glibc/elf/dl-hwcaps.c
Florian Weimer dcbc6b83ef elf: Do not read hwcaps from the vDSO in ld.so
This was only ever used for the "nosegneg" flag.  This approach for
passing hardware capability information creates a subtle dependency
between the kernel and userspace, and ld.so.cache contents.  It seems
inappropriate for toady, where people expect to be able to run
system images which very different kernel versions.

Reviewed-by: Adhemerval Zanella <adhemerval.zanella@linaro.org>
2020-05-28 10:20:57 +02:00

199 lines
5.1 KiB
C

/* Hardware capability support for run-time dynamic loader.
Copyright (C) 2012-2020 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This file is part of the GNU C Library.
The GNU C Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
The GNU C Library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
Lesser General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
License along with the GNU C Library; if not, see
<https://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
#include <assert.h>
#include <elf.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include <libintl.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <ldsodefs.h>
#include <dl-procinfo.h>
#include <dl-hwcaps.h>
/* Return an array of useful/necessary hardware capability names. */
const struct r_strlenpair *
_dl_important_hwcaps (const char *platform, size_t platform_len, size_t *sz,
size_t *max_capstrlen)
{
uint64_t hwcap_mask = GET_HWCAP_MASK();
/* Determine how many important bits are set. */
uint64_t masked = GLRO(dl_hwcap) & hwcap_mask;
size_t cnt = platform != NULL;
size_t n, m;
size_t total;
struct r_strlenpair *result;
struct r_strlenpair *rp;
char *cp;
/* Count the number of bits set in the masked value. */
for (n = 0; (~((1ULL << n) - 1) & masked) != 0; ++n)
if ((masked & (1ULL << n)) != 0)
++cnt;
/* For TLS enabled builds always add 'tls'. */
++cnt;
/* Create temporary data structure to generate result table. */
struct r_strlenpair temp[cnt];
m = 0;
for (n = 0; masked != 0; ++n)
if ((masked & (1ULL << n)) != 0)
{
temp[m].str = _dl_hwcap_string (n);
temp[m].len = strlen (temp[m].str);
masked ^= 1ULL << n;
++m;
}
if (platform != NULL)
{
temp[m].str = platform;
temp[m].len = platform_len;
++m;
}
temp[m].str = "tls";
temp[m].len = 3;
++m;
assert (m == cnt);
/* Determine the total size of all strings together. */
if (cnt == 1)
total = temp[0].len + 1;
else
{
total = temp[0].len + temp[cnt - 1].len + 2;
if (cnt > 2)
{
total <<= 1;
for (n = 1; n + 1 < cnt; ++n)
total += temp[n].len + 1;
if (cnt > 3
&& (cnt >= sizeof (size_t) * 8
|| total + (sizeof (*result) << 3)
>= (1UL << (sizeof (size_t) * 8 - cnt + 3))))
_dl_signal_error (ENOMEM, NULL, NULL,
N_("cannot create capability list"));
total <<= cnt - 3;
}
}
/* The result structure: we use a very compressed way to store the
various combinations of capability names. */
*sz = 1 << cnt;
result = (struct r_strlenpair *) malloc (*sz * sizeof (*result) + total);
if (result == NULL)
_dl_signal_error (ENOMEM, NULL, NULL,
N_("cannot create capability list"));
if (cnt == 1)
{
result[0].str = (char *) (result + *sz);
result[0].len = temp[0].len + 1;
result[1].str = (char *) (result + *sz);
result[1].len = 0;
cp = __mempcpy ((char *) (result + *sz), temp[0].str, temp[0].len);
*cp = '/';
*sz = 2;
*max_capstrlen = result[0].len;
return result;
}
/* Fill in the information. This follows the following scheme
(indices from TEMP for four strings):
entry #0: 0, 1, 2, 3 binary: 1111
#1: 0, 1, 3 1101
#2: 0, 2, 3 1011
#3: 0, 3 1001
This allows the representation of all possible combinations of
capability names in the string. First generate the strings. */
result[1].str = result[0].str = cp = (char *) (result + *sz);
#define add(idx) \
cp = __mempcpy (__mempcpy (cp, temp[idx].str, temp[idx].len), "/", 1);
if (cnt == 2)
{
add (1);
add (0);
}
else
{
n = 1 << (cnt - 1);
do
{
n -= 2;
/* We always add the last string. */
add (cnt - 1);
/* Add the strings which have the bit set in N. */
for (m = cnt - 2; m > 0; --m)
if ((n & (1 << m)) != 0)
add (m);
/* Always add the first string. */
add (0);
}
while (n != 0);
}
#undef add
/* Now we are ready to install the string pointers and length. */
for (n = 0; n < (1UL << cnt); ++n)
result[n].len = 0;
n = cnt;
do
{
size_t mask = 1 << --n;
rp = result;
for (m = 1 << cnt; m > 0; ++rp)
if ((--m & mask) != 0)
rp->len += temp[n].len + 1;
}
while (n != 0);
/* The first half of the strings all include the first string. */
n = (1 << cnt) - 2;
rp = &result[2];
while (n != (1UL << (cnt - 1)))
{
if ((--n & 1) != 0)
rp[0].str = rp[-2].str + rp[-2].len;
else
rp[0].str = rp[-1].str;
++rp;
}
/* The second half starts right after the first part of the string of
the corresponding entry in the first half. */
do
{
rp[0].str = rp[-(1 << (cnt - 1))].str + temp[cnt - 1].len + 1;
++rp;
}
while (--n != 0);
/* The maximum string length. */
*max_capstrlen = result[0].len;
return result;
}