On Tue, 2006-07-18 at 12:25 -0700, Chris Wright wrote:
> * Rusty Russell ([email protected]) wrote:
> > On Tue, 2006-07-18 at 00:00 -0700, Chris Wright wrote:
> > > plain text document attachment (i386-segments)
> > > We allow for the fact that the guest kernel may not run in ring 0.
> > > This requires some abstraction in a few places when setting %cs or
> > > checking privilege level (user vs kernel).
> >
> > Zach had an alternate patch for this, which didn't assume the kernel ran
> > in a compile-time known ring, but is otherwise very similar. I've put
> > it below for discussion (but Zach now tells me the asm parts are not
> > required: Zach, can you mod this patch and comment?).
>
> This patch also doesn't have a compile time known ring, it's using
> get_kernel_cs() because the Xen method for booting native is dynamic and
> would resolve to ring 0 in that case (XENFEAT_supervisor_mode_kernel).
I was referring to the different ways the two patches figure out whether
we're in user mode:
Yours:
static inline int user_mode(struct pt_regs *regs)
{
return (regs->xcs & USER_MODE_MASK) != 0;
}
Where you have for native:
#define USER_MODE_MASK 3
vs Xen:
#define USER_MODE_MASK 2
Zach's patch does this:
static inline int user_mode(struct pt_regs *regs)
{
return (regs->xcs & SEGMENT_RPL_MASK) == 3;
}
I'm no x86pert, but the latter seems more generic to me (user mode is
ring 3, vs. usermode is anything >= 2). Perhaps they are in fact
equivalent?
Thanks!
Rusty.
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