xref: /linux/arch/x86/entry/calling.h (revision 96ac6d435100450f0565708d9b885ea2a7400e0a)
1 /* SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 */
2 #include <linux/jump_label.h>
3 #include <asm/unwind_hints.h>
4 #include <asm/cpufeatures.h>
5 #include <asm/page_types.h>
6 #include <asm/percpu.h>
7 #include <asm/asm-offsets.h>
8 #include <asm/processor-flags.h>
9 
10 /*
11 
12  x86 function call convention, 64-bit:
13  -------------------------------------
14   arguments           |  callee-saved      | extra caller-saved | return
15  [callee-clobbered]   |                    | [callee-clobbered] |
16  ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
17  rdi rsi rdx rcx r8-9 | rbx rbp [*] r12-15 | r10-11             | rax, rdx [**]
18 
19  ( rsp is obviously invariant across normal function calls. (gcc can 'merge'
20    functions when it sees tail-call optimization possibilities) rflags is
21    clobbered. Leftover arguments are passed over the stack frame.)
22 
23  [*]  In the frame-pointers case rbp is fixed to the stack frame.
24 
25  [**] for struct return values wider than 64 bits the return convention is a
26       bit more complex: up to 128 bits width we return small structures
27       straight in rax, rdx. For structures larger than that (3 words or
28       larger) the caller puts a pointer to an on-stack return struct
29       [allocated in the caller's stack frame] into the first argument - i.e.
30       into rdi. All other arguments shift up by one in this case.
31       Fortunately this case is rare in the kernel.
32 
33 For 32-bit we have the following conventions - kernel is built with
34 -mregparm=3 and -freg-struct-return:
35 
36  x86 function calling convention, 32-bit:
37  ----------------------------------------
38   arguments         | callee-saved        | extra caller-saved | return
39  [callee-clobbered] |                     | [callee-clobbered] |
40  -------------------------------------------------------------------------
41  eax edx ecx        | ebx edi esi ebp [*] | <none>             | eax, edx [**]
42 
43  ( here too esp is obviously invariant across normal function calls. eflags
44    is clobbered. Leftover arguments are passed over the stack frame. )
45 
46  [*]  In the frame-pointers case ebp is fixed to the stack frame.
47 
48  [**] We build with -freg-struct-return, which on 32-bit means similar
49       semantics as on 64-bit: edx can be used for a second return value
50       (i.e. covering integer and structure sizes up to 64 bits) - after that
51       it gets more complex and more expensive: 3-word or larger struct returns
52       get done in the caller's frame and the pointer to the return struct goes
53       into regparm0, i.e. eax - the other arguments shift up and the
54       function's register parameters degenerate to regparm=2 in essence.
55 
56 */
57 
58 #ifdef CONFIG_X86_64
59 
60 /*
61  * 64-bit system call stack frame layout defines and helpers,
62  * for assembly code:
63  */
64 
65 /* The layout forms the "struct pt_regs" on the stack: */
66 /*
67  * C ABI says these regs are callee-preserved. They aren't saved on kernel entry
68  * unless syscall needs a complete, fully filled "struct pt_regs".
69  */
70 #define R15		0*8
71 #define R14		1*8
72 #define R13		2*8
73 #define R12		3*8
74 #define RBP		4*8
75 #define RBX		5*8
76 /* These regs are callee-clobbered. Always saved on kernel entry. */
77 #define R11		6*8
78 #define R10		7*8
79 #define R9		8*8
80 #define R8		9*8
81 #define RAX		10*8
82 #define RCX		11*8
83 #define RDX		12*8
84 #define RSI		13*8
85 #define RDI		14*8
86 /*
87  * On syscall entry, this is syscall#. On CPU exception, this is error code.
