Rene,

Thanks !

and welcome back (just kidding) ;)

On 11/25/07, Rene Herman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On 25-11-07 08:58, Ramagudi Naziir wrote:
>
> > I read in intel's manual that you can either put interrupt gate
> > or a task gate in the IDT.
>
> Or trap-gate, which is an interrupt-gate minus the automatic interrupt
> disabling.
>
> > So what does Linux put there ? when an int 80 is executed - is
> > it via an interrupt gate or task gate ?
>
> Trap-gate.
>
> > are task gates used in Linux anyway ?
>
> Only for a double fault (defined as an exception that occurs while calling
> the handler for a previous one and which cannot be handled serially; a page
> fault occuring while trying to call the page-fault handler for example) and
> only since late 2.5 or early 2.6 or so.
>
> The most definite advantage of using a task gate for this seems likely to be
> that a task switch also switches stacks so that a stack fault won't just
> keep recursing upon trying to call the handler and end up as a triple-fault,
> meaning an automatic CPU shutdown.
>
> You can see Linux set up the IDT in trap_init().
>
> Rene.
>

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