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2aae950b21
This implements new vDSO for x86-64. The concept is similar to the existing vDSOs on i386 and PPC. x86-64 has had static vsyscalls before, but these are not flexible enough anymore. A vDSO is a ELF shared library supplied by the kernel that is mapped into user address space. The vDSO mapping is randomized for each process for security reasons. Doing this was needed for clock_gettime, because clock_gettime always needs a syscall fallback and having one at a fixed address would have made buffer overflow exploits too easy to write. The vdso can be disabled with vdso=0 It currently includes a new gettimeofday implemention and optimized clock_gettime(). The gettimeofday implementation is slightly faster than the one in the old vsyscall. clock_gettime is significantly faster than the syscall for CLOCK_MONOTONIC and CLOCK_REALTIME. The new calls are generally faster than the old vsyscall. Advantages over the old x86-64 vsyscalls: - Extensible - Randomized - Cleaner - Easier to virtualize (the old static address range previously causes overhead e.g. for Xen because it has to create special page tables for it) Weak points: - glibc support still to be written The VM interface is partly based on Ingo Molnar's i386 version. Includes compile fix from Joachim Deguara Signed-off-by: Andi Kleen <ak@suse.de> Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
22 lines
370 B
C
22 lines
370 B
C
#ifndef __x86_64_MMU_H
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#define __x86_64_MMU_H
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#include <linux/spinlock.h>
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#include <asm/semaphore.h>
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/*
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* The x86_64 doesn't have a mmu context, but
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* we put the segment information here.
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*
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* cpu_vm_mask is used to optimize ldt flushing.
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*/
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typedef struct {
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void *ldt;
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rwlock_t ldtlock;
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int size;
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struct semaphore sem;
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void *vdso;
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} mm_context_t;
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#endif
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