/* * Copyright (C) 2003 - 2007 Jeff Dike (jdike@{addtoit,linux.intel}.com) * Copyright 2003 PathScale, Inc. * * Licensed under the GPL */ #include #include #include /* XXX This should get the constants from libc */ #include #include long arch_prctl(struct task_struct *task, int code, unsigned long __user *addr) { unsigned long *ptr = addr, tmp; long ret; int pid = task->mm->context.id.u.pid; /* * With ARCH_SET_FS (and ARCH_SET_GS is treated similarly to * be safe), we need to call arch_prctl on the host because * setting %fs may result in something else happening (like a * GDT or thread.fs being set instead). So, we let the host * fiddle the registers and thread struct and restore the * registers afterwards. * * So, the saved registers are stored to the process (this * needed because a stub may have been the last thing to run), * arch_prctl is run on the host, then the registers are read * back. */ switch (code) { case ARCH_SET_FS: case ARCH_SET_GS: ret = restore_pid_registers(pid, ¤t->thread.regs.regs); if (ret) return ret; break; case ARCH_GET_FS: case ARCH_GET_GS: /* * With these two, we read to a local pointer and * put_user it to the userspace pointer that we were * given. If addr isn't valid (because it hasn't been * faulted in or is just bogus), we want put_user to * fault it in (or return -EFAULT) instead of having * the host return -EFAULT. */ ptr = &tmp; } ret = os_arch_prctl(pid, code, ptr); if (ret) return ret; switch (code) { case ARCH_SET_FS: current->thread.arch.fs = (unsigned long) ptr; ret = save_registers(pid, ¤t->thread.regs.regs); break; case ARCH_SET_GS: ret = save_registers(pid, ¤t->thread.regs.regs); break; case ARCH_GET_FS: ret = put_user(tmp, addr); break; case ARCH_GET_GS: ret = put_user(tmp, addr); break; } return ret; } long sys_arch_prctl(int code, unsigned long addr) { return arch_prctl(current, code, (unsigned long __user *) addr); } void arch_switch_to(struct task_struct *to) { if ((to->thread.arch.fs == 0) || (to->mm == NULL)) return; arch_prctl(to, ARCH_SET_FS, (void __user *) to->thread.arch.fs); }