cachepc-linux

Fork of AMDESE/linux with modifications for CachePC side-channel attack
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tagged-address-abi.rst (6168B)


      1==========================
      2AArch64 TAGGED ADDRESS ABI
      3==========================
      4
      5Authors: Vincenzo Frascino <vincenzo.frascino@arm.com>
      6         Catalin Marinas <catalin.marinas@arm.com>
      7
      8Date: 21 August 2019
      9
     10This document describes the usage and semantics of the Tagged Address
     11ABI on AArch64 Linux.
     12
     131. Introduction
     14---------------
     15
     16On AArch64 the ``TCR_EL1.TBI0`` bit is set by default, allowing
     17userspace (EL0) to perform memory accesses through 64-bit pointers with
     18a non-zero top byte. This document describes the relaxation of the
     19syscall ABI that allows userspace to pass certain tagged pointers to
     20kernel syscalls.
     21
     222. AArch64 Tagged Address ABI
     23-----------------------------
     24
     25From the kernel syscall interface perspective and for the purposes of
     26this document, a "valid tagged pointer" is a pointer with a potentially
     27non-zero top-byte that references an address in the user process address
     28space obtained in one of the following ways:
     29
     30- ``mmap()`` syscall where either:
     31
     32  - flags have the ``MAP_ANONYMOUS`` bit set or
     33  - the file descriptor refers to a regular file (including those
     34    returned by ``memfd_create()``) or ``/dev/zero``
     35
     36- ``brk()`` syscall (i.e. the heap area between the initial location of
     37  the program break at process creation and its current location).
     38
     39- any memory mapped by the kernel in the address space of the process
     40  during creation and with the same restrictions as for ``mmap()`` above
     41  (e.g. data, bss, stack).
     42
     43The AArch64 Tagged Address ABI has two stages of relaxation depending on
     44how the user addresses are used by the kernel:
     45
     461. User addresses not accessed by the kernel but used for address space
     47   management (e.g. ``mprotect()``, ``madvise()``). The use of valid
     48   tagged pointers in this context is allowed with these exceptions:
     49
     50   - ``brk()``, ``mmap()`` and the ``new_address`` argument to
     51     ``mremap()`` as these have the potential to alias with existing
     52     user addresses.
     53
     54     NOTE: This behaviour changed in v5.6 and so some earlier kernels may
     55     incorrectly accept valid tagged pointers for the ``brk()``,
     56     ``mmap()`` and ``mremap()`` system calls.
     57
     58   - The ``range.start``, ``start`` and ``dst`` arguments to the
     59     ``UFFDIO_*`` ``ioctl()``s used on a file descriptor obtained from
     60     ``userfaultfd()``, as fault addresses subsequently obtained by reading
     61     the file descriptor will be untagged, which may otherwise confuse
     62     tag-unaware programs.
     63
     64     NOTE: This behaviour changed in v5.14 and so some earlier kernels may
     65     incorrectly accept valid tagged pointers for this system call.
     66
     672. User addresses accessed by the kernel (e.g. ``write()``). This ABI
     68   relaxation is disabled by default and the application thread needs to
     69   explicitly enable it via ``prctl()`` as follows:
     70
     71   - ``PR_SET_TAGGED_ADDR_CTRL``: enable or disable the AArch64 Tagged
     72     Address ABI for the calling thread.
     73
     74     The ``(unsigned int) arg2`` argument is a bit mask describing the
     75     control mode used:
     76
     77     - ``PR_TAGGED_ADDR_ENABLE``: enable AArch64 Tagged Address ABI.
     78       Default status is disabled.
     79
     80     Arguments ``arg3``, ``arg4``, and ``arg5`` must be 0.
     81
     82   - ``PR_GET_TAGGED_ADDR_CTRL``: get the status of the AArch64 Tagged
     83     Address ABI for the calling thread.
     84
     85     Arguments ``arg2``, ``arg3``, ``arg4``, and ``arg5`` must be 0.
     86
     87   The ABI properties described above are thread-scoped, inherited on
     88   clone() and fork() and cleared on exec().
