[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [PATCH 05/16] x86/shstk: Introduce Supervisor Shadow Stack support
On 04/05/2020 14:52, Jan Beulich wrote: > [CAUTION - EXTERNAL EMAIL] DO NOT reply, click links, or open attachments > unless you have verified the sender and know the content is safe. > > On 02.05.2020 00:58, Andrew Cooper wrote: >> --- a/xen/arch/x86/Kconfig >> +++ b/xen/arch/x86/Kconfig >> @@ -34,6 +34,9 @@ config ARCH_DEFCONFIG >> config INDIRECT_THUNK >> def_bool $(cc-option,-mindirect-branch-register) >> >> +config HAS_AS_CET >> + def_bool $(as-instr,wrssq %rax$(comma)0;setssbsy;endbr64) > I see you add as-instr here as a side effect. Until the other > similar checks get converted, I think for the time being we should > use the old model, to have all such checks in one place. I realize > this means you can't have a Kconfig dependency then. No. That's like asking me to keep on using bool_t, and you are the first person to point out and object to that in newly submitted patches. > Also why do you check multiple insns, when just one (like we do > elsewhere) would suffice? Because CET-SS and CET-IBT are orthogonal ABIs, but you wanted a single CET symbol, rather than a CET_SS symbol. I picked a sample of various instructions to get broad coverage of CET without including every instruction. > The crucial insns to check are those which got changed pretty > close before the release of 2.29 (in the cover letter you > mention 2.32): One of incssp{d,q}, setssbsy, or saveprevssp. > There weren't official binutils releases with the original > insns, but distros may still have picked up intermediate > snapshots. I've got zero interest in catering to distros which are still using obsolete pre-release toolchains. Bleeding edge toolchains are one thing, but this is like asking us to support the middle changeset of the series introducing CET, which is absolutely a non-starter. If the instructions were missing from real binutils releases, then obviously we should exclude those releases, but that doesn't appear to be the case. >> --- a/xen/arch/x86/setup.c >> +++ b/xen/arch/x86/setup.c >> @@ -95,6 +95,36 @@ unsigned long __initdata highmem_start; >> size_param("highmem-start", highmem_start); >> #endif >> >> +static bool __initdata opt_xen_shstk = true; >> + >> +static int parse_xen(const char *s) >> +{ >> + const char *ss; >> + int val, rc = 0; >> + >> + do { >> + ss = strchr(s, ','); >> + if ( !ss ) >> + ss = strchr(s, '\0'); >> + >> + if ( (val = parse_boolean("shstk", s, ss)) >= 0 ) >> + { >> +#ifdef CONFIG_XEN_SHSTK >> + opt_xen_shstk = val; >> +#else >> + no_config_param("XEN_SHSTK", "xen", s, ss); >> +#endif >> + } >> + else >> + rc = -EINVAL; >> + >> + s = ss + 1; >> + } while ( *ss ); >> + >> + return rc; >> +} >> +custom_param("xen", parse_xen); > What's the idea here going forward, i.e. why the new top level > "xen" option? Almost all options are for Xen itself, after all. > Did you perhaps mean this to be "cet"? I forgot an RFC for this, as I couldn't think of anything better. "cet" as a top level option isn't going to gain more than {no-}shstk and {no-}ibt as suboptions. >> --- a/xen/scripts/Kconfig.include >> +++ b/xen/scripts/Kconfig.include >> @@ -31,6 +31,10 @@ cc-option = $(success,$(CC) -Werror $(CLANG_FLAGS) $(1) >> -E -x c /dev/null -o /de >> # Return y if the linker supports <flag>, n otherwise >> ld-option = $(success,$(LD) -v $(1)) >> >> +# $(as-instr,<instr>) >> +# Return y if the assembler supports <instr>, n otherwise >> +as-instr = $(success,printf "%b\n" "$(1)" | $(CC) $(CLANG_FLAGS) -c -x >> assembler -o /dev/null -) > CLANG_FLAGS caught my eye here, then noticing that cc-option > also uses it. Anthony - what's the deal with this? It doesn't > look to get defined anywhere, and I also don't see what clang- > specific about these constructs. This is as it inherits from Linux. There is obviously a reason. However, I'm not interested in diving into that rabbit hole in an unrelated series. ~Andrew
|
Lists.xenproject.org is hosted with RackSpace, monitoring our |