Quoting from Intel® 64 and IA-32 Architectures Software Developer’s Manual Volume 3A pg. 2-15 (Emphasis mine):
WP Write Protect (bit 16 of CR0) — When set, inhibits supervisor-level procedures from writing into readonly pages; when clear, allows supervisor-level procedures to write into read-only pages (regardless of the U/S bit setting; see Section 4.1.3 and Section 4.6). This flag facilitates implementation of the copy-on-write method of creating a new process (forking) used by operating systems such as UNIX.
Update:
Looking at wikipedia on fork():
Whenever a process (parent or child) modifies a page, a separate copy of that particular page alone is made for that process (parent or child) which performed the modification.
This is at the core of copy-on-write, but presents a problem when the modification is done by the kernel (such as when the write occurs as a result of syscall - think read()
).
From 4.1.3:
CR0.WP allows pages to be protected from supervisor-mode writes. If CR0.WP = 0, supervisor-mode write
accesses are allowed to linear addresses with read-only access rights; if CR0.WP = 1, they are not. (User-mode
write accesses are never allowed to linear addresses with read-only access rights, regardless of the value of
CR0.WP.)
By setting CR0.WP = 1
the kernel will be notified (with a page-fault) when it modifies read-only user pages and can perform the copy-on-write operation before proceeding with the page modification.