linux/include/linux/regset.h
<<
>>
Prefs
   1/* SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-only */
   2/*
   3 * User-mode machine state access
   4 *
   5 * Copyright (C) 2007 Red Hat, Inc.  All rights reserved.
   6 *
   7 * Red Hat Author: Roland McGrath.
   8 */
   9
  10#ifndef _LINUX_REGSET_H
  11#define _LINUX_REGSET_H 1
  12
  13#include <linux/compiler.h>
  14#include <linux/types.h>
  15#include <linux/bug.h>
  16#include <linux/uaccess.h>
  17struct task_struct;
  18struct user_regset;
  19
  20
  21/**
  22 * user_regset_active_fn - type of @active function in &struct user_regset
  23 * @target:     thread being examined
  24 * @regset:     regset being examined
  25 *
  26 * Return -%ENODEV if not available on the hardware found.
  27 * Return %0 if no interesting state in this thread.
  28 * Return >%0 number of @size units of interesting state.
  29 * Any get call fetching state beyond that number will
  30 * see the default initialization state for this data,
  31 * so a caller that knows what the default state is need
  32 * not copy it all out.
  33 * This call is optional; the pointer is %NULL if there
  34 * is no inexpensive check to yield a value < @n.
  35 */
  36typedef int user_regset_active_fn(struct task_struct *target,
  37                                  const struct user_regset *regset);
  38
  39/**
  40 * user_regset_get_fn - type of @get function in &struct user_regset
  41 * @target:     thread being examined
  42 * @regset:     regset being examined
  43 * @pos:        offset into the regset data to access, in bytes
  44 * @count:      amount of data to copy, in bytes
  45 * @kbuf:       if not %NULL, a kernel-space pointer to copy into
  46 * @ubuf:       if @kbuf is %NULL, a user-space pointer to copy into
  47 *
  48 * Fetch register values.  Return %0 on success; -%EIO or -%ENODEV
  49 * are usual failure returns.  The @pos and @count values are in
  50 * bytes, but must be properly aligned.  If @kbuf is non-null, that
  51 * buffer is used and @ubuf is ignored.  If @kbuf is %NULL, then
  52 * ubuf gives a userland pointer to access directly, and an -%EFAULT
  53 * return value is possible.
  54 */
  55typedef int user_regset_get_fn(struct task_struct *target,
  56                               const struct user_regset *regset,
  57                               unsigned int pos, unsigned int count,
  58                               void *kbuf, void __user *ubuf);
  59
  60/**
  61 * user_regset_set_fn - type of @set function in &struct user_regset
  62 * @target:     thread being examined
  63 * @regset:     regset being examined
  64 * @pos:        offset into the regset data to access, in bytes
  65 * @count:      amount of data to copy, in bytes
  66 * @kbuf:       if not %NULL, a kernel-space pointer to copy from
  67 * @ubuf:       if @kbuf is %NULL, a user-space pointer to copy from
  68 *
  69 * Store register values.  Return %0 on success; -%EIO or -%ENODEV
  70 * are usual failure returns.  The @pos and @count values are in
  71 * bytes, but must be properly aligned.  If @kbuf is non-null, that
  72 * buffer is used and @ubuf is ignored.  If @kbuf is %NULL, then
  73 * ubuf gives a userland pointer to access directly, and an -%EFAULT
  74 * return value is possible.
  75 */
  76typedef int user_regset_set_fn(struct task_struct *target,
  77                               const struct user_regset *regset,
  78                               unsigned int pos, unsigned int count,
  79                               const void *kbuf, const void __user *ubuf);
  80
  81/**
  82 * user_regset_writeback_fn - type of @writeback function in &struct user_regset
  83 * @target:     thread being examined
  84 * @regset:     regset being examined
  85 * @immediate:  zero if writeback at completion of next context switch is OK
  86 *
  87 * This call is optional; usually the pointer is %NULL.  When
  88 * provided, there is some user memory associated with this regset's
  89 * hardware, such as memory backing cached register data on register
  90 * window machines; the regset's data controls what user memory is
  91 * used (e.g. via the stack pointer value).
  92 *
  93 * Write register data back to user memory.  If the @immediate flag
  94 * is nonzero, it must be written to the user memory so uaccess or
  95 * access_process_vm() can see it when this call returns; if zero,
  96 * then it must be written back by the time the task completes a
  97 * context switch (as synchronized with wait_task_inactive()).
