diff options
author | marcel <marcel@FreeBSD.org> | 2014-08-25 15:15:59 +0000 |
---|---|---|
committer | marcel <marcel@FreeBSD.org> | 2014-08-25 15:15:59 +0000 |
commit | ef25b335dfa5f1458d26fa26f56ab5c3a0fe939d (patch) | |
tree | ce118c0ce4b16bb0bef534a9c34cbc342745dbd9 /bin | |
parent | be6e110f20fb2dbd549dbb7392648b4b60f1ede8 (diff) | |
download | FreeBSD-src-ef25b335dfa5f1458d26fa26f56ab5c3a0fe939d.zip FreeBSD-src-ef25b335dfa5f1458d26fa26f56ab5c3a0fe939d.tar.gz |
Make sure the psr field in the trapframe (which holds the value of cr.ipsr)
is properly synthesized for the EPC syscall. Properly synthesized in this
case means that the bank number (BN bitfield) is set to 1. This is needed
because the move-from-PSR instruction does copy all bits! In this case
the BN bitfield was not copied.
While normally this is not a problem, because when we leave the kernel via
the EPC syscall path again, we don't actually care about the BN bitfield.
We restore PSR with a move-to-PSR instruction, which also doesn't cover
the BN bitfield.
There is however a scenario where we enter the kernel via the EPC syscall
path and leave the kernel via the exception/interrupt path. That path
uses the RFI (Return-From-Interrupt) instruction and it restores all bits.
What happens in that case is that we don't properly switch to register
bank 1 and any exception/interrupt that happens while running in bank 0
clobbers the process' (or kernel's) banked registers. This is because the
CPU switches to bank 0 on an exception/interrupt so that there are 16
general registers available for constructing a trapframe and saving the
context. Consequently: normal code should always use register bank 1.
This bug has been present since 2003 (11 years) and has been the cause
for many "unexplained" kernel panics. It says something about how often
we hit this problem on the one hand and how tricky it was to find it.
Many thanks to: clusteradm@ for enabling me to track this down!
Diffstat (limited to 'bin')
0 files changed, 0 insertions, 0 deletions