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x86: Kill handle_signal()->set_fs()

handle_signal()->set_fs() has a nice comment which explains what
set_fs() is, but it doesn't explain why it is needed and why it
depends on CONFIG_X86_64.

Afaics, the history of this confusion is:

	1. I guess today nobody can explain why it was needed
	   in arch/i386/kernel/signal.c, perhaps it was always
	   wrong. This predates 2.4.0 kernel.

	2. then it was copy-and-past'ed to the new x86_64 arch.

	3. then it was removed from i386 (but not from x86_64)
	   by b93b6ca3 "i386: remove unnecessary code".

	4. then it was reintroduced under CONFIG_X86_64 when x86
	   unified i386 and x86_64, because the patch above didn't
	   touch x86_64.

Remove it. ->addr_limit should be correct. Even if it was possible
that it is wrong, it is too late to fix it after setup_rt_frame().

Linus commented in:
http://lkml.kernel.org/r/alpine.LFD.0.999.0707170902570.19166@woody.linux-foundation.org

... about the equivalent bit from i386:

Heh. I think it's entirely historical.

Please realize that the whole reason that function is called "set_fs()" is 
that it literally used to set the %fs segment register, not 
"->addr_limit".

So I think the "set_fs(USER_DS)" is there _only_ to match the other

        regs->xds = __USER_DS;
        regs->xes = __USER_DS;
        regs->xss = __USER_DS;
        regs->xcs = __USER_CS;

things, and never mattered. And now it matters even less, and has been 
copied to all other architectures where it is just totally insane.

Signed-off-by: Oleg Nesterov <oleg@redhat.com>
Link: http://lkml.kernel.org/r/20110710164424.GA20261@redhat.com
Signed-off-by: H. Peter Anvin <hpa@linux.intel.com>
Oleg Nesterov 14 years ago
parent
commit
73d382decc
1 changed files with 0 additions and 9 deletions
  1. 0 9
      arch/x86/kernel/signal.c

+ 0 - 9
arch/x86/kernel/signal.c

@@ -720,15 +720,6 @@ handle_signal(unsigned long sig, siginfo_t *info, struct k_sigaction *ka,
 	if (ret)
 		return ret;
 
-#ifdef CONFIG_X86_64
-	/*
-	 * This has nothing to do with segment registers,
-	 * despite the name.  This magic affects uaccess.h
-	 * macros' behavior.  Reset it to the normal setting.
-	 */
-	set_fs(USER_DS);
-#endif
-
 	/*
 	 * Clear the direction flag as per the ABI for function entry.
 	 */