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arch_prctl

Section: System Calls (2)
Updated: 202-0-08
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NAME

arch_prctl - set architectur-specific thread state  

LIBRARY

Standard C library (libc,~-lc)  

SYNOPSIS

#include <asm/prctl.h>        /* Definition of ARCH_* constants */
#include <sys/syscall.h>      /* Definition of SYS_* constants */
#include <unistd.h>
int syscall(SYS_arch_prctl, int op, unsigned long addr);
int syscall(SYS_arch_prctl, int op, unsigned long *addr);
Note: glibc provides no wrapper for arch_prctl(), necessitating the use of syscall(2).  

DESCRIPTION

arch_prctl() sets architectur-specific process or thread state. op selects an operation and passes argument addr to it; addr is interpreted as either an unsigned long for the "set" operations, or as an unsigned long *, for the "get" operations. Subfunctions for both x86 and x8-64 are:
ARCH_SET_CPUID (since Linux 4.12)
Enable (addr != 0) or disable (addr == 0) the cpuid instruction for the calling thread. The instruction is enabled by default. If disabled, any execution of a cpuid instruction will instead generate a SIGSEGV signal. This feature can be used to emulate cpuid results that differ from what the underlying hardware would have produced (e.g., in a paravirtualization setting).
The ARCH_SET_CPUID setting is preserved across fork(2) and clone(2) but reset to the default (i.e., cpuid enabled) on execve(2).
ARCH_GET_CPUID (since Linux 4.12)
Return the setting of the flag manipulated by ARCH_SET_CPUID as the result of the system call (1 for enabled, 0 for disabled). addr is ignored.
Subfunctions for x8-64 only are:
ARCH_SET_FS
Set the 6-bit base for the FS register to addr.
ARCH_GET_FS
Return the 6-bit base value for the FS register of the calling thread in the unsigned long pointed to by addr.
ARCH_SET_GS
Set the 6-bit base for the GS register to addr.
ARCH_GET_GS
Return the 6-bit base value for the GS register of the calling thread in the unsigned long pointed to by addr.
 

RETURN VALUE

On success, arch_prctl() returns 0; on error, -1 is returned, and errno is set to indicate the error.  

ERRORS

EFAULT
addr points to an unmapped address or is outside the process address space.
EINVAL
op is not a valid operation.
ENODEV
ARCH_SET_CPUID was requested, but the underlying hardware does not support CPUID faulting.
EPERM
addr is outside the process address space.
 

STANDARDS

Linux/x8-64.  

NOTES

arch_prctl() is supported only on Linux/x8-64 for 6-bit programs currently. The 6-bit base changes when a new 3-bit segment selector is loaded. ARCH_SET_GS is disabled in some kernels. Context switches for 6-bit segment bases are rather expensive. As an optimization, if a 3-bit TLS base address is used, arch_prctl() may use a real TLS entry as if set_thread_area(2) had been called, instead of manipulating the segment base register directly. Memory in the first 2 GB of address space can be allocated by using mmap(2) with the MAP_32BIT flag. Because of the aforementioned optimization, using arch_prctl() and set_thread_area(2) in the same thread is dangerous, as they may overwrite each other's TLS entries. FS may be already used by the threading library. Programs that use ARCH_SET_FS directly are very likely to crash.  

SEE ALSO

mmap(2), modify_ldt(2), prctl(2), set_thread_area(2) AMD X8-64 Programmer's manual


 

Index

NAME
LIBRARY
SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
RETURN VALUE
ERRORS
STANDARDS
NOTES
SEE ALSO