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Linux Kernel Programming

You're reading from  Linux Kernel Programming

Product type Book
Published in Mar 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789953435
Pages 754 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Kaiwan N. Billimoria Kaiwan N. Billimoria
Profile icon Kaiwan N. Billimoria
Toc

Table of Contents (19) Chapters close

Preface 1. Section 1: The Basics
2. Kernel Workspace Setup 3. Building the 5.x Linux Kernel from Source - Part 1 4. Building the 5.x Linux Kernel from Source - Part 2 5. Writing Your First Kernel Module - LKMs Part 1 6. Writing Your First Kernel Module - LKMs Part 2 7. Section 2: Understanding and Working with the Kernel
8. Kernel Internals Essentials - Processes and Threads 9. Memory Management Internals - Essentials 10. Kernel Memory Allocation for Module Authors - Part 1 11. Kernel Memory Allocation for Module Authors - Part 2 12. The CPU Scheduler - Part 1 13. The CPU Scheduler - Part 2 14. Section 3: Delving Deeper
15. Kernel Synchronization - Part 1 16. Kernel Synchronization - Part 2 17. About Packt 18. Other Books You May Enjoy

The null trap page

Did you notice how the preceding diagrams (Figure 7.9) and, in and Figure 7.12, at the extreme left edge (albeit very small!), a single page at the very beginning of the user space, named the null trap page? What is it? That's easy: virtual page 0 is given no permissions (at the hardware MMU/PTE level). Thus, any access to this page, be it r, w, or x  (read/write/execute), will result in the MMU raising what is called a fault or exception. This will have the processor jump to an OS handler routine (the fault handler). It runs, killing the culprit trying to access a memory region with no permissions!

It's very interesting indeed: the OS handler mentioned previously runs in process context, and guess what current is: why, it's the process (or thread) that initiated this bad NULL pointer lookup! Within the fault handler code, the SIGSEGV signal is delivered to the faulting process (current), causing it to...

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