Syscall User Dispatch (SUD) must take precedence over seccomp, since the use case is emulation (it can be invoked with a different ABI) such that seccomp filtering by syscall number doesn't make sense in the first place. In addition, either the syscall is dispatched back to userspace, in which case there is no resource for seccomp to protect, or the syscall will be executed, and seccomp will execute next.
Regarding ptrace, I experimented with before and after, and while the same ABI argument applies, I felt it was easier to debug if I let ptrace happen for syscalls that are dispatched back to userspace. In addition, doing it after ptrace makes the code in syscall_exit_work slightly simpler, since it doesn't require special handling for this feature.
Signed-off-by: Gabriel Krisman Bertazi krisman@collabora.com --- kernel/entry/common.c | 8 ++++++++ 1 file changed, 8 insertions(+)
diff --git a/kernel/entry/common.c b/kernel/entry/common.c index 80db3f146462..f05a4ee094a1 100644 --- a/kernel/entry/common.c +++ b/kernel/entry/common.c @@ -6,6 +6,8 @@ #include <linux/audit.h> #include <linux/syscall_intercept.h>
+#include "common.h" + #define CREATE_TRACE_POINTS #include <trace/events/syscalls.h>
@@ -47,6 +49,12 @@ static inline long do_syscall_intercept(struct pt_regs *regs) int sysint_work = READ_ONCE(current->syscall_intercept); int ret;
+ if (sysint_work & SYSINT_USER_DISPATCH) { + ret = do_syscall_user_dispatch(regs); + if (ret == -1L) + return ret; + } + if (sysint_work & SYSINT_SECCOMP) { ret = __secure_computing(NULL); if (ret == -1L)