (struct sigcontext *scp) { struct hurd_sigstate *ss; struct hurd_userlink *link = (void *) &scp[1]; - mach_port_t reply_port; if (scp == NULL || (scp->sc_mask & _SIG_CANT_MASK)) { @@ -98,13 +115,6 @@ __sigreturn (struct sigcontext *scp) if (scp->sc_onstack) ss->sigaltstack.ss_flags &= ~SS_ONSTACK; - /* Destroy the MiG reply port used by the signal handler, and restore the - reply port in use by the thread when interrupted. */ - reply_port = THREAD_GETMEM (THREAD_SELF, reply_port); - THREAD_SETMEM (THREAD_SELF, reply_port, scp->sc_reply_port); - if (MACH_PORT_VALID (reply_port)) - __mach_port_destroy (__mach_task_self (), reply_port); - if (scp->sc_fpused) /* Restore the FPU state. Mach conveniently stores the state in the format the i387 `frstor' instruction uses to restore it. */ @@ -115,15 +125,16 @@ __sigreturn (struct sigcontext *scp) copy the registers onto the user's stack, switch there, pop and return. */ - int *usp = (int *) scp->sc_uesp; + int usp_arg, *usp = (int *) scp->sc_uesp; *--usp = scp->sc_eip; *--usp = scp->sc_efl; memcpy (usp -= 12, &scp->sc_i386_thread_state, 12 * sizeof (int)); + usp_arg = (int) usp; + *--usp = (int) scp; /* Pass usp to __sigreturn2 so it can unwind itself easily. */ - *(usp-1) = (int) usp; - --usp; + *--usp = usp_arg; /* Bogus return address for __sigreturn2 */ *--usp = 0; *--usp = (int) __sigreturn2; |