arch_prctl — set architecture-specific thread state
#include <asm/prctl.h> #include <sys/prctl.h>
int
arch_prctl( |
int code, |
unsigned long addr); |
int
arch_prctl( |
int code, |
unsigned long *addr); |
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Note |
|---|---|
| There is no glibc wrapper for this system call; see NOTES. |
arch_prctl() sets
architecture-specific process or thread state. code selects a subfunction 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 x86-64 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.
ARCH_SET_FSSet the 64-bit base for the FS register to addr.
ARCH_GET_FSReturn the 64-bit base value for the FS register of the calling thread in
the unsigned long pointed to
by addr.
ARCH_SET_GSSet the 64-bit base for the GS register to addr.
ARCH_GET_GSReturn the 64-bit base value for the GS register of the calling thread in
the unsigned long pointed to
by addr.
On success, arch_prctl()
returns 0; on error, −1 is returned, and errno is set to indicate the error.
addr points
to an unmapped address or is outside the process
address space.
code is not
a valid subcommand.
addr is
outside the process address space.
ARCH_SET_CPUID was
requested, but the underlying hardware does not support
CPUID faulting.
arch_prctl() is a
Linux/x86-64 extension and should not be used in programs
intended to be portable.
arch_prctl() is supported
only on Linux/x86-64 for 64-bit programs currently.
The 64-bit base changes when a new 32-bit segment selector is loaded.
ARCH_SET_GS is disabled in
some kernels.
Context switches for 64-bit segment bases are rather
expensive. As an optimization, if a 32-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.
Glibc does not provide a wrapper for this system call; call it using syscall(2).
FS may be already used by
the threading library. Programs that use ARCH_SET_FS directly are very likely to
crash.
This page is part of release 5.11 of the Linux man-pages project. A
description of the project, information about reporting bugs,
and the latest version of this page, can be found at
https://www.kernel.org/doc/man−pages/.
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