linux/arch/arm/mm/copypage-xsc3.c

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/*
* linux/arch/arm/mm/copypage-xsc3.S
*
* Copyright (C) 2004 Intel Corp.
*
* This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
* it under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2 as
* published by the Free Software Foundation.
*
* Adapted for 3rd gen XScale core, no more mini-dcache
* Author: Matt Gilbert (matthew.m.gilbert@intel.com)
*/
#include <linux/init.h>
#include <linux/highmem.h>
/*
* General note:
* We don't really want write-allocate cache behaviour for these functions
* since that will just eat through 8K of the cache.
*/
/*
* XSC3 optimised copy_user_highpage
* r0 = destination
* r1 = source
*
* The source page may have some clean entries in the cache already, but we
* can safely ignore them - break_cow() will flush them out of the cache
* if we eventually end up using our copied page.
*
*/
static void __naked
xsc3_mc_copy_user_page(void *kto, const void *kfrom)
{
asm("\
stmfd sp!, {r4, r5, lr} \n\
mov lr, %0 \n\
\n\
pld [r1, #0] \n\
pld [r1, #32] \n\
1: pld [r1, #64] \n\
pld [r1, #96] \n\
\n\
2: ldrd r2, [r1], #8 \n\
mov ip, r0 \n\
ldrd r4, [r1], #8 \n\
mcr p15, 0, ip, c7, c6, 1 @ invalidate\n\
strd r2, [r0], #8 \n\
ldrd r2, [r1], #8 \n\
strd r4, [r0], #8 \n\
ldrd r4, [r1], #8 \n\
strd r2, [r0], #8 \n\
strd r4, [r0], #8 \n\
ldrd r2, [r1], #8 \n\
mov ip, r0 \n\
ldrd r4, [r1], #8 \n\
mcr p15, 0, ip, c7, c6, 1 @ invalidate\n\
strd r2, [r0], #8 \n\
ldrd r2, [r1], #8 \n\
subs lr, lr, #1 \n\
strd r4, [r0], #8 \n\
ldrd r4, [r1], #8 \n\
strd r2, [r0], #8 \n\
strd r4, [r0], #8 \n\
bgt 1b \n\
beq 2b \n\
\n\
ldmfd sp!, {r4, r5, pc}"
:
: "I" (PAGE_SIZE / 64 - 1));
}
void xsc3_mc_copy_user_highpage(struct page *to, struct page *from,
unsigned long vaddr, struct vm_area_struct *vma)
{
void *kto, *kfrom;
kto = kmap_atomic(to, KM_USER0);
kfrom = kmap_atomic(from, KM_USER1);
ARM: Flush user mapping on VIVT processors when copying a page Steven Walter <stevenrwalter@gmail.com> writes: > I've been tracking down an instance of userspace data corruption, > and I believe I have found a window during fork where data can be > lost. The corruption is occurring on an ARMv5 system with VIVT > caches. Here's the scenario in question. Thread A is forking, > Thread B is running in userspace: > > Thread A: flush_cache_mm() (dup_mmap) > Thread B: writes to a page in the above mm > Thread A: pte_wrprotect() the above page (copy_one_pte) > Thread B: writes to the same page again > > During thread B's second write, he'll take a fault and enter the > do_wp_page() case. We'll end up calling copy_page(), which notably > uses the kernel virtual addresses for the old and new pages. This > means that the new page does not necessarily have the data from the > first write. Now there are two conflicting copies of the same > cache-line in dcache. If the userspace cache-line flushes before > the kernel cache-line, we lose the changes made during the first > write. do_wp_page does call flush_dcache_page on the newly-copied > page, but there's still a window where the CPU could flush the > userspace cache-line before then. Resolve this by flushing the user mapping before copying the page on processors with a writeback VIVT cache. Note: this does have a performance impact, and so needs further consideration before being merged - can we optimize out some of the cache flushes if, eg, we know that the page isn't yet mapped? Thread: <e06498070903061426o5875ad13hc6328aa0d3f08ed7@mail.gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Russell King <rmk+kernel@arm.linux.org.uk>
2009-10-05 16:34:22 +02:00
flush_cache_page(vma, vaddr, page_to_pfn(from));
xsc3_mc_copy_user_page(kto, kfrom);
kunmap_atomic(kfrom, KM_USER1);
kunmap_atomic(kto, KM_USER0);
}
/*
* XScale optimised clear_user_page
* r0 = destination
* r1 = virtual user address of ultimate destination page
*/
void xsc3_mc_clear_user_highpage(struct page *page, unsigned long vaddr)
{
void *ptr, *kaddr = kmap_atomic(page, KM_USER0);
asm volatile ("\
mov r1, %2 \n\
mov r2, #0 \n\
mov r3, #0 \n\
1: mcr p15, 0, %0, c7, c6, 1 @ invalidate line\n\
strd r2, [%0], #8 \n\
strd r2, [%0], #8 \n\
strd r2, [%0], #8 \n\
strd r2, [%0], #8 \n\
subs r1, r1, #1 \n\
bne 1b"
: "=r" (ptr)
: "0" (kaddr), "I" (PAGE_SIZE / 32)
: "r1", "r2", "r3");
kunmap_atomic(kaddr, KM_USER0);
}
struct cpu_user_fns xsc3_mc_user_fns __initdata = {
.cpu_clear_user_highpage = xsc3_mc_clear_user_highpage,
.cpu_copy_user_highpage = xsc3_mc_copy_user_highpage,
};