On Wed, 13 Apr 2005, Theodore Ts'o wrote:
On Wed, Apr 13, 2005 at 08:40:05AM -0400, Richard B. Johnson wrote:
The kernel does NOT have to copy data from user-space before
using it.
Incorrect. It must, or the kernel code in question is by definition
buggy.
What? Explain why a memory-mapped buffer can't be DMAed directly?
In fact, user-mode pointers are valid in kernel-space
when the kernel is performing a function on behalf of the user-
mode code.
On some architectures, this is true. But not all architectures, and
not in all circumstances. For example, even on the x86 architecture,
in the 4G/4G mode, a user-mode pointer is *not* valid when kernel code
is running. You must use copy_to_user()/copy_from_user(). Simply
dereferencing a user-mode pointer is a BUG. It might work sometimes,
on some architectures, but not everywhere. Therefore, for correctly
written kernel code, you must not do it.
You apparently didn't even bother to read my explanation why the
copy/to/from user was necessary unless the buffer(s) were memory-
mapped, marked reserved, and set to no-cache. In that case
you can DMA directly to/from user-space. Perhaps you just wanted
to argue?
- Ted
Again, as long as you can guarantee that the RAM you are using
is reserved so the kernel won't use it for paged RAM, and as
long as it's accessible in both user-mode and kernel-mode,
which means memory-mapped, either the kernel or the user can
use it as it sees fit. If it can't, the kernel is buggy. In
fact, there is no way the kernel could prevent it from being
used in this manner. Since, by definition, the kernel
will leave reserved memory alone, and memory-mapped space
will not fault, there is no way for the kernel to even know
how it is being accessed.
Cheers,
Dick Johnson
Penguin : Linux version 2.6.11 on an i686 machine (5537.79 BogoMips).
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