x86/alternative: Optimize single-byte NOPs at an arbitrary position
Up until now the assumption was that an alternative patching site would have some instructions at the beginning and trailing single-byte NOPs (0x90) padding. Therefore, the patching machinery would go and optimize those single-byte NOPs into longer ones. However, this assumption is broken on 32-bit when code like hv_do_hypercall() in hyperv_init() would use the ratpoline speculation killer CALL_NOSPEC. The 32-bit version of that macro would align certain insns to 16 bytes, leading to the compiler issuing a one or more single-byte NOPs, depending on the holes it needs to fill for alignment. That would lead to the warning in optimize_nops() to fire: ------------[ cut here ]------------ Not a NOP at 0xc27fb598 WARNING: CPU: 0 PID: 0 at arch/x86/kernel/alternative.c:211 optimize_nops.isra.13 due to that function verifying whether all of the following bytes really are single-byte NOPs. Therefore, carve out the NOP padding into a separate function and call it for each NOP range beginning with a single-byte NOP. Fixes: 23c1ad53 ("x86/alternatives: Optimize optimize_nops()") Reported-by: Richard Narron <richard@aaazen.com> Signed-off-by: Borislav Petkov <bp@suse.de> Acked-by: Peter Zijlstra (Intel) <peterz@infradead.org> Link: https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=213301 Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20210601212125.17145-1-bp@alien8.de
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