     89
     90   Calling ``prctl(PR_SET_TAGGED_ADDR_CTRL, PR_TAGGED_ADDR_ENABLE, 0, 0, 0)``
     91   returns ``-EINVAL`` if the AArch64 Tagged Address ABI is globally
     92   disabled by ``sysctl abi.tagged_addr_disabled=1``. The default
     93   ``sysctl abi.tagged_addr_disabled`` configuration is 0.
     94
     95When the AArch64 Tagged Address ABI is enabled for a thread, the
     96following behaviours are guaranteed:
     97
     98- All syscalls except the cases mentioned in section 3 can accept any
     99  valid tagged pointer.
    100
    101- The syscall behaviour is undefined for invalid tagged pointers: it may
    102  result in an error code being returned, a (fatal) signal being raised,
    103  or other modes of failure.
    104
    105- The syscall behaviour for a valid tagged pointer is the same as for
    106  the corresponding untagged pointer.
    107
    108
    109A definition of the meaning of tagged pointers on AArch64 can be found
    110in Documentation/arm64/tagged-pointers.rst.
    111
    1123. AArch64 Tagged Address ABI Exceptions
    113-----------------------------------------
    114
    115The following system call parameters must be untagged regardless of the
    116ABI relaxation:
    117
    118- ``prctl()`` other than pointers to user data either passed directly or
    119  indirectly as arguments to be accessed by the kernel.
    120
    121- ``ioctl()`` other than pointers to user data either passed directly or
    122  indirectly as arguments to be accessed by the kernel.
    123
    124- ``shmat()`` and ``shmdt()``.
    125
    126- ``brk()`` (since kernel v5.6).
    127
    128- ``mmap()`` (since kernel v5.6).
    129
    130- ``mremap()``, the ``new_address`` argument (since kernel v5.6).
    131
    132Any attempt to use non-zero tagged pointers may result in an error code
    133being returned, a (fatal) signal being raised, or other modes of
    134failure.
    135
    1364. Example of correct usage
    137---------------------------
    138.. code-block:: c
    139
    140   #include <stdlib.h>
    141   #include <string.h>
    142   #include <unistd.h>
    143   #include <sys/mman.h>
    144   #include <sys/prctl.h>
    145   
    146   #define PR_SET_TAGGED_ADDR_CTRL	55
    147   #define PR_TAGGED_ADDR_ENABLE	(1UL << 0)
    148   
    149   #define TAG_SHIFT		56
    150   
    151   int main(void)
    152   {
    153   	int tbi_enabled = 0;
    154   	unsigned long tag = 0;
    155   	char *ptr;
    156   
    157   	/* check/enable the tagged address ABI */
    158   	if (!prctl(PR_SET_TAGGED_ADDR_CTRL, PR_TAGGED_ADDR_ENABLE, 0, 0, 0))
    159   		tbi_enabled = 1;
    160   
    161   	/* memory allocation */
    162   	ptr = mmap(NULL, sysconf(_SC_PAGE_SIZE), PROT_READ | PROT_WRITE,
    163   		   MAP_PRIVATE | MAP_ANONYMOUS, -1, 0);
    164   	if (ptr == MAP_FAILED)
    165   		return 1;
    166   
    167   	/* set a non-zero tag if the ABI is available */
    168   	if (tbi_enabled)
    169   		tag = rand() & 0xff;
    170   	ptr = (char *)((unsigned long)ptr | (tag << TAG_SHIFT));
    171   
    172   	/* memory access to a tagged address */
    173   	strcpy(ptr, "tagged pointer\n");
    174   
    175   	/* syscall with a tagged pointer */
    176   	write(1, ptr, strlen(ptr));
    177   
    178   	return 0;
    179   }