88  * On hw interrupt, it's IRQ number:
89  */
90 #define ORIG_RAX	15*8
91 /* Return frame for iretq */
92 #define RIP		16*8
93 #define CS		17*8
94 #define EFLAGS		18*8
95 #define RSP		19*8
96 #define SS		20*8
97 
98 #define SIZEOF_PTREGS	21*8
99 
100 .macro PUSH_AND_CLEAR_REGS rdx=%rdx rax=%rax save_ret=0
101 	/*
102 	 * Push registers and sanitize registers of values that a
103 	 * speculation attack might otherwise want to exploit. The
104 	 * lower registers are likely clobbered well before they
105 	 * could be put to use in a speculative execution gadget.
106 	 * Interleave XOR with PUSH for better uop scheduling:
107 	 */
108 	.if \save_ret
109 	pushq	%rsi		/* pt_regs->si */
110 	movq	8(%rsp), %rsi	/* temporarily store the return address in %rsi */
111 	movq	%rdi, 8(%rsp)	/* pt_regs->di (overwriting original return address) */
112 	.else
113 	pushq   %rdi		/* pt_regs->di */
114 	pushq   %rsi		/* pt_regs->si */
115 	.endif
116 	pushq	\rdx		/* pt_regs->dx */
117 	xorl	%edx, %edx	/* nospec   dx */
118 	pushq   %rcx		/* pt_regs->cx */
119 	xorl	%ecx, %ecx	/* nospec   cx */
120 	pushq   \rax		/* pt_regs->ax */
121 	pushq   %r8		/* pt_regs->r8 */
122 	xorl	%r8d, %r8d	/* nospec   r8 */
123 	pushq   %r9		/* pt_regs->r9 */
124 	xorl	%r9d, %r9d	/* nospec   r9 */
125 	pushq   %r10		/* pt_regs->r10 */
126 	xorl	%r10d, %r10d	/* nospec   r10 */
127 	pushq   %r11		/* pt_regs->r11 */
128 	xorl	%r11d, %r11d	/* nospec   r11*/
129 	pushq	%rbx		/* pt_regs->rbx */
130 	xorl    %ebx, %ebx	/* nospec   rbx*/
131 	pushq	%rbp		/* pt_regs->rbp */
132 	xorl    %ebp, %ebp	/* nospec   rbp*/
133 	pushq	%r12		/* pt_regs->r12 */
134 	xorl	%r12d, %r12d	/* nospec   r12*/
135 	pushq	%r13		/* pt_regs->r13 */
136 	xorl	%r13d, %r13d	/* nospec   r13*/
137 	pushq	%r14		/* pt_regs->r14 */
138 	xorl	%r14d, %r14d	/* nospec   r14*/
139 	pushq	%r15		/* pt_regs->r15 */
140 	xorl	%r15d, %r15d	/* nospec   r15*/
141 	UNWIND_HINT_REGS
142 	.if \save_ret
143 	pushq	%rsi		/* return address on top of stack */
144 	.endif
145 .endm
146 
147 .macro POP_REGS pop_rdi=1 skip_r11rcx=0
148 	popq %r15
149 	popq %r14
150 	popq %r13
151 	popq %r12
152 	popq %rbp
153 	popq %rbx
154 	.if \skip_r11rcx
155 	popq %rsi
156 	.else
157 	popq %r11
158 	.endif
159 	popq %r10
160 	popq %r9
161 	popq %r8
162 	popq %rax
163 	.if \skip_r11rcx
164 	popq %rsi
165 	.else
166 	popq %rcx
167 	.endif
168 	popq %rdx
169 	popq %rsi
170 	.if \pop_rdi
171 	popq %rdi
172 	.endif
173 .endm
174 
175 /*
176  * This is a sneaky trick to help the unwinder find pt_regs on the stack.  The
177  * frame pointer is replaced with an encoded pointer to pt_regs.  The encoding
178  * is just setting the LSB, which makes it an invalid stack address and is also
179  * a signal to the unwinder that it's a pt_regs pointer in disguise.
180  *
181  * NOTE: This macro must be used *after* PUSH_AND_CLEAR_REGS because it corrupts
182  * the original rbp.
