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+.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-or-later
+
+==========================================
+DEXCR (Dynamic Execution Control Register)
+==========================================
+
+Overview
+========
+
+The DEXCR is a privileged special purpose register (SPR) introduced in
+PowerPC ISA 3.1B (Power10) that allows per-cpu control over several dynamic
+execution behaviours. These behaviours include speculation (e.g., indirect
+branch target prediction) and enabling return-oriented programming (ROP)
+protection instructions.
+
+The execution control is exposed in hardware as up to 32 bits ('aspects') in
+the DEXCR. Each aspect controls a certain behaviour, and can be set or cleared
+to enable/disable the aspect. There are several variants of the DEXCR for
+different purposes:
+
+DEXCR
+ A privileged SPR that can control aspects for userspace and kernel space
+HDEXCR
+ A hypervisor-privileged SPR that can control aspects for the hypervisor and
+ enforce aspects for the kernel and userspace.
+UDEXCR
+ An optional ultravisor-privileged SPR that can control aspects for the ultravisor.
+
+Userspace can examine the current DEXCR state using a dedicated SPR that
+provides a non-privileged read-only view of the userspace DEXCR aspects.
+There is also an SPR that provides a read-only view of the hypervisor enforced
+aspects, which ORed with the userspace DEXCR view gives the effective DEXCR
+state for a process.
+
+
+Configuration
+=============
+
+The DEXCR is currently unconfigurable. All threads are run with the
+NPHIE aspect enabled.
+
+
+coredump and ptrace
+===================
+
+The userspace values of the DEXCR and HDEXCR (in this order) are exposed under
+``NT_PPC_DEXCR``. These are each 64 bits and readonly, and are intended to
+assist with core dumps. The DEXCR may be made writable in future. The top 32
+bits of both registers (corresponding to the non-userspace bits) are masked off.
+
+If the kernel config ``CONFIG_CHECKPOINT_RESTORE`` is enabled, then
+``NT_PPC_HASHKEYR`` is available and exposes the HASHKEYR value of the process
+for reading and writing. This is a tradeoff between increased security and
+checkpoint/restore support: a process should normally have no need to know its
+secret key, but restoring a process requires setting its original key. The key
+therefore appears in core dumps, and an attacker may be able to retrieve it from
+a coredump and effectively bypass ROP protection on any threads that share this
+key (potentially all threads from the same parent that have not run ``exec()``).