  98 * Return %0 on success or if there was nothing to do, -%EFAULT for
  99 * a memory problem (bad stack pointer or whatever), or -%EIO for a
 100 * hardware problem.
 101 */
 102typedef int user_regset_writeback_fn(struct task_struct *target,
 103                                     const struct user_regset *regset,
 104                                     int immediate);
 105
 106/**
 107 * user_regset_get_size_fn - type of @get_size function in &struct user_regset
 108 * @target:     thread being examined
 109 * @regset:     regset being examined
 110 *
 111 * This call is optional; usually the pointer is %NULL.
 112 *
 113 * When provided, this function must return the current size of regset
 114 * data, as observed by the @get function in &struct user_regset.  The
 115 * value returned must be a multiple of @size.  The returned size is
 116 * required to be valid only until the next time (if any) @regset is
 117 * modified for @target.
 118 *
 119 * This function is intended for dynamically sized regsets.  A regset
 120 * that is statically sized does not need to implement it.
 121 *
 122 * This function should not be called directly: instead, callers should
 123 * call regset_size() to determine the current size of a regset.
 124 */
 125typedef unsigned int user_regset_get_size_fn(struct task_struct *target,
 126                                             const struct user_regset *regset);
 127
 128/**
 129 * struct user_regset - accessible thread CPU state
 130 * @n:                  Number of slots (registers).
 131 * @size:               Size in bytes of a slot (register).
 132 * @align:              Required alignment, in bytes.
 133 * @bias:               Bias from natural indexing.
 134 * @core_note_type:     ELF note @n_type value used in core dumps.
 135 * @get:                Function to fetch values.
 136 * @set:                Function to store values.
 137 * @active:             Function to report if regset is active, or %NULL.
 138 * @writeback:          Function to write data back to user memory, or %NULL.
 139 * @get_size:           Function to return the regset's size, or %NULL.
 140 *
 141 * This data structure describes a machine resource we call a register set.
 142 * This is part of the state of an individual thread, not necessarily
 143 * actual CPU registers per se.  A register set consists of a number of
 144 * similar slots, given by @n.  Each slot is @size bytes, and aligned to
 145 * @align bytes (which is at least @size).  For dynamically-sized
 146 * regsets, @n must contain the maximum possible number of slots for the
 147 * regset, and @get_size must point to a function that returns the
 148 * current regset size.
 149 *
 150 * Callers that need to know only the current size of the regset and do
 151 * not care about its internal structure should call regset_size()
 152 * instead of inspecting @n or calling @get_size.
 153 *
 154 * For backward compatibility, the @get and @set methods must pad to, or
 155 * accept, @n * @size bytes, even if the current regset size is smaller.
 156 * The precise semantics of these operations depend on the regset being
 157 * accessed.
 158 *
 159 * The functions to which &struct user_regset members point must be
 160 * called only on the current thread or on a thread that is in
 161 * %TASK_STOPPED or %TASK_TRACED state, that we are guaranteed will not
 162 * be woken up and return to user mode, and that we have called
 163 * wait_task_inactive() on.  (The target thread always might wake up for
 164 * SIGKILL while these functions are working, in which case that
 165 * thread's user_regset state might be scrambled.)
 166 *
 167 * The @pos argument must be aligned according to @align; the @count
 168 * argument must be a multiple of @size.  These functions are not
 169 * responsible for checking for invalid arguments.
 170 *
 171 * When there is a natural value to use as an index, @bias gives the
 172 * difference between the natural index and the slot index for the
 173 * register set.  For example, x86 GDT segment descriptors form a regset;
 174 * the segment selector produces a natural index, but only a subset of
 175 * that index space is available as a regset (the TLS slots); subtracting
 176 * @bias from a segment selector index value computes the regset slot.
 177 *
 178 * If nonzero, @core_note_type gives the n_type field (NT_* value)
 179 * of the core file note in which this regset's data appears.
 180 * NT_PRSTATUS is a special case in that the regset data starts at
 181 * offsetof(struct elf_prstatus, pr_reg) into the note data; that is
 182 * part of the per-machine ELF formats userland knows about.  In
 183 * other cases, the core file note contains exactly the whole regset
 184 * (@n * @size) and nothing else.  The core file note is normally
 185 * omitted when there is an @active function and it returns zero.
