Re: [PATCH 0/4] support for text-relative kallsyms table

From: Rusty Russell
Date: Tue Jan 26 2016 - 23:32:18 EST


Ard Biesheuvel <ard.biesheuvel@xxxxxxxxxx> writes:
> On 21 January 2016 at 07:45, Ard Biesheuvel <ard.biesheuvel@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>> On 21 January 2016 at 06:10, Rusty Russell <rusty@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>> Ard Biesheuvel <ard.biesheuvel@xxxxxxxxxx> writes:
>>>> This implements text-relative kallsyms address tables. This was developed
>>>> as part of my series to implement KASLR/CONFIG_RELOCATABLE for arm64, but
>>>> I think it may be beneficial to other architectures as well, so I am
>>>> presenting it as a separate series.
>>>
>>> Nice work!
>>>
>>
>> Thanks
>>
>>> AFAICT this should work for every arch, as long as they start with _text
>>> (esp: data and init must be > _text). In addition, it's not harmful on
>>> 32 bit archs.
>>>
>>> IOW, I'd like to turn it on for everyone and discard some code. But
>>> it's easier to roll in like you've done first.
>>>
>>> Should we enable it by default for every arch for now, and see what
>>> happens?
>>>
>>
>> As you say, this only works if every symbol >= _text, which is
>> obviously not the case per the conditional in scripts/kallsyms.c,
>> which emits _text + n or _text - n depending on whether the symbol
>> precedes or follows _text. The git log tells me for which arch this
>> was originally implemented, but it does not tell me which other archs
>> have come to rely on it in the meantime.
>>
>> On top of that, ia64 fails to build with this option, since it has
>> some whitelisted absolute symbols that look suspiciously like they
>> could be emitted as _text relative (and it does not even matter in the
>> absence of CONFIG_RELOCATABLE on ia64, afaict) but I don't know
>> whether we can just override their types as T, since it would also
>> change the type in the contents of /proc/kallsyms. So some guidance
>> would be appreciated here.
>>
>
> Digging a little deeper, it appears that it would be non-trivial to
> port this to ia64:
>
> ...
> a000000000040720 A __kernel_syscall_via_break
> a000000000040740 A __kernel_sigtramp
> a000000000040a00 A __kernel_syscall_via_epc
> a000000100000000 T ia64_ivt
> a000000100000000 T __start_ivt_text
> a000000100000000 T _stext
> a000000100000000 T _text
> ...
>
> The top three symbols are the absolute symbols that are explicitly
> whitelisted by scripts/kallsyms.c, and they are too far from 0 and too
> far from _text to be representable in 32 bits

How annoying. OK, until ia64 is removed, we'll leave the option.

Thanks,
Rusty.