Date: Fri, 5 Apr 2013 02:16:02 +1100 (EST) From: Bruce Evans <brde@optusnet.com.au> To: Bruce Evans <brde@optusnet.com.au> Cc: freebsd-gnats-submit@freebsd.org, freebsd-bugs@freebsd.org, Brian Demsky <bdemsky@uci.edu> Subject: Re: misc/177624: Swapcontext can get compiled incorrectly Message-ID: <20130405011027.Y1350@besplex.bde.org> In-Reply-To: <20130404232206.S1025@besplex.bde.org> References: <201304040232.r342WFTC020054@red.freebsd.org> <20130404232206.S1025@besplex.bde.org>
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This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text, while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools. --0-1588918552-1365088562=:1350 Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=X-UNKNOWN; format=flowed Content-Transfer-Encoding: QUOTED-PRINTABLE On Fri, 5 Apr 2013, Bruce Evans wrote: > On Thu, 4 Apr 2013, Brian Demsky wrote: > >>> Description: >> Here is the code for swap context: >>=20 >> int >> swapcontext(ucontext_t *oucp, const ucontext_t *ucp) >> { >> int ret; >>=20 >> if ((oucp =3D=3D NULL) || (ucp =3D=3D NULL)) { >> errno =3D EINVAL; >> return (-1); >> } >> oucp->uc_flags &=3D ~UCF_SWAPPED; >> ret =3D getcontext(oucp); >> if ((ret =3D=3D 0) && !(oucp->uc_flags & UCF_SWAPPED)) { >> oucp->uc_flags |=3D UCF_SWAPPED; >> ret =3D setcontext(ucp); >> } >> return (ret); >> } > >> On the OS X port of libc in Mac OSX 10.7.5, this gets compiled as: > >> ... >> 0x00007fff901e870b <swapcontext+89>: pop %rbx >> 0x00007fff901e870c <swapcontext+90>: pop %r14 >> 0x00007fff901e870e <swapcontext+92>: jmpq 0x7fff90262855 <setcontex= t> >>=20 >> The problem is that rbx is callee saved by compiled version of swapconte= xt=20 >> and then reused before getcontext is called. Getcontext then stores the= =20 >> wrong value for rbx and setcontext later restores the wrong value for rb= x.=20 >> If the caller had any value in rbx, it has been trashed at this point. > > Later you wrote: > >> The analysis is a little wrong about the problem. Ultimately, the tail= =20 >> call to set context trashes the copies of bx and r14 on the stack=85. > > The bug seems to be in setcontext(). It must preserve the callee-saved > registers, not restore them. This would happen automatically if more > were written in C. But setcontext() can't be written entirely in C, > since it must save all callee-saved registers including ones not used > and therefore not normally saved by any C function that it might be in, > and possibly also including callee-saved registers for nonstandard or > non-C ABIs. In FreeBSD, it is apparently always a syscall. This is more than a little wrong. When setcontext() succeeds, it doesn't return here. Then it acts like longjmp() and must restore all the callee-saved to whatever they were when getcontext() was called. Otherwise, it must not clobber any callee-saved registers (then it differs from longjmp(). longjmp() just can't fail). Now I don't see any bug here. If the saved state is returned to, then it is as if getcontext() returned, and the intermediately-saved %rbx is correct (we will restore the orginal %rbx if we return). If setcontext() fails, then it should preserve all callee-saved registers. In the tail-call case, we have already restored the orginal %rbx and the failing setcontext() should preserve that. Bruce --0-1588918552-1365088562=:1350--
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