kpatch/kmod/core/core.c

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/*
* Copyright (C) 2014 Seth Jennings <sjenning@redhat.com>
* Copyright (C) 2013-2014 Josh Poimboeuf <jpoimboe@redhat.com>
*
2014-03-05 03:34:03 +00:00
* This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
* modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License
* as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2
* of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
*
* This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
* GNU General Public License for more details.
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
* along with this program; if not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
2014-03-05 03:34:03 +00:00
*/
/*
* kpatch core module
*
* Patch modules register with this module to redirect old functions to new
* functions.
*
* For each function patched by the module we must:
* - Call stop_machine
* - Ensure that no task has the old function in its call stack
* - Add the new function address to kpatch_func_hash
*
2014-03-13 18:11:58 +00:00
* After that, each call to the old function calls into kpatch_ftrace_handler()
* which finds the new function in kpatch_func_hash table and updates the
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* return instruction pointer so that ftrace will return to the new function.
*/
#define pr_fmt(fmt) KBUILD_MODNAME ": " fmt
#include <linux/module.h>
#include <linux/slab.h>
#include <linux/stop_machine.h>
#include <linux/ftrace.h>
#include <linux/hashtable.h>
#include <linux/preempt_mask.h>
#include <asm/stacktrace.h>
#include <asm/cacheflush.h>
#include "kpatch.h"
#if !defined(CONFIG_FUNCTION_TRACER) || \
!defined(CONFIG_HAVE_FENTRY) || \
!defined(CONFIG_MODULES) || \
!defined(CONFIG_SYSFS)
#error "CONFIG_FUNCTION_TRACER, CONFIG_HAVE_FENTRY, CONFIG_MODULES, and CONFIG_SYSFS kernel config options are required"
#endif
#define KPATCH_HASH_BITS 8
static DEFINE_HASHTABLE(kpatch_func_hash, KPATCH_HASH_BITS);
static DEFINE_SEMAPHORE(kpatch_mutex);
static int kpatch_num_registered;
static struct kobject *kpatch_root_kobj;
struct kobject *kpatch_patches_kobj;
EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(kpatch_patches_kobj);
struct kpatch_backtrace_args {
struct kpatch_module *kpmod;
int ret;
};
kmod/core: NMI synchronization improvements This is an attempt to both simplify and improve the correctness of the NMI synchronization code. There's a race in kpatch_ftrace_handler() between the kpatch_get_func() and kpatch_finish_status() calls which could result in func being NULL. The retry was supposed to fix this. However, this race would still be a problem in the repatching case (if the function had already been previously patched), in which case func would not be NULL, but could instead point to the previously patched version of the function. In this case it wouldn't retry and it would be possible for the previous version of the function to run. The fix is to use a memory barrier between accesses of the func hash and the status variable, and then just call kpatch_get_func() *after* accessing the status variable. For OP_PATCH, if status is SUCCESS, then func is guaranteed to point to the new function. If status is FAILURE, func might point to the new function, in which case we can use get_prev_func to get the previous version of the function. I also made some pretty big changes to try to simplify the design so that there are less moving parts and so that it's hopefully easier to understand. I moved the OP field into the kpatch_func struct. This allows us to merge the two global state variables (status + op) into a single global state variable (state), which helps make the code quite a bit simpler. I turned it into a proper state machine and documented the meaning of each state in the comments. Moving the OP field to the kpatch_func struct also paves the way for an upcoming pull request which will allow patch modules to be atomically replaced ("kpatch load --replace <module>").
2014-04-28 16:41:20 +00:00
/*
* The kpatch core module has a state machine which allows for proper
* synchronization with kpatch_ftrace_handler() when it runs in NMI context.
*
* +-----------------------------------------------------+
* | |
* | +
* v +---> KPATCH_STATE_SUCCESS
* KPATCH_STATE_IDLE +---> KPATCH_STATE_UPDATING |
* ^ +---> KPATCH_STATE_FAILURE
* | +
* | |
* +-----------------------------------------------------+
*
* KPATCH_STATE_IDLE: No updates are pending. The func hash is valid, and the
* reader doesn't need to check func->op.
*
* KPATCH_STATE_UPDATING: An update is in progress. The reader must call
* kpatch_state_finish(KPATCH_STATE_FAILURE) before accessing the func hash.
*
* KPATCH_STATE_FAILURE: An update failed, and the func hash might be
* inconsistent (pending patched funcs might not have been removed yet). If
* func->op is KPATCH_OP_PATCH, then rollback to the previous version of the
* func.
*
* KPATCH_STATE_SUCCESS: An update succeeded, but the func hash might be
* inconsistent (pending unpatched funcs might not have been removed yet). If
* func->op is KPATCH_OP_UNPATCH, then rollback to the previous version of the
* func.