183  */
184 .macro ENCODE_FRAME_POINTER ptregs_offset=0
185 #ifdef CONFIG_FRAME_POINTER
186 	leaq 1+\ptregs_offset(%rsp), %rbp
187 #endif
188 .endm
189 
190 #ifdef CONFIG_PAGE_TABLE_ISOLATION
191 
192 /*
193  * PAGE_TABLE_ISOLATION PGDs are 8k.  Flip bit 12 to switch between the two
194  * halves:
195  */
196 #define PTI_USER_PGTABLE_BIT		PAGE_SHIFT
197 #define PTI_USER_PGTABLE_MASK		(1 << PTI_USER_PGTABLE_BIT)
198 #define PTI_USER_PCID_BIT		X86_CR3_PTI_PCID_USER_BIT
199 #define PTI_USER_PCID_MASK		(1 << PTI_USER_PCID_BIT)
200 #define PTI_USER_PGTABLE_AND_PCID_MASK  (PTI_USER_PCID_MASK | PTI_USER_PGTABLE_MASK)
201 
202 .macro SET_NOFLUSH_BIT	reg:req
203 	bts	$X86_CR3_PCID_NOFLUSH_BIT, \reg
204 .endm
205 
206 .macro ADJUST_KERNEL_CR3 reg:req
207 	ALTERNATIVE "", "SET_NOFLUSH_BIT \reg", X86_FEATURE_PCID
208 	/* Clear PCID and "PAGE_TABLE_ISOLATION bit", point CR3 at kernel pagetables: */
209 	andq    $(~PTI_USER_PGTABLE_AND_PCID_MASK), \reg
210 .endm
211 
212 .macro SWITCH_TO_KERNEL_CR3 scratch_reg:req
213 	ALTERNATIVE "jmp .Lend_\@", "", X86_FEATURE_PTI
214 	mov	%cr3, \scratch_reg
215 	ADJUST_KERNEL_CR3 \scratch_reg
216 	mov	\scratch_reg, %cr3
217 .Lend_\@:
218 .endm
219 
220 #define THIS_CPU_user_pcid_flush_mask   \
221 	PER_CPU_VAR(cpu_tlbstate) + TLB_STATE_user_pcid_flush_mask
222 
223 .macro SWITCH_TO_USER_CR3_NOSTACK scratch_reg:req scratch_reg2:req
224 	ALTERNATIVE "jmp .Lend_\@", "", X86_FEATURE_PTI
225 	mov	%cr3, \scratch_reg
226 
227 	ALTERNATIVE "jmp .Lwrcr3_\@", "", X86_FEATURE_PCID
228 
229 	/*
230 	 * Test if the ASID needs a flush.
231 	 */
232 	movq	\scratch_reg, \scratch_reg2
233 	andq	$(0x7FF), \scratch_reg		/* mask ASID */
234 	bt	\scratch_reg, THIS_CPU_user_pcid_flush_mask
235 	jnc	.Lnoflush_\@
236 
237 	/* Flush needed, clear the bit */
238 	btr	\scratch_reg, THIS_CPU_user_pcid_flush_mask
239 	movq	\scratch_reg2, \scratch_reg
240 	jmp	.Lwrcr3_pcid_\@
241 
242 .Lnoflush_\@:
243 	movq	\scratch_reg2, \scratch_reg
244 	SET_NOFLUSH_BIT \scratch_reg
245 
246 .Lwrcr3_pcid_\@:
247 	/* Flip the ASID to the user version */
248 	orq	$(PTI_USER_PCID_MASK), \scratch_reg
249 
250 .Lwrcr3_\@:
251 	/* Flip the PGD to the user version */
252 	orq     $(PTI_USER_PGTABLE_MASK), \scratch_reg
253 	mov	\scratch_reg, %cr3
254 .Lend_\@:
255 .endm
256 
257 .macro SWITCH_TO_USER_CR3_STACK	scratch_reg:req
258 	pushq	%rax
259 	SWITCH_TO_USER_CR3_NOSTACK scratch_reg=\scratch_reg scratch_reg2=%rax
260 	popq	%rax
261 .endm
262 
263 .macro SAVE_AND_SWITCH_TO_KERNEL_CR3 scratch_reg:req save_reg:req
264 	ALTERNATIVE "jmp .Ldone_\@", "", X86_FEATURE_PTI
265 	movq	%cr3, \scratch_reg
266 	movq	\scratch_reg, \save_reg
267 	/*
268 	 * Test the user pagetable bit. If set, then the user page tables
269 	 * are active. If clear CR3 already has the kernel page table
270 	 * active.
