| This file documents some of the kernel entries in |
| arch/x86/kernel/entry_64.S. A lot of this explanation is adapted from |
| an email from Ingo Molnar: |
| |
| http://lkml.kernel.org/r/<20110529191055.GC9835%40elte.hu> |
| |
| The x86 architecture has quite a few different ways to jump into |
| kernel code. Most of these entry points are registered in |
| arch/x86/kernel/traps.c and implemented in arch/x86/kernel/entry_64.S |
| for 64-bit, arch/x86/kernel/entry_32.S for 32-bit and finally |
| arch/x86/ia32/ia32entry.S which implements the 32-bit compatibility |
| syscall entry points and thus provides for 32-bit processes the |
| ability to execute syscalls when running on 64-bit kernels. |
| |
| The IDT vector assignments are listed in arch/x86/include/asm/irq_vectors.h. |
| |
| Some of these entries are: |
| |
| - system_call: syscall instruction from 64-bit code. |
| |
| - entry_INT80_compat: int 0x80 from 32-bit or 64-bit code; compat syscall |
| either way. |
| |
| - entry_INT80_compat, ia32_sysenter: syscall and sysenter from 32-bit |
| code |
| |
| - interrupt: An array of entries. Every IDT vector that doesn't |
| explicitly point somewhere else gets set to the corresponding |
| value in interrupts. These point to a whole array of |
| magically-generated functions that make their way to do_IRQ with |
| the interrupt number as a parameter. |
| |
| - APIC interrupts: Various special-purpose interrupts for things |
| like TLB shootdown. |
| |
| - Architecturally-defined exceptions like divide_error. |
| |
| There are a few complexities here. The different x86-64 entries |
| have different calling conventions. The syscall and sysenter |
| instructions have their own peculiar calling conventions. Some of |
| the IDT entries push an error code onto the stack; others don't. |
| IDT entries using the IST alternative stack mechanism need their own |
| magic to get the stack frames right. (You can find some |
| documentation in the AMD APM, Volume 2, Chapter 8 and the Intel SDM, |
| Volume 3, Chapter 6.) |
| |
| Dealing with the swapgs instruction is especially tricky. Swapgs |
| toggles whether gs is the kernel gs or the user gs. The swapgs |
| instruction is rather fragile: it must nest perfectly and only in |
| single depth, it should only be used if entering from user mode to |
| kernel mode and then when returning to user-space, and precisely |
| so. If we mess that up even slightly, we crash. |
| |
| So when we have a secondary entry, already in kernel mode, we *must |
| not* use SWAPGS blindly - nor must we forget doing a SWAPGS when it's |
| not switched/swapped yet. |
| |
| Now, there's a secondary complication: there's a cheap way to test |
| which mode the CPU is in and an expensive way. |
| |
| The cheap way is to pick this info off the entry frame on the kernel |
| stack, from the CS of the ptregs area of the kernel stack: |
| |
| xorl %ebx,%ebx |
| testl $3,CS+8(%rsp) |
| je error_kernelspace |
| SWAPGS |
| |
| The expensive (paranoid) way is to read back the MSR_GS_BASE value |
| (which is what SWAPGS modifies): |
| |
| movl $1,%ebx |
| movl $MSR_GS_BASE,%ecx |
| rdmsr |
| testl %edx,%edx |
| js 1f /* negative -> in kernel */ |
| SWAPGS |
| xorl %ebx,%ebx |
| 1: ret |
| |
| If we are at an interrupt or user-trap/gate-alike boundary then we can |
| use the faster check: the stack will be a reliable indicator of |
| whether SWAPGS was already done: if we see that we are a secondary |
| entry interrupting kernel mode execution, then we know that the GS |
| base has already been switched. If it says that we interrupted |
| user-space execution then we must do the SWAPGS. |
| |
| But if we are in an NMI/MCE/DEBUG/whatever super-atomic entry context, |
| which might have triggered right after a normal entry wrote CS to the |
| stack but before we executed SWAPGS, then the only safe way to check |
| for GS is the slower method: the RDMSR. |
| |
| Therefore, super-atomic entries (except NMI, which is handled separately) |
| must use idtentry with paranoid=1 to handle gsbase correctly. This |
| triggers three main behavior changes: |
| |
| - Interrupt entry will use the slower gsbase check. |
| - Interrupt entry from user mode will switch off the IST stack. |
| - Interrupt exit to kernel mode will not attempt to reschedule. |
| |
| We try to only use IST entries and the paranoid entry code for vectors |
| that absolutely need the more expensive check for the GS base - and we |
| generate all 'normal' entry points with the regular (faster) paranoid=0 |
| variant. |