linux-user: fix segmentation fault passing with h2g(x) != x

When forwarding a segmentation fault into the guest process, we were passing
the host's address directly into the guest process's signal descriptor.

That obviously confused the guest process, since it didn't know what to make
of the (usually 32-bit truncated) address. Passing in h2g(address) makes the
guest process a lot happier.

To make the code more obvious, introduce a h2g_nocheck() macro that does the
same as h2g(), but allows us to convert addresses that may be outside of guest
mapped range into the guest's view of address space.

This fixes java running in arm-linux-user for me.

Signed-off-by: Alexander Graf <agraf@suse.de>
Signed-off-by: Riku Voipio <riku.voipio@linaro.org>
stable-1.6
Alexander Graf 2013-07-06 14:17:49 +02:00 committed by Riku Voipio
parent 82f05b69e6
commit 732f9e89a1
2 changed files with 10 additions and 2 deletions

View File

@ -209,11 +209,15 @@ extern unsigned long reserved_va;
})
#endif
#define h2g(x) ({ \
#define h2g_nocheck(x) ({ \
unsigned long __ret = (unsigned long)(x) - GUEST_BASE; \
(abi_ulong)__ret; \
})
#define h2g(x) ({ \
/* Check if given address fits target address space */ \
assert(h2g_valid(x)); \
(abi_ulong)__ret; \
h2g_nocheck(x); \
})
#define saddr(x) g2h(x)

View File

@ -95,6 +95,10 @@ static inline int handle_cpu_signal(uintptr_t pc, unsigned long address,
return 1;
}
/* Convert forcefully to guest address space, invalid addresses
are still valid segv ones */
address = h2g_nocheck(address);
env = current_cpu->env_ptr;
/* see if it is an MMU fault */
ret = cpu_handle_mmu_fault(env, address, is_write, MMU_USER_IDX);