*/
enum {
KPATCH_STATE_IDLE,
KPATCH_STATE_UPDATING,
KPATCH_STATE_SUCCESS,
KPATCH_STATE_FAILURE,
};
static atomic_t kpatch_state;
static inline void kpatch_state_idle(void)
kmod/core: Support live patching on NMI handlers Support live patching on NMI handlers. This adds checks for possible inconsistency of live patching on NMI handlers. The inconsistency problem means that any concurrent execution of old function and new function, which can lead unexpected results. Current kpatch checks possible inconsistency problem with stop_machine, which can cover only threads and normal interrupts. However, beacuse NMI can not stop with it, stop_machine is not enough for live patching on NMI handlers or sub-functions which are invoked in the NMI context. To check for possible inconsistency of live patching on those functions, add an atomic flag to count patching target functions invoked in NMI context while updating kpatch hash table. If the flag is set by the target functions in NMI, we can not ensure there is no concurrent execution on it. This fixes the issue #65. Changes from v5: - Fix to add a NULL check in kpatch_get_committed_func(). Changes from v4: - Change kpatch_operation to atomic_t. - Use smp_rmb/wmb barriers between kpatch_operation and kpatch_status. - Check in_nmi() first and if true, access kpatch_operation. Changes from v3: - Fix kpatch_apply/remove_patch to return 0 if succeeded. Changes from v2: - Clean up kpatch_get_committed_func as same style of kpatch_get_func. - Rename opr to op in kpatch_ftrace_handler. - Consolidate in_nmi() and kpatch_operation check into one condition. - Fix UNPATCH/PATCH mistype in kpatch_register. Changes from v1: - Rename inconsistent_flag to kpatch_status. - Introduce new enums and helper functions for kpatch_status. - Use hash_del_rcu instead of hlist_del_rcu. - Rename get_committed_func to kpatch_get_committed_func. - Use ACCESS_ONCE for kpatch_operation to prevent compiler optimization. - Fix to remove (!func || func->updating) condition from NMI check. - Add more precise comments. - Fix setting order of kpatch_status and kpatch_operation. Signed-off-by: Masami Hiramatsu <masami.hiramatsu.pt@hitachi.com>
2014-04-23 01:58:45 +00:00
{
kmod/core: NMI synchronization improvements This is an attempt to both simplify and improve the correctness of the NMI synchronization code. There's a race in kpatch_ftrace_handler() between the kpatch_get_func() and kpatch_finish_status() calls which could result in func being NULL. The retry was supposed to fix this. However, this race would still be a problem in the repatching case (if the function had already been previously patched), in which case func would not be NULL, but could instead point to the previously patched version of the function. In this case it wouldn't retry and it would be possible for the previous version of the function to run. The fix is to use a memory barrier between accesses of the func hash and the status variable, and then just call kpatch_get_func() *after* accessing the status variable. For OP_PATCH, if status is SUCCESS, then func is guaranteed to point to the new function. If status is FAILURE, func might point to the new function, in which case we can use get_prev_func to get the previous version of the function. I also made some pretty big changes to try to simplify the design so that there are less moving parts and so that it's hopefully easier to understand. I moved the OP field into the kpatch_func struct. This allows us to merge the two global state variables (status + op) into a single global state variable (state), which helps make the code quite a bit simpler. I turned it into a proper state machine and documented the meaning of each state in the comments. Moving the OP field to the kpatch_func struct also paves the way for an upcoming pull request which will allow patch modules to be atomically replaced ("kpatch load --replace <module>").
2014-04-28 16:41:20 +00:00
int state = atomic_read(&kpatch_state);
WARN_ON(state != KPATCH_STATE_SUCCESS && state != KPATCH_STATE_FAILURE);
atomic_set(&kpatch_state, KPATCH_STATE_IDLE);
kmod/core: Support live patching on NMI handlers Support live patching on NMI handlers. This adds checks for possible inconsistency of live patching on NMI handlers. The inconsistency problem means that any concurrent execution of old function and new function, which can lead unexpected results. Current kpatch checks possible inconsistency problem with stop_machine, which can cover only threads and normal interrupts. However, beacuse NMI can not stop with it, stop_machine is not enough for live patching on NMI handlers or sub-functions which are invoked in the NMI context. To check for possible inconsistency of live patching on those functions, add an atomic flag to count patching target functions invoked in NMI context while updating kpatch hash table. If the flag is set by the target functions in NMI, we can not ensure there is no concurrent execution on it. This fixes the issue #65. Changes from v5: - Fix to add a NULL check in kpatch_get_committed_func(). Changes from v4: - Change kpatch_operation to atomic_t. - Use smp_rmb/wmb barriers between kpatch_operation and kpatch_status. - Check in_nmi() first and if true, access kpatch_operation. Changes from v3: - Fix kpatch_apply/remove_patch to return 0 if succeeded. Changes from v2: - Clean up kpatch_get_committed_func as same style of kpatch_get_func. - Rename opr to op in kpatch_ftrace_handler. - Consolidate in_nmi() and kpatch_operation check into one condition. - Fix UNPATCH/PATCH mistype in kpatch_register. Changes from v1: - Rename inconsistent_flag to kpatch_status. - Introduce new enums and helper functions for kpatch_status. - Use hash_del_rcu instead of hlist_del_rcu. - Rename get_committed_func to kpatch_get_committed_func. - Use ACCESS_ONCE for kpatch_operation to prevent compiler optimization. - Fix to remove (!func || func->updating) condition from NMI check. - Add more precise comments. - Fix setting order of kpatch_status and kpatch_operation. Signed-off-by: Masami Hiramatsu <masami.hiramatsu.pt@hitachi.com>
