blob: 8db3e45659f27397400e5e927dec066f4794e3a7 [file] [log] [blame] [edit]
#include <mm.h>
#include <frontend.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <kmalloc.h>
#include <syscall.h>
#include <elf.h>
#include <pmap.h>
#include <smp.h>
#include <arch/arch.h>
#ifdef CONFIG_64BIT
# define elf_field(obj, field) (elf64 ? (obj##64)->field : (obj##32)->field)
#else
# define elf_field(obj, field) ((obj##32)->field)
#endif
/* Check if the file is valid elf file (i.e. by checking for ELF_MAGIC in the
* header) */
bool is_valid_elf(struct file *f)
{
elf64_t h;
off64_t o = 0;
struct proc *c = switch_to(0);
if (f->f_op->read(f, (char*)&h, sizeof(elf64_t), &o) != sizeof(elf64_t)) {
goto fail;
}
if (h.e_magic != ELF_MAGIC) {
goto fail;
}
success:
switch_back(0, c);
return TRUE;
fail:
switch_back(0, c);
return FALSE;
}
/* We need the writable flag for ld. Even though the elf header says it wants
* RX (and not W) for its main program header, it will page fault (eip 56f0,
* 46f0 after being relocated to 0x1000, va 0x20f4). */
static int load_one_elf(struct proc *p, struct file *f, uintptr_t pgoffset,
elf_info_t *ei, bool writable)
{
int ret = -1;
ei->phdr = -1;
ei->dynamic = 0;
ei->highest_addr = 0;
off64_t f_off = 0;
void* phdrs = 0;
int mm_perms, mm_flags = MAP_FIXED;
/* When reading on behalf of the kernel, we need to make sure no proc is
* "current". This is a bit ghetto (TODO: KFOP) */
struct proc *old_proc = switch_to(0);
/* Read in ELF header. */
elf64_t elfhdr_storage;
elf32_t* elfhdr32 = (elf32_t*)&elfhdr_storage;
elf64_t* elfhdr64 = &elfhdr_storage;
if (f->f_op->read(f, (char*)elfhdr64, sizeof(elf64_t), &f_off)
!= sizeof(elf64_t)) {
/* if you ever debug this, be sure to 0 out elfhrd_storage in advance */
printk("[kernel] load_one_elf: failed to read file\n");
goto fail;
}
if (elfhdr64->e_magic != ELF_MAGIC) {
printk("[kernel] load_one_elf: file is not an elf!\n");
goto fail;
}
bool elf32 = elfhdr32->e_ident[ELF_IDENT_CLASS] == ELFCLASS32;
bool elf64 = elfhdr64->e_ident[ELF_IDENT_CLASS] == ELFCLASS64;
if (elf64 == elf32) {
printk("[kernel] load_one_elf: ID as both 32 and 64 bit\n");
goto fail;
}
#ifndef CONFIG_64BIT
if (elf64) {
printk("[kernel] load_one_elf: 64 bit elf on 32 bit kernel\n");
goto fail;
}
#endif
#ifdef CONFIG_X86_64
if (elf32) {
printk("[kernel] load_one_elf: 32 bit elf on 64 bit kernel\n");
goto fail;
}
#endif
size_t phsz = elf64 ? sizeof(proghdr64_t) : sizeof(proghdr32_t);
uint16_t e_phnum = elf_field(elfhdr, e_phnum);
uint16_t e_phoff = elf_field(elfhdr, e_phoff);
/* Read in program headers. */
if (e_phnum > 10000 || e_phoff % (elf32 ? 4 : 8) != 0) {
printk("[kernel] load_one_elf: Bad program headers\n");
goto fail;
}
phdrs = kmalloc(e_phnum * phsz, 0);
f_off = e_phoff;
if (!phdrs || f->f_op->read(f, phdrs, e_phnum * phsz, &f_off) !=
e_phnum * phsz) {
printk("[kernel] load_one_elf: could not get program headers\n");
goto fail;
}
for (int i = 0; i < e_phnum; i++) {
proghdr32_t* ph32 = (proghdr32_t*)phdrs + i;
proghdr64_t* ph64 = (proghdr64_t*)phdrs + i;
uint16_t p_type = elf_field(ph, p_type);
uintptr_t p_va = elf_field(ph, p_va);
uintptr_t p_offset = elf_field(ph, p_offset);
uintptr_t p_align = elf_field(ph, p_align);
uintptr_t p_memsz = elf_field(ph, p_memsz);
uintptr_t p_filesz = elf_field(ph, p_filesz);