 186 */
 187struct user_regset {
 188        user_regset_get_fn              *get;
 189        user_regset_set_fn              *set;
 190        user_regset_active_fn           *active;
 191        user_regset_writeback_fn        *writeback;
 192        user_regset_get_size_fn         *get_size;
 193        unsigned int                    n;
 194        unsigned int                    size;
 195        unsigned int                    align;
 196        unsigned int                    bias;
 197        unsigned int                    core_note_type;
 198};
 199
 200/**
 201 * struct user_regset_view - available regsets
 202 * @name:       Identifier, e.g. UTS_MACHINE string.
 203 * @regsets:    Array of @n regsets available in this view.
 204 * @n:          Number of elements in @regsets.
 205 * @e_machine:  ELF header @e_machine %EM_* value written in core dumps.
 206 * @e_flags:    ELF header @e_flags value written in core dumps.
 207 * @ei_osabi:   ELF header @e_ident[%EI_OSABI] value written in core dumps.
 208 *
 209 * A regset view is a collection of regsets (&struct user_regset,
 210 * above).  This describes all the state of a thread that can be seen
 211 * from a given architecture/ABI environment.  More than one view might
 212 * refer to the same &struct user_regset, or more than one regset
 213 * might refer to the same machine-specific state in the thread.  For
 214 * example, a 32-bit thread's state could be examined from the 32-bit
 215 * view or from the 64-bit view.  Either method reaches the same thread
 216 * register state, doing appropriate widening or truncation.
 217 */
 218struct user_regset_view {
 219        const char *name;
 220        const struct user_regset *regsets;
 221        unsigned int n;
 222        u32 e_flags;
 223        u16 e_machine;
 224        u8 ei_osabi;
 225};
 226
 227/*
 228 * This is documented here rather than at the definition sites because its
 229 * implementation is machine-dependent but its interface is universal.
 230 */
 231/**
 232 * task_user_regset_view - Return the process's native regset view.
 233 * @tsk: a thread of the process in question
 234 *
 235 * Return the &struct user_regset_view that is native for the given process.
 236 * For example, what it would access when it called ptrace().
 237 * Throughout the life of the process, this only changes at exec.
 238 */
 239const struct user_regset_view *task_user_regset_view(struct task_struct *tsk);
 240
 241
 242/*
 243 * These are helpers for writing regset get/set functions in arch code.
 244 * Because @start_pos and @end_pos are always compile-time constants,
 245 * these are inlined into very little code though they look large.
 246 *
 247 * Use one or more calls sequentially for each chunk of regset data stored
 248 * contiguously in memory.  Call with constants for @start_pos and @end_pos,
 249 * giving the range of byte positions in the regset that data corresponds
 250 * to; @end_pos can be -1 if this chunk is at the end of the regset layout.
 251 * Each call updates the arguments to point past its chunk.
 252 */
 253
 254static inline int user_regset_copyout(unsigned int *pos, unsigned int *count,
 255                                      void **kbuf,
 256                                      void __user **ubuf, const void *data,
 257                                      const int start_pos, const int end_pos)
 258{
 259        if (*count == 0)
 260                return 0;
 261        BUG_ON(*pos < start_pos);
 262        if (end_pos < 0 || *pos < end_pos) {
 263                unsigned int copy = (end_pos < 0 ? *count
 264                                     : min(*count, end_pos - *pos));
 265                data += *pos - start_pos;
 266                if (*kbuf) {
 267                        memcpy(*kbuf, data, copy);
 268                        *kbuf += copy;
 269                } else if (__copy_to_user(*ubuf, data, copy))
 270                        return -EFAULT;
 271                else
 272                        *ubuf += copy;
 273                *pos += copy;
 274                *count -= copy;
 275        }
 276        return 0;
 277}
 278
 279static inline int user_regset_copyin(unsigned int *pos, unsigned int *count,
 280                                     const void **kbuf,
 281                                     const void __user **ubuf, void *data,
 282                                     const int start_pos, const int end_pos)
 283{
 284        if (*count == 0)
 285                return 0;
 286        BUG_ON(*pos < start_pos);
 287        if (end_pos < 0 || *pos < end_pos) {
 288                unsigned int copy = (end_pos < 0 ? *count
 289                                     : min(*count, end_pos - *pos));
 290                data += *pos - start_pos;
 291                if (*kbuf) {
 292                        memcpy(data, *kbuf, copy);
 293                        *kbuf += copy;
 294                } else if (__copy_from_user(data, *ubuf, copy))
 295                        return -EFAULT;
 296                else
 297                        *ubuf += copy;
 298                *pos += copy;
 299                *count -= copy;
 300        }
 301        return 0;
 302}
 303
 304/*
 305 * These two parallel the two above, but for portions of a regset layout
 306 * that always read as all-zero or for which writes are ignored.
