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author | Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org> | 2024-09-13 11:11:56 -0300 |
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committer | Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org> | 2024-10-16 15:03:00 -0300 |
commit | 34b5783ea2740e704cf3839ec057343e61fac679 (patch) | |
tree | b101c418f700e429122652e988b05b0a8798a35a /sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/clock_settime.c | |
parent | c8dfbe64383cc90d070fa660c63020e0969e2d29 (diff) | |
download | glibc-34b5783ea2740e704cf3839ec057343e61fac679.tar.gz glibc-34b5783ea2740e704cf3839ec057343e61fac679.tar.xz glibc-34b5783ea2740e704cf3839ec057343e61fac679.zip |
sparc: Fix restartable syscalls (BZ 32173) azanella/2.39/master
The commit 'sparc: Use Linux kABI for syscall return' (86c5d2cf0ce046279baddc7faa27da71f1a89fde) did not take into account a subtle sparc syscall kABI constraint. For syscalls that might block indefinitely, on an interrupt (like SIGCONT) the kernel will set the instruction pointer to just before the syscall: arch/sparc/kernel/signal_64.c 476 static void do_signal(struct pt_regs *regs, unsigned long orig_i0) 477 { [...] 525 if (restart_syscall) { 526 switch (regs->u_regs[UREG_I0]) { 527 case ERESTARTNOHAND: 528 case ERESTARTSYS: 529 case ERESTARTNOINTR: 530 /* replay the system call when we are done */ 531 regs->u_regs[UREG_I0] = orig_i0; 532 regs->tpc -= 4; 533 regs->tnpc -= 4; 534 pt_regs_clear_syscall(regs); 535 fallthrough; 536 case ERESTART_RESTARTBLOCK: 537 regs->u_regs[UREG_G1] = __NR_restart_syscall; 538 regs->tpc -= 4; 539 regs->tnpc -= 4; 540 pt_regs_clear_syscall(regs); 541 } However, on a SIGCONT it seems that 'g1' register is being clobbered after the syscall returns. Before 86c5d2cf0ce046279, the 'g1' was always placed jus before the 'ta' instruction which then reloads the syscall number and restarts the syscall. On master, where 'g1' might be placed before 'ta': $ cat test.c #include <unistd.h> int main () { pause (); } $ gcc test.c -o test $ strace -f ./t [...] ppoll(NULL, 0, NULL, NULL, 0 On another terminal $ kill -STOP 2262828 $ strace -f ./t [...] --- SIGSTOP {si_signo=SIGSTOP, si_code=SI_USER, si_pid=2521813, si_uid=8289} --- --- stopped by SIGSTOP --- And then $ kill -CONT 2262828 Results in: --- SIGCONT {si_signo=SIGCONT, si_code=SI_USER, si_pid=2521813, si_uid=8289} --- restart_syscall(<... resuming interrupted ppoll ...>) = -1 EINTR (Interrupted system call) Where the expected behaviour would be: $ strace -f ./t [...] ppoll(NULL, 0, NULL, NULL, 0) = ? ERESTARTNOHAND (To be restarted if no handler) --- SIGSTOP {si_signo=SIGSTOP, si_code=SI_USER, si_pid=2521813, si_uid=8289} --- --- stopped by SIGSTOP --- --- SIGCONT {si_signo=SIGCONT, si_code=SI_USER, si_pid=2521813, si_uid=8289} --- ppoll(NULL, 0, NULL, NULL, 0 Just moving the 'g1' setting near the syscall asm is not suffice, the compiler might optimize it away (as I saw on cancellation.c by trying this fix). Instead, I have change the inline asm to put the 'g1' setup in ithe asm block. This would require to change the asm constraint for INTERNAL_SYSCALL_NCS, since the syscall number is not constant. Checked on sparc64-linux-gnu. Reported-by: René Rebe <rene@exactcode.de> Tested-by: Sam James <sam@gentoo.org> Reviewed-by: Sam James <sam@gentoo.org> (cherry picked from commit 2c1903cbbac0022153a67776f474c221250ad6ed)
Diffstat (limited to 'sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/clock_settime.c')
0 files changed, 0 insertions, 0 deletions