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-rw-r--r--drivers/lguest/segments.c62
1 files changed, 5 insertions, 57 deletions
diff --git a/drivers/lguest/segments.c b/drivers/lguest/segments.c
index f675a41a80d..9b81119f46e 100644
--- a/drivers/lguest/segments.c
+++ b/drivers/lguest/segments.c
@@ -43,22 +43,6 @@
* begin.
*/
-/* Is the descriptor the Guest wants us to put in OK?
- *
- * The flag which Intel says must be zero: must be zero. The descriptor must
- * be present, (this is actually checked earlier but is here for thorougness),
- * and the descriptor type must be 1 (a memory segment). */
-static int desc_ok(const struct desc_struct *gdt)
-{
- return ((gdt->b & 0x00209000) == 0x00009000);
-}
-
-/* Is the segment present? (Otherwise it can't be used by the Guest). */
-static int segment_present(const struct desc_struct *gdt)
-{
- return gdt->b & 0x8000;
-}
-
/* There are several entries we don't let the Guest set. The TSS entry is the
* "Task State Segment" which controls all kinds of delicate things. The
* LGUEST_CS and LGUEST_DS entries are reserved for the Switcher, and the
@@ -71,37 +55,11 @@ static int ignored_gdt(unsigned int num)
|| num == GDT_ENTRY_DOUBLEFAULT_TSS);
}
-/* If the Guest asks us to remove an entry from the GDT, we have to be careful.
- * If one of the segment registers is pointing at that entry the Switcher will
- * crash when it tries to reload the segment registers for the Guest.
- *
- * It doesn't make much sense for the Guest to try to remove its own code, data
- * or stack segments while they're in use: assume that's a Guest bug. If it's
- * one of the lesser segment registers using the removed entry, we simply set
- * that register to 0 (unusable). */
-static void check_segment_use(struct lguest *lg, unsigned int desc)
-{
- /* GDT entries are 8 bytes long, so we divide to get the index and
- * ignore the bottom bits. */
- if (lg->regs->gs / 8 == desc)
- lg->regs->gs = 0;
- if (lg->regs->fs / 8 == desc)
- lg->regs->fs = 0;
- if (lg->regs->es / 8 == desc)
- lg->regs->es = 0;
- if (lg->regs->ds / 8 == desc
- || lg->regs->cs / 8 == desc
- || lg->regs->ss / 8 == desc)
- kill_guest(lg, "Removed live GDT entry %u", desc);
-}
-/*:*/
-/*M:009 We wouldn't need to check for removal of in-use segments if we handled
- * faults in the Switcher. However, it's probably not a worthwhile
- * optimization. :*/
-
-/*H:610 Once the GDT has been changed, we look through the changed entries and
- * see if they're OK. If not, we'll call kill_guest() and the Guest will never
- * get to use the invalid entries. */
+/*H:610 Once the GDT has been changed, we fix the new entries up a little. We
+ * don't care if they're invalid: the worst that can happen is a General
+ * Protection Fault in the Switcher when it restores a Guest segment register
+ * which tries to use that entry. Then we kill the Guest for causing such a
+ * mess: the message will be "unhandled trap 256". */
static void fixup_gdt_table(struct lguest *lg, unsigned start, unsigned end)
{
unsigned int i;
@@ -112,16 +70,6 @@ static void fixup_gdt_table(struct lguest *lg, unsigned start, unsigned end)
if (ignored_gdt(i))
continue;
- /* We could fault in switch_to_guest if they are using
- * a removed segment. */
- if (!segment_present(&lg->gdt[i])) {
- check_segment_use(lg, i);
- continue;
- }
-
- if (!desc_ok(&lg->gdt[i]))
- kill_guest(lg, "Bad GDT descriptor %i", i);
-
/* Segment descriptors contain a privilege level: the Guest is
* sometimes careless and leaves this as 0, even though it's
* running at privilege level 1. If so, we fix it here. */