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- /*
- * sysret_ss_attrs.c - test that syscalls return valid hidden SS attributes
- * Copyright (c) 2015 Andrew Lutomirski
- *
- * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
- * it under the terms and conditions of the GNU General Public License,
- * version 2, as published by the Free Software Foundation.
- *
- * This program is distributed in the hope it will be useful, but
- * WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
- * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
- * General Public License for more details.
- *
- * On AMD CPUs, SYSRET can return with a valid SS descriptor with with
- * the hidden attributes set to an unusable state. Make sure the kernel
- * doesn't let this happen.
- */
- #define _GNU_SOURCE
- #include <stdlib.h>
- #include <unistd.h>
- #include <stdio.h>
- #include <string.h>
- #include <sys/mman.h>
- #include <err.h>
- #include <stddef.h>
- #include <stdbool.h>
- #include <pthread.h>
- static void *threadproc(void *ctx)
- {
- /*
- * Do our best to cause sleeps on this CPU to exit the kernel and
- * re-enter with SS = 0.
- */
- while (true)
- ;
- return NULL;
- }
- #ifdef __x86_64__
- extern unsigned long call32_from_64(void *stack, void (*function)(void));
- asm (".pushsection .text\n\t"
- ".code32\n\t"
- "test_ss:\n\t"
- "pushl $0\n\t"
- "popl %eax\n\t"
- "ret\n\t"
- ".code64");
- extern void test_ss(void);
- #endif
- int main()
- {
- /*
- * Start a busy-looping thread on the same CPU we're on.
- * For simplicity, just stick everything to CPU 0. This will
- * fail in some containers, but that's probably okay.
- */
- cpu_set_t cpuset;
- CPU_ZERO(&cpuset);
- CPU_SET(0, &cpuset);
- if (sched_setaffinity(0, sizeof(cpuset), &cpuset) != 0)
- printf("[WARN]\tsched_setaffinity failed\n");
- pthread_t thread;
- if (pthread_create(&thread, 0, threadproc, 0) != 0)
- err(1, "pthread_create");
- #ifdef __x86_64__
- unsigned char *stack32 = mmap(NULL, 4096, PROT_READ | PROT_WRITE,
- MAP_32BIT | MAP_ANONYMOUS | MAP_PRIVATE,
- -1, 0);
- if (stack32 == MAP_FAILED)
- err(1, "mmap");
- #endif
- printf("[RUN]\tSyscalls followed by SS validation\n");
- for (int i = 0; i < 1000; i++) {
- /*
- * Go to sleep and return using sysret (if we're 64-bit
- * or we're 32-bit on AMD on a 64-bit kernel). On AMD CPUs,
- * SYSRET doesn't fix up the cached SS descriptor, so the
- * kernel needs some kind of workaround to make sure that we
- * end the system call with a valid stack segment. This
- * can be a confusing failure because the SS *selector*
- * is the same regardless.
- */
- usleep(2);
- #ifdef __x86_64__
- /*
- * On 32-bit, just doing a syscall through glibc is enough
- * to cause a crash if our cached SS descriptor is invalid.
- * On 64-bit, it's not, so try extra hard.
- */
- call32_from_64(stack32 + 4088, test_ss);
- #endif
- }
- printf("[OK]\tWe survived\n");
- #ifdef __x86_64__
- munmap(stack32, 4096);
- #endif
- return 0;
- }
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