diff options
author | Jason Gunthorpe | 2019-04-24 16:20:34 -0300 |
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committer | Jason Gunthorpe | 2019-04-24 16:20:34 -0300 |
commit | 449a224c10a48d047c799c5c5d3b22d6aec98c60 (patch) | |
tree | 7ecff2cce22ad3875b70a772eae55a443752cfce /include/trace | |
parent | 3c176c9d72446217f6451543452692141eb665dc (diff) | |
parent | 4eb6ab13b99148b5bf9bfdae7977fe139b4452f8 (diff) |
Merge branch 'rdma_mmap' into rdma.git for-next
Jason Gunthorpe says:
====================
Upon review it turns out there are some long standing problems in BAR
mapping area:
* BAR pages intended for read-only can be switched to writable via mprotect.
* Missing use of rdma_user_mmap_io for the mlx5 clock BAR page.
* Disassociate causes SIGBUS when touching the pages.
* CPU pages are being mapped through to the process via remap_pfn_range
instead of the more appropriate vm_insert_page, causing weird behaviors
during disassociation.
This series adds the missing VM_* flag manipulation, adds faulting a zero
page for disassociation and revises the CPU page mappings to use
vm_insert_page.
====================
For dependencies this branch is based on for-rc from
git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/rdma/rdma.git
* branch 'rdma_mmap':
RDMA: Remove rdma_user_mmap_page
RDMA/mlx5: Use get_zeroed_page() for clock_info
RDMA/ucontext: Fix regression with disassociate
RDMA/mlx5: Use rdma_user_map_io for mapping BAR pages
RDMA/mlx5: Do not allow the user to write to the clock page
Signed-off-by: Jason Gunthorpe <jgg@mellanox.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'include/trace')
-rw-r--r-- | include/trace/events/syscalls.h | 2 |
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/include/trace/events/syscalls.h b/include/trace/events/syscalls.h index 44a3259ed4a5..b6e0cbc2c71f 100644 --- a/include/trace/events/syscalls.h +++ b/include/trace/events/syscalls.h @@ -28,7 +28,7 @@ TRACE_EVENT_FN(sys_enter, TP_fast_assign( __entry->id = id; - syscall_get_arguments(current, regs, 0, 6, __entry->args); + syscall_get_arguments(current, regs, __entry->args); ), TP_printk("NR %ld (%lx, %lx, %lx, %lx, %lx, %lx)", |