Commit e41d6c3f authored by Michael Ellerman's avatar Michael Ellerman

powerpc/signal64: Copy siginfo before changing regs->nip

In commit 96d7a4e0 ("powerpc/signal64: Rewrite handle_rt_signal64()
to minimise uaccess switches") the 64-bit signal code was rearranged to
use user_write_access_begin/end().

As part of that change the call to copy_siginfo_to_user() was moved
later in the function, so that it could be done after the
user_write_access_end().

In particular it was moved after we modify regs->nip to point to the
signal trampoline. That means if copy_siginfo_to_user() fails we exit
handle_rt_signal64() with an error but with regs->nip modified, whereas
previously we would not modify regs->nip until the copy succeeded.

Returning an error from signal delivery but with regs->nip updated
leaves the process in a sort of half-delivered state. We do immediately
force a SEGV in signal_setup_done(), called from do_signal(), so the
process should never run in the half-delivered state.

However that SEGV is not delivered until we've gone around to
do_notify_resume() again, so it's possible some tracing could observe
the half-delivered state.

There are other cases where we fail signal delivery with regs partly
updated, eg. the write to newsp and SA_SIGINFO, but the latter at least
is very unlikely to fail as it reads back from the frame we just wrote
to.

Looking at other arches they seem to be more careful about leaving regs
unchanged until the copy operations have succeeded, and in general that
seems like good hygenie.

So although the current behaviour is not cleary buggy, it's also not
clearly correct. So move the call to copy_siginfo_to_user() up prior to
the modification of regs->nip, which is closer to the old behaviour, and
easier to reason about.

Fixes: 96d7a4e0 ("powerpc/signal64: Rewrite handle_rt_signal64() to minimise uaccess switches")
Signed-off-by: default avatarMichael Ellerman <mpe@ellerman.id.au>
Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20210608134605.2783677-1-mpe@ellerman.id.au
parent 8e11d62e
...@@ -902,6 +902,10 @@ int handle_rt_signal64(struct ksignal *ksig, sigset_t *set, ...@@ -902,6 +902,10 @@ int handle_rt_signal64(struct ksignal *ksig, sigset_t *set,
unsafe_copy_to_user(&frame->uc.uc_sigmask, set, sizeof(*set), badframe_block); unsafe_copy_to_user(&frame->uc.uc_sigmask, set, sizeof(*set), badframe_block);
user_write_access_end(); user_write_access_end();
/* Save the siginfo outside of the unsafe block. */
if (copy_siginfo_to_user(&frame->info, &ksig->info))
goto badframe;
/* Make sure signal handler doesn't get spurious FP exceptions */ /* Make sure signal handler doesn't get spurious FP exceptions */
tsk->thread.fp_state.fpscr = 0; tsk->thread.fp_state.fpscr = 0;
...@@ -915,11 +919,6 @@ int handle_rt_signal64(struct ksignal *ksig, sigset_t *set, ...@@ -915,11 +919,6 @@ int handle_rt_signal64(struct ksignal *ksig, sigset_t *set,
regs->nip = (unsigned long) &frame->tramp[0]; regs->nip = (unsigned long) &frame->tramp[0];
} }
/* Save the siginfo outside of the unsafe block. */
if (copy_siginfo_to_user(&frame->info, &ksig->info))
goto badframe;
/* Allocate a dummy caller frame for the signal handler. */ /* Allocate a dummy caller frame for the signal handler. */
newsp = ((unsigned long)frame) - __SIGNAL_FRAMESIZE; newsp = ((unsigned long)frame) - __SIGNAL_FRAMESIZE;
err |= put_user(regs->gpr[1], (unsigned long __user *)newsp); err |= put_user(regs->gpr[1], (unsigned long __user *)newsp);
......
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