uintptr_t p_flags = elf_field(ph, p_flags);
/* Here's the ld hack, mentioned above */
p_flags |= (writable ? ELF_PROT_WRITE : 0);
/* All mmaps need to be fixed to their VAs. If the program wants it to
* be a writable region, we also need the region to be private. */
mm_flags = MAP_FIXED | (p_flags & ELF_PROT_WRITE ? MAP_PRIVATE : 0);
if (p_type == ELF_PROG_PHDR)
ei->phdr = p_va;
else if (p_type == ELF_PROG_INTERP) {
f_off = p_offset;
ssize_t maxlen = sizeof(ei->interp);
ssize_t bytes = f->f_op->read(f, ei->interp, maxlen, &f_off);
/* trying to catch errors. don't know how big it could be, but it
* should be at least 0. */
if (bytes <= 0) {
printk("[kernel] load_one_elf: could not read ei->interp\n");
goto fail;
}
maxlen = MIN(maxlen, bytes);
if (strnlen(ei->interp, maxlen) == maxlen) {
printk("[kernel] load_one_elf: interpreter name too long\n");
goto fail;
}
ei->dynamic = 1;
}
else if (p_type == ELF_PROG_LOAD && p_memsz) {
if (p_align % PGSIZE) {
printk("[kernel] load_one_elf: not page aligned\n");
goto fail;
}
if (p_offset % PGSIZE != p_va % PGSIZE) {
printk("[kernel] load_one_elf: offset difference \n");
goto fail;
}
uintptr_t filestart = ROUNDDOWN(p_offset, PGSIZE);
uintptr_t filesz = p_offset + p_filesz - filestart;
uintptr_t memstart = ROUNDDOWN(p_va, PGSIZE);
uintptr_t memsz = ROUNDUP(p_va + p_memsz, PGSIZE) - memstart;
memstart += pgoffset * PGSIZE;
if (memstart + memsz > ei->highest_addr)
ei->highest_addr = memstart + memsz;
mm_perms = 0;
mm_perms |= (p_flags & ELF_PROT_READ ? PROT_READ : 0);
mm_perms |= (p_flags & ELF_PROT_WRITE ? PROT_WRITE : 0);
mm_perms |= (p_flags & ELF_PROT_EXEC ? PROT_EXEC : 0);
if (filesz) {
/* Due to elf-ghetto-ness, we need to zero the first part of
* the BSS from the last page of the data segment. If we end
* on a partial page, we map it in separately with
* MAP_POPULATE so that we can zero the rest of it now. We
* translate to the KVA so we don't need to worry about using
* the proc's mapping */
uintptr_t partial = PGOFF(filesz);
if (filesz - partial) {
/* Map the complete pages. */
if (do_mmap(p, memstart, filesz - partial, mm_perms,
mm_flags, f, filestart) == MAP_FAILED) {
printk("[kernel] load_one_elf: complete mmap failed\n");
goto fail;
}
}
/* Note that we (probably) only need to do this zeroing the end
* of a partial file page when we are dealing with
* ELF_PROT_WRITE-able PHs, and not for all cases. */
if (partial) {
/* Need our own populated, private copy of the page so that
* we can zero the remainder - and not zero chunks of the
* real file in the page cache. */
mm_flags |= MAP_PRIVATE | MAP_POPULATE;
/* Map the final partial page. */
uintptr_t last_page = memstart + filesz - partial;
if (do_mmap(p, last_page, PGSIZE, mm_perms, mm_flags,
f, filestart + filesz - partial) == MAP_FAILED) {
printk("[kernel] load_one_elf: partial mmap failed\n");
goto fail;
}
/* Zero the end of it. This is a huge pain in the ass. The
* filesystems should zero out the last bits of a page if
* the file doesn't fill the last page. But we're dealing
* with windows into otherwise complete files. */
pte_t *pte = pgdir_walk(p->env_pgdir, (void*)last_page, 0);
/* if we were able to get a PTE, then there is a real page
* backing the VMR, and we need to zero the excess. if
* there isn't, then the page fault code should handle it.
