Commit Graph

39 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
John Baldwin
59d8f3ff08 Fix a couple of issues with the stack limit for 32-bit processes on 64-bit
kernels exposed by the recent fixes to resource limits for 32-bit processes
on 64-bit kernels:
- Let ABIs expose their maximum stack size via a new pointer in sysentvec
  and use that in preference to maxssiz during exec() rather than always
  using maxssiz for all processses.
- Apply the ABI's limit fixup to the previous stack size when adjusting
  RLIMIT_STACK to determine if the existing mapping for the stack needs to
  be grown or shrunk (as well as how much it should be grown or shrunk).

Approved by:	re (kensmith)
2007-07-12 18:01:31 +00:00
Alexander Kabaev
23a29e45cd Allow FreeBSD's native ELF image activators to execute shared libraries the
same way it was enabled for Linux binares in linuxulator.

This allows binaries built with -pie. Many ports auto-detect -fPIE support
in GCC 4.2 and build binaries FreeBSD was unable to run.
2007-05-22 02:22:58 +00:00
John Baldwin
19059a13ed Rework the support for ABIs to override resource limits (used by 32-bit
processes under 64-bit kernels).  Previously, each 32-bit process overwrote
its resource limits at exec() time.  The problem with this approach is that
the new limits affect all child processes of the 32-bit process, including
if the child process forks and execs a 64-bit process.  To fix this, don't
ovewrite the resource limits during exec().  Instead, sv_fixlimits() is
now replaced with a different function sv_fixlimit() which asks the ABI to
sanitize a single resource limit.  We then use this when querying and
setting resource limits.  Thus, if a 32-bit process sets a limit, then
that new limit will be inherited by future children.  However, if the
32-bit process doesn't change a limit, then a future 64-bit child will
see the "full" 64-bit limit rather than the 32-bit limit.

MFC is tentative since it will break the ABI of old linux.ko modules (no
other modules are affected).

MFC after:	1 week
2007-05-14 22:40:04 +00:00
David Xu
c6511aea86 Move some declaration of 32-bit signal structures into file
freebsd32-signal.h, implement sigtimedwait and sigwaitinfo system calls.
2006-10-05 01:56:11 +00:00
Maxim Sobolev
900b28f9f6 Remove kern.elf32.can_exec_dyn sysctl. Instead extend Brandinfo structure
with flags bitfield and set BI_CAN_EXEC_DYN flag for all brands that usually
allow executing elf dynamic binaries (aka shared libraries). When it is
requested to execute ET_DYN elf image check if this flag is on after we
know the elf brand allowing execution if so.

PR:		kern/87615
Submitted by:	Marcin Koziej <creep@desk.pl>
2005-12-26 21:23:57 +00:00
Peter Wemm
79880f7327 Catch up to the system siginfo changes. Use a union for the ia32 layout
of siginfo just like the system one.  There are now two fields to copy
instead of one.
2005-12-06 23:06:29 +00:00
Paul Saab
1471f287e1 Calling setrlimit from 32bit apps could potentially increase certain
limits beyond what should be capiable in a 32bit process, so we
must fixup the limits.

Reviewed by:	jhb
2005-11-02 21:18:07 +00:00
David Xu
9104847f21 1. Change prototype of trapsignal and sendsig to use ksiginfo_t *, most
changes in MD code are trivial, before this change, trapsignal and
   sendsig use discrete parameters, now they uses member fields of
   ksiginfo_t structure. For sendsig, this change allows us to pass
   POSIX realtime signal value to user code.

2. Remove cpu_thread_siginfo, it is no longer needed because we now always
   generate ksiginfo_t data and feed it to libpthread.

3. Add p_sigqueue to proc structure to hold shared signals which were
   blocked by all threads in the proc.

4. Add td_sigqueue to thread structure to hold all signals delivered to
   thread.

5. i386 and amd64 now return POSIX standard si_code, other arches will
   be fixed.

