On 9/22/20 4:11 PM, Catalin Marinas wrote:
On Tue, Sep 01, 2020 at 02:57:19PM +0530, Amit Daniel Kachhap wrote:
Add a testcase to check that user address with valid/invalid
mte tag works in kernel mode. This test verifies the kernel API's
__arch_copy_from_user/__arch_copy_to_user works by considering
if the user pointer has valid/invalid allocation tags.

In MTE sync mode a SIGSEV fault is generated if a user memory
with invalid tag is accessed in kernel. In async mode no such
fault occurs.

We don't generate a SIGSEGV for faults in the uaccess routines. The
kernel simply returns less copied bytes than what was requested or -1
and setting errno.

ok. I will update in the next iteration.

BTW, Qemu has a bug and it reports the wrong exception class (lower
DABT) for a tag check fault while in the uaccess routines, leading to
kernel panic (bad mode in synchronous abort handler).

Yes I am also seeing this.

+static int check_usermem_access_fault(int mem_type, int mode, int mapping)
+{
+       int fd, ret, i, err;
+       char val = 'A';
+       size_t len, read_len;
+       void *ptr, *ptr_next;
+       bool fault;
+
+       len = 2 * page_sz;
+       err = KSFT_FAIL;
+       /*
+        * Accessing user memory in kernel with invalid tag should fault in sync
+        * mode but may not fault in async mode as per the implemented MTE
+        * support in Arm64 kernel.
+        */
+       if (mode == MTE_ASYNC_ERR)
+               fault = false;
+       else
+               fault = true;
+       mte_switch_mode(mode, MTE_ALLOW_NON_ZERO_TAG);
+       fd = create_temp_file();
+       if (fd == -1)
+               return KSFT_FAIL;
+       for (i = 0; i < len; i++)
+               write(fd, &val, sizeof(val));
+       lseek(fd, 0, 0);
+       ptr = mte_allocate_memory(len, mem_type, mapping, true);
+       if (check_allocated_memory(ptr, len, mem_type, true) != KSFT_PASS) {
+               close(fd);
+               return KSFT_FAIL;
+       }
+       mte_initialize_current_context(mode, (uintptr_t)ptr, len);
+       /* Copy from file into buffer with valid tag */
+       read_len = read(fd, ptr, len);
+       ret = errno;

My reading of the man page is that errno is set only if read() returns
-1.

Yes. The checks should be optimized here.

+       mte_wait_after_trig();
+       if ((cur_mte_cxt.fault_valid == true) || ret == EFAULT || read_len < 
len)
+               goto usermem_acc_err;
+       /* Verify same pattern is read */
+       for (i = 0; i < len; i++)
+               if (*(char *)(ptr + i) != val)
+                       break;
+       if (i < len)
+               goto usermem_acc_err;
+
+       /* Tag the next half of memory with different value */
+       ptr_next = (void *)((unsigned long)ptr + page_sz);
+       ptr_next = mte_insert_tags(ptr_next, page_sz);
+       if (!ptr_next)
+               goto usermem_acc_err;
+       lseek(fd, 0, 0);
+       /* Copy from file into buffer with invalid tag */
+       read_len = read(fd, ptr, len);
+       ret = errno;
+       mte_wait_after_trig();
+       if ((fault == true) &&

Nitpick: just use "if (fault &&), it's a bool already.

ok.

+           (cur_mte_cxt.fault_valid == true || ret == EFAULT || read_len < 
len)) {
+               err = KSFT_PASS;
+       } else if ((fault == false) &&
+                  (cur_mte_cxt.fault_valid == false && read_len == len)) {

Same here, !fault, !cur_mte_cxt.fault_valid.

ok.

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