[PATCH] sys_alarm() unsigned signed conversion fixup

alarm() calls the kernel with an unsigend int timeout in seconds.  The
value is stored in the tv_sec field of a struct timeval to setup the
itimer.  The tv_sec field of struct timeval is of type long, which causes
the tv_sec value to be negative on 32 bit machines if seconds > INT_MAX.

Before the hrtimer merge (pre 2.6.16) such a negative value was converted
to the maximum jiffies timeout by the timeval_to_jiffies conversion.  It's
not clear whether this was intended or just happened to be done by the
timeval_to_jiffies code.

hrtimers expect a timeval in canonical form and treat a negative timeout as
already expired.  This breaks the legitimate usage of alarm() with a
timeout value > INT_MAX seconds.

For 32 bit machines it is therefor necessary to limit the internal seconds
value to avoid API breakage.  Instead of doing this in all implementations
of sys_alarm the duplicated sys_alarm code is moved into a common function
in itimer.c

Signed-off-by: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@osdl.org>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
This commit is contained in:
Thomas Gleixner
2006-03-25 03:06:33 -08:00
committed by Linus Torvalds
parent 185ae6d7a3
commit c08b8a4910
6 changed files with 43 additions and 61 deletions

View File

@@ -226,6 +226,43 @@ again:
return 0;
}
/**
* alarm_setitimer - set alarm in seconds
*
* @seconds: number of seconds until alarm
* 0 disables the alarm
*
* Returns the remaining time in seconds of a pending timer or 0 when
* the timer is not active.
*
* On 32 bit machines the seconds value is limited to (INT_MAX/2) to avoid
* negative timeval settings which would cause immediate expiry.
*/
unsigned int alarm_setitimer(unsigned int seconds)
{
struct itimerval it_new, it_old;
#if BITS_PER_LONG < 64
if (seconds > INT_MAX)
seconds = INT_MAX;
#endif
it_new.it_value.tv_sec = seconds;
it_new.it_value.tv_usec = 0;
it_new.it_interval.tv_sec = it_new.it_interval.tv_usec = 0;
do_setitimer(ITIMER_REAL, &it_new, &it_old);
/*
* We can't return 0 if we have an alarm pending ... And we'd
* better return too much than too little anyway
*/
if ((!it_old.it_value.tv_sec && it_old.it_value.tv_usec) ||
it_old.it_value.tv_usec >= 500000)
it_old.it_value.tv_sec++;
return it_old.it_value.tv_sec;
}
asmlinkage long sys_setitimer(int which,
struct itimerval __user *value,
struct itimerval __user *ovalue)