On 2025-08-26 at 19:46:19 -0500, Samuel Holland wrote: >Hi Maciej, > >On 2025-08-26 3:08 AM, Maciej Wieczor-Retman wrote: >> On 2025-08-25 at 14:36:35 -0700, Dave Hansen wrote: >>> On 8/25/25 13:24, Maciej Wieczor-Retman wrote: >>>> +/* >>>> + * CONFIG_KASAN_SW_TAGS requires LAM which changes the canonicality checks. >>>> + */ >>>> +#ifdef CONFIG_KASAN_SW_TAGS >>>> +static __always_inline u64 __canonical_address(u64 vaddr, u8 vaddr_bits) >>>> +{ >>>> + return (vaddr | BIT_ULL(63) | BIT_ULL(vaddr_bits - 1)); >>>> +} >>>> +#else >>>> static __always_inline u64 __canonical_address(u64 vaddr, u8 vaddr_bits) >>>> { >>>> return ((s64)vaddr << (64 - vaddr_bits)) >> (64 - vaddr_bits); >>>> } >>>> +#endif >>> >>> This is the kind of thing that's bound to break. Could we distill it >>> down to something simpler, perhaps? >>> >>> In the end, the canonical enforcement mask is the thing that's changing. >>> So perhaps it should be all common code except for the mask definition: >>> >>> #ifdef CONFIG_KASAN_SW_TAGS >>> #define CANONICAL_MASK(vaddr_bits) (BIT_ULL(63) | BIT_ULL(vaddr_bits-1)) >>> #else >>> #define CANONICAL_MASK(vaddr_bits) GENMASK_UL(63, vaddr_bits) >>> #endif >>> >>> (modulo off-by-one bugs ;) >>> >>> Then the canonical check itself becomes something like: >>> >>> unsigned long cmask = CANONICAL_MASK(vaddr_bits); >>> return (vaddr & mask) == mask; >>> >>> That, to me, is the most straightforward way to do it. >> >> Thanks, I'll try something like this. I will also have to investigate what >> Samuel brought up that KVM possibly wants to pass user addresses to this >> function as well. >> >>> >>> I don't see it addressed in the cover letter, but what happens when a >>> CONFIG_KASAN_SW_TAGS=y kernel is booted on non-LAM hardware? >> >> That's a good point, I need to add it to the cover letter. On non-LAM hardware >> the kernel just doesn't boot. Disabling KASAN in runtime on unsupported hardware >> isn't that difficult in outline mode, but I'm not sure it can work in inline >> mode (where checks into shadow memory are just pasted into code by the >> compiler). > >On RISC-V at least, I was able to run inline mode with missing hardware support. >The shadow memory is still allocated, so the inline tag checks do not fault. And >with a patch to make kasan_enabled() return false[1], all pointers remain >canonical (they match the MatchAllTag), so the inline tag checks all succeed. > >[1]: >https://lore.kernel.org/linux-riscv/20241022015913.3524425-3-samuel.holland@xxxxxxxxxx/ Thanks, that should work :) I'll test it and apply to the series. > >Regards, >Samuel > >> Since for now there is no compiler support for the inline mode anyway, I'll try to >> disable KASAN on non-LAM hardware in runtime. >> > -- Kind regards Maciej Wieczór-Retman