271 	 */
272 	bt	$PTI_USER_PGTABLE_BIT, \scratch_reg
273 	jnc	.Ldone_\@
274 
275 	ADJUST_KERNEL_CR3 \scratch_reg
276 	movq	\scratch_reg, %cr3
277 
278 .Ldone_\@:
279 .endm
280 
281 .macro RESTORE_CR3 scratch_reg:req save_reg:req
282 	ALTERNATIVE "jmp .Lend_\@", "", X86_FEATURE_PTI
283 
284 	ALTERNATIVE "jmp .Lwrcr3_\@", "", X86_FEATURE_PCID
285 
286 	/*
287 	 * KERNEL pages can always resume with NOFLUSH as we do
288 	 * explicit flushes.
289 	 */
290 	bt	$PTI_USER_PGTABLE_BIT, \save_reg
291 	jnc	.Lnoflush_\@
292 
293 	/*
294 	 * Check if there's a pending flush for the user ASID we're
295 	 * about to set.
296 	 */
297 	movq	\save_reg, \scratch_reg
298 	andq	$(0x7FF), \scratch_reg
299 	bt	\scratch_reg, THIS_CPU_user_pcid_flush_mask
300 	jnc	.Lnoflush_\@
301 
302 	btr	\scratch_reg, THIS_CPU_user_pcid_flush_mask
303 	jmp	.Lwrcr3_\@
304 
305 .Lnoflush_\@:
306 	SET_NOFLUSH_BIT \save_reg
307 
308 .Lwrcr3_\@:
309 	/*
310 	 * The CR3 write could be avoided when not changing its value,
311 	 * but would require a CR3 read *and* a scratch register.
312 	 */
313 	movq	\save_reg, %cr3
314 .Lend_\@:
315 .endm
316 
317 #else /* CONFIG_PAGE_TABLE_ISOLATION=n: */
318 
319 .macro SWITCH_TO_KERNEL_CR3 scratch_reg:req
320 .endm
321 .macro SWITCH_TO_USER_CR3_NOSTACK scratch_reg:req scratch_reg2:req
322 .endm
323 .macro SWITCH_TO_USER_CR3_STACK scratch_reg:req
324 .endm
325 .macro SAVE_AND_SWITCH_TO_KERNEL_CR3 scratch_reg:req save_reg:req
326 .endm
327 .macro RESTORE_CR3 scratch_reg:req save_reg:req
328 .endm
329 
330 #endif
331 
332 .macro STACKLEAK_ERASE_NOCLOBBER
333 #ifdef CONFIG_GCC_PLUGIN_STACKLEAK
334 	PUSH_AND_CLEAR_REGS
335 	call stackleak_erase
336 	POP_REGS
337 #endif
338 .endm
339 
340 #endif /* CONFIG_X86_64 */
341 
342 .macro STACKLEAK_ERASE
343 #ifdef CONFIG_GCC_PLUGIN_STACKLEAK
344 	call stackleak_erase
345 #endif
346 .endm
347 
348 /*
349  * This does 'call enter_from_user_mode' unless we can avoid it based on
350  * kernel config or using the static jump infrastructure.
351  */
352 .macro CALL_enter_from_user_mode
353 #ifdef CONFIG_CONTEXT_TRACKING
354 #ifdef CONFIG_JUMP_LABEL
355 	STATIC_JUMP_IF_FALSE .Lafter_call_\@, context_tracking_enabled, def=0
356 #endif
357 	call enter_from_user_mode
358 .Lafter_call_\@:
359 #endif
360 .endm
361