H. Peter Anvin wrote:
> Philipp Kohlbecher wrote:
>> From: Philipp Kohlbecher <[email protected]>
>>
>> The kernel_execve function issues a software interrupt (int 0x80) to make
>> a system call to sys_execve. This function expects to find the stack segment
>> and stack pointer of the function that issued the system call in the pt_regs
>> struct. The syscall entry code that sets up this struct expects the stack
>> segment and the stack pointer of the issuing function already on the stack.
>> But the Intel processor saves these registers only if a stack-switch occurs,
>> i.e. for inter-privilege interrupts and exceptions (cf. Intel Software
>> Developer’s Manual, Vol. 3A, p. 5-17,
>> http://www.intel.com/design/processor/manuals/253668.pdf).
>> For an intra-privilege interrupt like the one issued in kernel_execve, these
>> registers must be saved manually.
>>
>
> Could you describe the failure scenario this causes?
I don't know of any problems this causes. The kernel needs to be aware
of the fact that the xss and esp fields of the pt_regs struct may
contain wrong values anyway, as hardware interrupts arriving while the
CPU is in kernel mode would also lead to this condition.
The file include/asm-i386/processor.h contains a comment to that effect
(lines 483-492).
With kernel_execve we can predict this, however, and account for it.
(This may be superfluous, but I don't think it hurts and it might
prevent future errors.)
- Phil Kohlbecher
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