6. In this sigqueue implementation, pending signal set is kept as before,
   an extra siginfo list holds additional siginfo_t data for signals.
   kernel code uses psignal() still behavior as before, it won't be failed
   even under memory pressure, only exception is when deleting a signal,
   we should call sigqueue_delete to remove signal from sigqueue but
   not SIGDELSET. Current there is no kernel code will deliver a signal
   with additional data, so kernel should be as stable as before,
   a ksiginfo can carry more information, for example, allow signal to
   be delivered but throw away siginfo data if memory is not enough.
   SIGKILL and SIGSTOP have fast path in sigqueue_add, because they can
   not be caught or masked.
   The sigqueue() syscall allows user code to queue a signal to target
   process, if resource is unavailable, EAGAIN will be returned as
   specification said.
   Just before thread exits, signal queue memory will be freed by
   sigqueue_flush.
   Current, all signals are allowed to be queued, not only realtime signals.

Earlier patch reviewed by: jhb, deischen
Tested on: i386, amd64
2005-10-14 12:43:47 +00:00
Peter Wemm
62919d788b Jumbo-commit to enhance 32 bit application support on 64 bit kernels.
This is good enough to be able to run a RELENG_4 gdb binary against
a RELENG_4 application, along with various other tools (eg: 4.x gcore).
We use this at work.

ia32_reg.[ch]: handle the 32 bit register file format, used by ptrace,
	procfs and core dumps.
procfs_*regs.c: vary the format of proc/XXX/*regs depending on the client
	and target application.
procfs_map.c: Don't print a 64 bit value to 32 bit consumers, or their
	sscanf fails.  They expect an unsigned long.
imgact_elf.c: produce a valid 32 bit coredump for 32 bit apps.
sys_process.c: handle 32 bit consumers debugging 32 bit targets.  Note
	that 64 bit consumers can still debug 32 bit targets.

IA64 has got stubs for ia32_reg.c.

Known limitations: a 5.x/6.x gdb uses get/setcontext(), which isn't
implemented in the 32/64 wrapper yet.  We also make a tiny patch to
gdb pacify it over conflicting formats of ld-elf.so.1.

Approved by:	re
2005-06-30 07:49:22 +00:00
Peter Wemm
50860ac0ee Fix 32 bit signals on amd64. It turns out that I was sign extending
the register values coming back from sigreturn(2).  Normally this wouldn't
matter because the 32 bit environment would truncate the upper 32 bits
and re-save the truncated values at the next trap.  However, if we got
a fast second signal and it was pending while we were returning from
sigreturn(2) in the signal trampoline, we'd never have had a chance to
truncate the bogus values in 32 bit mode, and the new sendsig would get
an EFAULT when trying to write to the bogus user stack address.
2005-04-05 22:41:49 +00:00
Maxim Sobolev
610ecfe035 o Split out kernel part of execve(2) syscall into two parts: one that
copies arguments into the kernel space and one that operates
  completely in the kernel space;

o use kernel-only version of execve(2) to kill another stackgap in
  linuxlator/i386.

Obtained from:  DragonFlyBSD (partially)
MFC after:      2 weeks
2005-01-29 23:12:00 +00:00
Marcel Moolenaar
4da47b2fec Add __elfN(dump_thread). This function is called from __elfN(coredump)
to allow dumping per-thread machine specific notes. On ia64 we use this
function to flush the dirty registers onto the backingstore before we
write out the PRSTATUS notes.

Tested on: alpha, amd64, i386, ia64 & sparc64
Not tested on: arm, powerpc
2004-08-11 02:35:06 +00:00
David E. O'Brien
6946a5bfcb /usr/libexec/ld-elf.so.1 -> /libexec/ld-elf32.so.1 2004-07-16 20:53:00 +00:00
Peter Wemm
5027176b20 Check in structure definitions for the FreeBSD-3.x signal syscall stuff.
Nothing uses these yet, but I dont want to lose them.
2004-04-14 23:20:14 +00:00
Peter Wemm
95c6291685 Change (yet again, sorry!) the path of the 32 bit ld-elf.so.1. 2004-03-21 01:22:24 +00:00
Peter Wemm
61aeb6a14d Add a note about the landmine in the middle of struct ia32_sigframe. 2004-02-21 23:36:31 +00:00
Peter Wemm
666dfc3f37 DOH!!! Fix signals for freebsd-4.x/i386 binaries. The ucontext has
different alignments due to the sse fxsave dump area.
2004-02-21 23:35:56 +00:00
John Baldwin
91d5354a2c Locking for the per-process resource limits structure.
- struct plimit includes a mutex to protect a reference count.  The plimit
  structure is treated similarly to struct ucred in that is is always copy
  on write, so having a reference to a structure is sufficient to read from
  it without needing a further lock.
- The proc lock protects the p_limit pointer and must be held while reading
  limits from a process to keep the limit structure from changing out from
  under you while reading from it.
- Various global limits that are ints are not protected by a lock since
  int writes are atomic on all the archs we support and thus a lock
  wouldn't buy us anything.
- All accesses to individual resource limits from a process are abstracted
  behind a simple lim_rlimit(), lim_max(), and lim_cur() API that return
  either an rlimit, or the current or max individual limit of the specified
  resource from a process.
- dosetrlimit() was renamed to kern_setrlimit() to match existing style of
  other similar syscall helper functions.
- The alpha OSF/1 compat layer no longer calls getrlimit() and setrlimit()
  (it didn't used the stackgap when it should have) but uses lim_rlimit()
  and kern_setrlimit() instead.
- The svr4 compat no longer uses the stackgap for resource limits calls,
  but uses lim_rlimit() and kern_setrlimit() instead.
- The ibcs2 compat no longer uses the stackgap for resource limits.  It
  also no longer uses the stackgap for accessing sysctl's for the
  ibcs2_sysconf() syscall but uses kernel_sysctl() instead.  As a result,
  ibcs2_sysconf() no longer needs Giant.
- The p_rlimit macro no longer exists.

