diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'arch/x86/kernel/tls.c')
-rw-r--r-- | arch/x86/kernel/tls.c | 25 |
1 files changed, 23 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/arch/x86/kernel/tls.c b/arch/x86/kernel/tls.c index 4e942f3..7fc5e84 100644 --- a/arch/x86/kernel/tls.c +++ b/arch/x86/kernel/tls.c @@ -29,7 +29,28 @@ static int get_free_idx(void) static bool tls_desc_okay(const struct user_desc *info) { - if (LDT_empty(info)) + /* + * For historical reasons (i.e. no one ever documented how any + * of the segmentation APIs work), user programs can and do + * assume that a struct user_desc that's all zeros except for + * entry_number means "no segment at all". This never actually + * worked. In fact, up to Linux 3.19, a struct user_desc like + * this would create a 16-bit read-write segment with base and + * limit both equal to zero. + * + * That was close enough to "no segment at all" until we + * hardened this function to disallow 16-bit TLS segments. Fix + * it up by interpreting these zeroed segments the way that they + * were almost certainly intended to be interpreted. + * + * The correct way to ask for "no segment at all" is to specify + * a user_desc that satisfies LDT_empty. To keep everything + * working, we accept both. + * + * Note that there's a similar kludge in modify_ldt -- look at + * the distinction between modes 1 and 0x11. + */ + if (LDT_empty(info) || LDT_zero(info)) return true; /* @@ -71,7 +92,7 @@ static void set_tls_desc(struct task_struct *p, int idx, cpu = get_cpu(); while (n-- > 0) { - if (LDT_empty(info)) + if (LDT_empty(info) || LDT_zero(info)) desc->a = desc->b = 0; else fill_ldt(desc, info); |