/* * S390 version * Copyright IBM Corp. 1999, 2000 * Author(s): Martin Schwidefsky (schwidefsky@de.ibm.com), * Thomas Spatzier (tspat@de.ibm.com) * * Derived from "arch/i386/kernel/sys_i386.c" * * This file contains various random system calls that * have a non-standard calling sequence on the Linux/s390 * platform. */ #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include "entry.h" /* * Perform the mmap() system call. Linux for S/390 isn't able to handle more * than 5 system call parameters, so this system call uses a memory block * for parameter passing. */ struct s390_mmap_arg_struct { unsigned long addr; unsigned long len; unsigned long prot; unsigned long flags; unsigned long fd; unsigned long offset; }; SYSCALL_DEFINE1(mmap2, struct s390_mmap_arg_struct __user *, arg) { struct s390_mmap_arg_struct a; int error = -EFAULT; if (copy_from_user(&a, arg, sizeof(a))) goto out; error = sys_mmap_pgoff(a.addr, a.len, a.prot, a.flags, a.fd, a.offset); out: return error; } /* * sys_ipc() is the de-multiplexer for the SysV IPC calls. */ SYSCALL_DEFINE5(s390_ipc, uint, call, int, first, unsigned long, second, unsigned long, third, void __user *, ptr) { if (call >> 16) return -EINVAL; /* The s390 sys_ipc variant has only five parameters instead of six * like the generic variant. The only difference is the handling of * the SEMTIMEDOP subcall where on s390 the third parameter is used * as a pointer to a struct timespec where the generic variant uses * the fifth parameter. * Therefore we can call the generic variant by simply passing the * third parameter also as fifth parameter. */ return sys_ipc(call, first, second, third, ptr, third); } #ifdef CONFIG_64BIT SYSCALL_DEFINE1(s390_personality, unsigned int, personality) { unsigned int ret; if (personality(current->personality) == PER_LINUX32 && personality(personality) == PER_LINUX) personality |= PER_LINUX32; ret = sys_personality(personality); if (personality(ret) == PER_LINUX32) ret &= ~PER_LINUX32; return ret; } #endif /* CONFIG_64BIT */ /* * Wrapper function for sys_fadvise64/fadvise64_64 */ #ifndef CONFIG_64BIT SYSCALL_DEFINE5(s390_fadvise64, int, fd, u32, offset_high, u32, offset_low, size_t, len, int, advice) { return sys_fadvise64(fd, (u64) offset_high << 32 | offset_low, len, advice); } struct fadvise64_64_args { int fd; long long offset; long long len; int advice; }; SYSCALL_DEFINE1(s390_fadvise64_64, struct fadvise64_64_args __user *, args) { struct fadvise64_64_args a; if ( copy_from_user(&a, args, sizeof(a)) ) return -EFAULT; return sys_fadvise64_64(a.fd, a.offset, a.len, a.advice); } /* * This is a wrapper to call sys_fallocate(). For 31 bit s390 the last * 64 bit argument "len" is split into the upper and lower 32 bits. The * system call wrapper in the user space loads the value to %r6/%r7. * The code in entry.S keeps the values in %r2 - %r6 where they are and * stores %r7 to 96(%r15). But the standard C linkage requires that * the whole 64 bit value for len is stored on the stack and doesn't * use %r6 at all. So s390_fallocate has to convert the arguments from * %r2: fd, %r3: mode, %r4/%r5: offset, %r6/96(%r15)-99(%r15): len * to * %r2: fd, %r3: mode, %r4/%r5: offset, 96(%r15)-103(%r15): len */ SYSCALL_DEFINE5(s390_fallocate, int, fd, int, mode, loff_t, offset, u32, len_high, u32, len_low) { return sys_fallocate(fd, mode, offset, ((u64)len_high << 32) | len_low); } #endif