[alsa-devel] [RFC PATCH 7/7] sound: core: Avoid using timespec for struct snd_timer_tread

Baolin Wang baolin.wang at linaro.org
Fri Sep 22 05:00:58 CEST 2017


On 21 September 2017 at 21:09, Arnd Bergmann <arnd at arndb.de> wrote:
> On Thu, Sep 21, 2017 at 8:18 AM, Baolin Wang <baolin.wang at linaro.org> wrote:
>
>> +static int snd_timer_user_tread(void __user *argp, struct snd_timer_user *tu,
>> +                               unsigned int cmd)
>> +{
>> +       int __user *p = argp;
>> +       int xarg, old_tread;
>> +
>> +       if (tu->timeri) /* too late */
>> +               return -EBUSY;
>> +       if (get_user(xarg, p))
>> +               return -EFAULT;
>> +
>> +       old_tread = tu->tread;
>> +#if __BITS_PER_LONG == 64
>> +       tu->tread = xarg ? 2 : 0;
>> +#ifdef IA32_EMULATION
>> +       tu->tread = xarg ? 3 : 0;
>> +#endif
>> +#else
>> +       if (cmd == SNDRV_TIMER_IOCTL_TREAD64)
>> +               tu->tread = xarg ? 2 : 0;
>> +       else
>> +               tu->tread = xarg ? 1 : 0;
>> +#endif
>
> The 64-bit case looks broken here:
>
> - The tread flag is different for compat and native mode, so you
>    must pass a flag to identify whether you are called from
>    __snd_timer_user_ioctl or from snd_timer_user_ioctl_compat().

I have some confusion here. For 64-bit, we will set tu->tread = 2 no
matter it is native mode or compat mode, only we will set tu->tread =
3 for x86_32 in compat mode, right?
So I think we do not need to identify whether called from native mode
or compat mode.

>
> - On x86, you have to check whether calling user space process uses
>    the i386 or the x32 ABI by checking in_x32_syscall()

Make sense.

-- 
Baolin.wang
Best Regards


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