* since we set populate above, we should have a PTE, except
* in cases where the offset + len window exceeded the file
* size. in this case, we let them mmap it, but didn't
* populate it. there will be a PF right away if someone
* tries to use this. check out do_mmap for more info. */
if (pte) {
void* last_page_kva = ppn2kva(PTE2PPN(*pte));
memset(last_page_kva + partial, 0, PGSIZE - partial);
}
filesz = ROUNDUP(filesz, PGSIZE);
}
}
/* Any extra pages are mapped anonymously... (a bit weird) */
if (filesz < memsz)
if (do_mmap(p, memstart + filesz, memsz-filesz,
PROT_READ | PROT_WRITE, MAP_PRIVATE,
NULL, 0) == MAP_FAILED) {
printk("[kernel] load_one_elf: anon mmap failed\n");
goto fail;
}
}
}
/* map in program headers anyway if not present in binary.
* useful for TLS in static programs. */
if (ei->phdr == -1) {
uintptr_t filestart = ROUNDDOWN(e_phoff, PGSIZE);
uintptr_t filesz = e_phoff + (e_phnum * phsz) - filestart;
void *phdr_addr = do_mmap(p, 0, filesz, PROT_READ | PROT_WRITE,
MAP_PRIVATE, f, filestart);
if (phdr_addr == MAP_FAILED) {
printk("[kernel] load_one_elf: prog header mmap failed\n");
goto fail;
}
ei->phdr = (long)phdr_addr + e_phoff;
}
ei->entry = elf_field(elfhdr, e_entry) + pgoffset*PGSIZE;
ei->phnum = e_phnum;
ei->elf64 = elf64;
ret = 0;
/* Fall-through */
fail:
if (phdrs)
kfree(phdrs);
switch_back(0, old_proc);
return ret;
}
int load_elf(struct proc* p, struct file* f)
{
elf_info_t ei, interp_ei;
if (load_one_elf(p, f, 0, &ei, FALSE))
return -1;
if (ei.dynamic) {
struct file *interp = do_file_open(ei.interp, 0, 0);
if (!interp)
return -1;
/* Load dynamic linker at 1M. Obvious MIB joke avoided.
* It used to be loaded at page 1, but the existence of valid addresses
* that low masked bad derefs through NULL pointer structs. This in turn
* helped us waste a full day debugging a bug in the Go runtime. True!
* Note that MMAP_LOWEST_VA also has this value but we want to make this
* explicit. */
int error = load_one_elf(p, interp, MiB>>12, &interp_ei, TRUE);
kref_put(&interp->f_kref);
if (error)
return -1;
}
// fill in auxiliary info for dynamic linker/runtime
elf_aux_t auxp[] = {{ELF_AUX_PHDR, ei.phdr},
{ELF_AUX_PHENT, sizeof(proghdr32_t)},
{ELF_AUX_PHNUM, ei.phnum},
{ELF_AUX_ENTRY, ei.entry},
{0, 0}};
// put auxp after argv, envp in procinfo
int auxp_pos = -1;
for (int i = 0, zeros = 0; i < PROCINFO_MAX_ARGP; i++)
if (p->procinfo->argp[i] == NULL)
if (++zeros == 2)
auxp_pos = i + 1;
if (auxp_pos == -1 ||
auxp_pos + sizeof(auxp) / sizeof(char*) >= PROCINFO_MAX_ARGP)
return -1;
memcpy(p->procinfo->argp+auxp_pos,auxp,sizeof(auxp));
uintptr_t core0_entry = ei.dynamic ? interp_ei.entry : ei.entry;
proc_init_ctx(&p->scp_ctx, 0, core0_entry, USTACKTOP, 0);
p->env_entry = ei.entry;
int flags = MAP_FIXED | MAP_ANONYMOUS;
uintptr_t stacksz = USTACK_NUM_PAGES*PGSIZE;
if (do_mmap(p, USTACKTOP-stacksz, stacksz, PROT_READ | PROT_WRITE,
flags, NULL, 0) == MAP_FAILED)
return -1;
// Set the heap bottom and top to just past where the text
// region has been loaded
p->heap_top = (void*)ei.highest_addr;
p->procinfo->heap_bottom = p->heap_top;
return 0;
}