ptrace has always returned only -EIO for all failures to access
registers.  The user_regset calls are allowed to return a more
meaningful variety of errors.  The REGSET_XFP calls use -ENODEV
for !cpu_has_fxsr hardware.  Make ptrace return the traditional
-EIO instead of the error code from the user_regset call.
Signed-off-by: Roland McGrath <roland@redhat.com>
Cc: stable@kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Ingo Molnar <mingo@elte.hu>
        int ret;
 
        if (!cpu_has_fxsr)
-               return -EIO;
+               return -ENODEV;
 
        ret = init_fpu(target);
        if (ret)
        int ret;
 
        if (!cpu_has_fxsr)
-               return -EIO;
+               return -ENODEV;
 
        ret = init_fpu(target);
        if (ret)
 
                return copy_regset_to_user(child, &user_x86_32_view,
                                           REGSET_XFP,
                                           0, sizeof(struct user_fxsr_struct),
-                                          datap);
+                                          datap) ? -EIO : 0;
 
        case PTRACE_SETFPXREGS: /* Set the child extended FPU state. */
                return copy_regset_from_user(child, &user_x86_32_view,
                                             REGSET_XFP,
                                             0, sizeof(struct user_fxsr_struct),
-                                            datap);
+                                            datap) ? -EIO : 0;
 #endif
 
 #if defined CONFIG_X86_32 || defined CONFIG_IA32_EMULATION