Submitted by:	mtm (mostly, I only did a few cleanups and catchups)
Tested on:	i386
Compiled on:	alpha, amd64
2004-02-04 21:52:57 +00:00
Peter Wemm
9b68618df0 Add an additional field to the elf brandinfo structure to support
quicker exec-time replacement of the elf interpreter on an emulation
environment where an entire /compat/* tree isn't really warranted.
2003-12-23 02:42:39 +00:00
Peter Wemm
f11e46c5ed Move the ia32_sigtramp.S file back under amd64/. This interfaces closely
with the sendsig code in the MD area.  It is not safe to assume that all
the register conventions will be the same.  Also, the way of producing
32 bit code (.code32 directives) in this file is amd64 specific.
2003-12-11 01:09:51 +00:00
Peter Wemm
64d85faa1c Assimilate ia64 back into the fold with the common freebsd32/ia32 code.
The split-up code is derived from the ia64 code originally.

Note that I have only compile-tested this, not actually run-tested it.
The ia64 side of the force is missing some significant chunks of signal
delivery code.
2003-12-11 01:05:09 +00:00
Peter Wemm
7f3a56a41a Use the correct syscall table limit 2003-12-10 23:16:32 +00:00
Peter Wemm
4cd2d525e3 Move a MD 32 bit binary support routine into the MD areas. exec_setregs
is highly MD in an emulation environment since it operates on the host
environment.  Although the setregs functions are really for exec support
rather than signals, they deal with the same sorts of context and include
files.  So I put it there rather than create yet another file.
2003-11-08 07:43:44 +00:00
Peter Wemm
e04f2bba96 Remove some duplicated comments that refer to npx. XXX The setregs
function is actually MD (not MI) though..
2003-11-08 03:35:06 +00:00
Peter Wemm
42ad9517cc Point the description of the fpu data in the context structures to
i386/include/npx.h instead of the host's machine/npx.h (which might not
exist)
2003-11-08 02:36:05 +00:00
Peter Wemm
40bb965382 Oops, forgot to save these in the editor. Add CTASSERTS for signal and
context related things.
2003-10-30 02:43:19 +00:00
Peter Wemm
60a8c422cd Add CTASSERT()'s to check that the sizes of our replicas of the 32 bit
structures come out the right size.

Fix the ones that broke.  stat32 had some missing fields from the end
and statfs32 was broken due to the strange definition of MNAMELEN
(which is dependent on sizeof(long))

I'm not sure if this fixes any actual problems or not.
2003-10-30 02:40:30 +00:00
Peter Wemm
c460ac3a00 Add sysentvec->sv_fixlimits() hook so that we can catch cases on 64 bit
systems where the data/stack/etc limits are too big for a 32 bit process.

Move the 5 or so identical instances of ELF_RTLD_ADDR() into imgact_elf.c.

Supply an ia32_fixlimits function.  Export the clip/default values to
sysctl under the compat.ia32 heirarchy.

Have mmap(0, ...) respect the current p->p_limits[RLIMIT_DATA].rlim_max
value rather than the sysctl tweakable variable.  This allows mmap to
place mappings at sensible locations when limits have been reduced.

