Okay, let's comment on each bit separately.

Regsets
-------

These don't appear to be a problem for ARM, and turn out to be relatively
clean.  The only thing I did do was invent some alternative simpler
helper functions rather than using the user_regset_copy* functions (to
avoid taking the address of function arguments, which needlessly forces
them onto the stack.)

However, in looking at other architectures, I notice that sparc does this
when initializing its regsets:

                .n = 38 * sizeof(u32),
                .size = sizeof(u32), .align = sizeof(u32),

and sparc64:

                .n = 36 * sizeof(u64),
                .size = sizeof(u64), .align = sizeof(u64),

which, given that fs/binfmt_elf.c does this:

                        size_t size = regset->n * regset->size;
                        void *data = kmalloc(size, GFP_KERNEL);
                        if (unlikely(!data))
                                return 0;

means sparc ends up allocating 38 * sizeof(u32) * sizeof(u32), and
sparc64 ends up with 36 * sizeof(u64) * sizeof(u64), which must surely
be wrong?

-- 
Russell King
 Linux kernel    2.6 ARM Linux   - http://www.arm.linux.org.uk/
 maintainer of:

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