 307 */
 308static inline int user_regset_copyout_zero(unsigned int *pos,
 309                                           unsigned int *count,
 310                                           void **kbuf, void __user **ubuf,
 311                                           const int start_pos,
 312                                           const int end_pos)
 313{
 314        if (*count == 0)
 315                return 0;
 316        BUG_ON(*pos < start_pos);
 317        if (end_pos < 0 || *pos < end_pos) {
 318                unsigned int copy = (end_pos < 0 ? *count
 319                                     : min(*count, end_pos - *pos));
 320                if (*kbuf) {
 321                        memset(*kbuf, 0, copy);
 322                        *kbuf += copy;
 323                } else if (__clear_user(*ubuf, copy))
 324                        return -EFAULT;
 325                else
 326                        *ubuf += copy;
 327                *pos += copy;
 328                *count -= copy;
 329        }
 330        return 0;
 331}
 332
 333static inline int user_regset_copyin_ignore(unsigned int *pos,
 334                                            unsigned int *count,
 335                                            const void **kbuf,
 336                                            const void __user **ubuf,
 337                                            const int start_pos,
 338                                            const int end_pos)
 339{
 340        if (*count == 0)
 341                return 0;
 342        BUG_ON(*pos < start_pos);
 343        if (end_pos < 0 || *pos < end_pos) {
 344                unsigned int copy = (end_pos < 0 ? *count
 345                                     : min(*count, end_pos - *pos));
 346                if (*kbuf)
 347                        *kbuf += copy;
 348                else
 349                        *ubuf += copy;
 350                *pos += copy;
 351                *count -= copy;
 352        }
 353        return 0;
 354}
 355
 356/**
 357 * copy_regset_to_user - fetch a thread's user_regset data into user memory
 358 * @target:     thread to be examined
 359 * @view:       &struct user_regset_view describing user thread machine state
 360 * @setno:      index in @view->regsets
 361 * @offset:     offset into the regset data, in bytes
 362 * @size:       amount of data to copy, in bytes
 363 * @data:       user-mode pointer to copy into
 364 */
 365static inline int copy_regset_to_user(struct task_struct *target,
 366                                      const struct user_regset_view *view,
 367                                      unsigned int setno,
 368                                      unsigned int offset, unsigned int size,
 369                                      void __user *data)
 370{
 371        const struct user_regset *regset = &view->regsets[setno];
 372
 373        if (!regset->get)
 374                return -EOPNOTSUPP;
 375
 376        if (!access_ok(data, size))
 377                return -EFAULT;
 378
 379        return regset->get(target, regset, offset, size, NULL, data);
 380}
 381
 382/**
 383 * copy_regset_from_user - store into thread's user_regset data from user memory
 384 * @target:     thread to be examined
 385 * @view:       &struct user_regset_view describing user thread machine state
 386 * @setno:      index in @view->regsets
 387 * @offset:     offset into the regset data, in bytes
 388 * @size:       amount of data to copy, in bytes
 389 * @data:       user-mode pointer to copy from
 390 */
 391static inline int copy_regset_from_user(struct task_struct *target,
 392                                        const struct user_regset_view *view,
 393                                        unsigned int setno,
 394                                        unsigned int offset, unsigned int size,
 395                                        const void __user *data)
 396{
 397        const struct user_regset *regset = &view->regsets[setno];
 398
 399        if (!regset->set)
 400                return -EOPNOTSUPP;
 401
 402        if (!access_ok(data, size))
 403                return -EFAULT;
 404
 405        return regset->set(target, regset, offset, size, NULL, data);
 406}
 407
 408/**
 409 * regset_size - determine the current size of a regset
 410 * @target:     thread to be examined
 411 * @regset:     regset to be examined
 412 *
 413 * Note that the returned size is valid only until the next time
 414 * (if any) @regset is modified for @target.
 415 */
 416static inline unsigned int regset_size(struct task_struct *target,
 417                                       const struct user_regset *regset)
 418{
 419        if (!regset->get_size)
 420                return regset->n * regset->size;
 421        else
 422                return regset->get_size(target, regset);
 423}
 424
 425#endif  /* <linux/regset.h> */
 426