Have the imgact_elf.c ld-elf.so.1 placement algorithm use the same
method as mmap(0, ...) now does.

Note that we cannot remove all references to the sysctl tweakable
maxdsiz etc variables because /etc/login.conf specifies a datasize
of 'unlimited'.  And that causes exec etc to fail since it can no
longer find space to mmap things.
2003-09-25 01:10:26 +00:00
Peter Wemm
46159d1fd6 Switch to using the emulator in the common compat area.
Still work-in-progress.
2003-08-23 00:04:53 +00:00
Peter Wemm
c639ca93f4 Initial sweep at dividing up the generic 32bit-on-64bit kernel support
from the ia32 specific stuff.  Some of this still needs to move to the MI
freebsd32 area, and some needs to move to the MD area.  This is still
work-in-progress.
2003-08-22 23:19:02 +00:00
David E. O'Brien
56ae44c5df Use __FBSDID().
Brought to you by:	a boring talk at Ottawa Linux Symposium
2003-07-25 21:19:19 +00:00
Peter Wemm
9f0c4ab393 Deal with the user VM space expanding. 32 bit applications do not like
having their stack at the 512GB mark.  Give 4GB of user VM space for 32
bit apps.  Note that this is significantly more than on i386 which gives
only about 2.9GB of user VM to a process (1GB for kernel, plus page
table pages which eat user VM space).

Approved by: re (blanket)
2003-05-23 05:07:33 +00:00
Peter Wemm
c0a54ff621 Collect the nastiness for preserving the kernel MSR_GSBASE around the
load_gs() calls into a single place that is less likely to go wrong.

Eliminate the per-process context switching of MSR_GSBASE, because it
should be constant for a single cpu.  Instead, save/restore it during
the loading of the new %gs selector for the new process.

Approved by:	re (amd64/* blanket)
2003-05-15 00:23:40 +00:00
Peter Wemm
d85631c4ac Add BASIC i386 binary support for the amd64 kernel. This is largely
stolen from the ia64/ia32 code (indeed there was a repocopy), but I've
redone the MD parts and added and fixed a few essential syscalls.  It
is sufficient to run i386 binaries like /bin/ls, /usr/bin/id (dynamic)
and p4.  The ia64 code has not implemented signal delivery, so I had
to do that.

Before you say it, yes, this does need to go in a common place.  But
we're in a freeze at the moment and I didn't want to risk breaking ia64.
I will sort this out after the freeze so that the common code is in a
common place.

On the AMD64 side, this required adding segment selector context switch
support and some other support infrastructure.  The %fs/%gs etc code
is hairy because loading %gs will clobber the kernel's current MSR_GSBASE
setting.  The segment selectors are not used by the kernel, so they're only
changed at context switch time or when changing modes.  This still needs
to be optimized.

Approved by:	re (amd64/* blanket)
2003-05-14 04:10:49 +00:00
Alfred Perlstein
d1e405c5ce SCARGS removal take II. 2002-12-14 01:56:26 +00:00
Alfred Perlstein
bc9e75d7ca Backout removal SCARGS, the code freeze is only "selectively" over. 2002-12-13 22:41:47 +00:00
Alfred Perlstein
0bbe7292e1 Remove SCARGS.
Reviewed by: md5
2002-12-13 22:27:25 +00:00
Jake Burkholder
f36ba45234 Added fields for VM_MIN_ADDRESS, PS_STRINGS and stack protections to
sysentvec.  Initialized all fields of all sysentvecs, which will allow
them to be used instead of constants in more places.  Provided stack
fixup routines for emulations that previously used the default.
2002-09-01 21:41:24 +00:00
Peter Wemm
3ebc124838 Infrastructure tweaks to allow having both an Elf32 and an Elf64 executable
handler in the kernel at the same time.  Also, allow for the
exec_new_vmspace() code to build a different sized vmspace depending on
the executable environment.  This is a big help for execing i386 binaries
on ia64.   The ELF exec code grows the ability to map partial pages when
there is a page size difference, eg: emulating 4K pages on 8K or 16K
hardware pages.

Flesh out the i386 emulation support for ia64.  At this point, the only
binary that I know of that fails is cvsup, because the cvsup runtime
tries to execute code in pages not marked executable.

Obtained from:  dfr (mostly, many tweaks from me).
2002-07-20 02:56:12 +00:00