If a library wants to get information from auxv (for instance,
AT_HWCAP/AT_HWCAP2), it has a few options, none of them perfectly reliable
or ideal:
- Be main or the pre-main startup code, and grub through the stack above
main. Doesn't work for a library.
- Call libc getauxval. Not ideal for libraries that are trying to be
libc-independent and/or don't otherwise require anything from other
libraries.
- Open and read /proc/self/auxv. Doesn't work for libraries that may run
in arbitrarily constrained environments that may not have /proc
mounted (e.g. libraries that might be used by an init program or a
container setup tool).
- Assume you're on the main thread and still on the original stack, and
try to walk the stack upwards, hoping to find auxv. Extremely bad
idea.
- Ask the caller to pass auxv in for you. Not ideal for a user-friendly
library, and then your caller may have the same problem.
Add a prctl that copies current->mm->saved_auxv to a userspace buffer.
Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/d81864a7f7f43bca6afa2a09fc2e850e4050ab42.1680611394.git.josh@joshtriplett.org
Signed-off-by: Josh Triplett <[email protected]>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <[email protected]>
#define PR_SET_VMA 0x53564d41
# define PR_SET_VMA_ANON_NAME 0
+#define PR_GET_AUXV 0x41555856
+
#endif /* _LINUX_PRCTL_H */
PR_MDWE_REFUSE_EXEC_GAIN : 0;
}
+static int prctl_get_auxv(void __user *addr, unsigned long len)
+{
+ struct mm_struct *mm = current->mm;
+ unsigned long size = min_t(unsigned long, sizeof(mm->saved_auxv), len);
+
+ if (size && copy_to_user(addr, mm->saved_auxv, size))
+ return -EFAULT;
+ return sizeof(mm->saved_auxv);
+}
+
SYSCALL_DEFINE5(prctl, int, option, unsigned long, arg2, unsigned long, arg3,
unsigned long, arg4, unsigned long, arg5)
{
else
return -EINVAL;
break;
+ case PR_GET_AUXV:
+ if (arg4 || arg5)
+ return -EINVAL;
+ error = prctl_get_auxv((void __user *)arg2, arg3);
+ break;
default:
return -EINVAL;
}