2014-04-23 01:58:45 +00:00
}
kmod/core: NMI synchronization improvements This is an attempt to both simplify and improve the correctness of the NMI synchronization code. There's a race in kpatch_ftrace_handler() between the kpatch_get_func() and kpatch_finish_status() calls which could result in func being NULL. The retry was supposed to fix this. However, this race would still be a problem in the repatching case (if the function had already been previously patched), in which case func would not be NULL, but could instead point to the previously patched version of the function. In this case it wouldn't retry and it would be possible for the previous version of the function to run. The fix is to use a memory barrier between accesses of the func hash and the status variable, and then just call kpatch_get_func() *after* accessing the status variable. For OP_PATCH, if status is SUCCESS, then func is guaranteed to point to the new function. If status is FAILURE, func might point to the new function, in which case we can use get_prev_func to get the previous version of the function. I also made some pretty big changes to try to simplify the design so that there are less moving parts and so that it's hopefully easier to understand. I moved the OP field into the kpatch_func struct. This allows us to merge the two global state variables (status + op) into a single global state variable (state), which helps make the code quite a bit simpler. I turned it into a proper state machine and documented the meaning of each state in the comments. Moving the OP field to the kpatch_func struct also paves the way for an upcoming pull request which will allow patch modules to be atomically replaced ("kpatch load --replace <module>").
2014-04-28 16:41:20 +00:00
static inline void kpatch_state_updating(void)
kmod/core: Support live patching on NMI handlers Support live patching on NMI handlers. This adds checks for possible inconsistency of live patching on NMI handlers. The inconsistency problem means that any concurrent execution of old function and new function, which can lead unexpected results. Current kpatch checks possible inconsistency problem with stop_machine, which can cover only threads and normal interrupts. However, beacuse NMI can not stop with it, stop_machine is not enough for live patching on NMI handlers or sub-functions which are invoked in the NMI context. To check for possible inconsistency of live patching on those functions, add an atomic flag to count patching target functions invoked in NMI context while updating kpatch hash table. If the flag is set by the target functions in NMI, we can not ensure there is no concurrent execution on it. This fixes the issue #65. Changes from v5: - Fix to add a NULL check in kpatch_get_committed_func(). Changes from v4: - Change kpatch_operation to atomic_t. - Use smp_rmb/wmb barriers between kpatch_operation and kpatch_status. - Check in_nmi() first and if true, access kpatch_operation. Changes from v3: - Fix kpatch_apply/remove_patch to return 0 if succeeded. Changes from v2: - Clean up kpatch_get_committed_func as same style of kpatch_get_func. - Rename opr to op in kpatch_ftrace_handler. - Consolidate in_nmi() and kpatch_operation check into one condition. - Fix UNPATCH/PATCH mistype in kpatch_register. Changes from v1: - Rename inconsistent_flag to kpatch_status. - Introduce new enums and helper functions for kpatch_status. - Use hash_del_rcu instead of hlist_del_rcu. - Rename get_committed_func to kpatch_get_committed_func. - Use ACCESS_ONCE for kpatch_operation to prevent compiler optimization. - Fix to remove (!func || func->updating) condition from NMI check. - Add more precise comments. - Fix setting order of kpatch_status and kpatch_operation. Signed-off-by: Masami Hiramatsu <masami.hiramatsu.pt@hitachi.com>
2014-04-23 01:58:45 +00:00
{
kmod/core: NMI synchronization improvements This is an attempt to both simplify and improve the correctness of the NMI synchronization code. There's a race in kpatch_ftrace_handler() between the kpatch_get_func() and kpatch_finish_status() calls which could result in func being NULL. The retry was supposed to fix this. However, this race would still be a problem in the repatching case (if the function had already been previously patched), in which case func would not be NULL, but could instead point to the previously patched version of the function. In this case it wouldn't retry and it would be possible for the previous version of the function to run. The fix is to use a memory barrier between accesses of the func hash and the status variable, and then just call kpatch_get_func() *after* accessing the status variable. For OP_PATCH, if status is SUCCESS, then func is guaranteed to point to the new function. If status is FAILURE, func might point to the new function, in which case we can use get_prev_func to get the previous version of the function. I also made some pretty big changes to try to simplify the design so that there are less moving parts and so that it's hopefully easier to understand. I moved the OP field into the kpatch_func struct. This allows us to merge the two global state variables (status + op) into a single global state variable (state), which helps make the code quite a bit simpler. I turned it into a proper state machine and documented the meaning of each state in the comments. Moving the OP field to the kpatch_func struct also paves the way for an upcoming pull request which will allow patch modules to be atomically replaced ("kpatch load --replace <module>").
2014-04-28 16:41:20 +00:00
WARN_ON(atomic_read(&kpatch_state) != KPATCH_STATE_IDLE);
atomic_set(&kpatch_state, KPATCH_STATE_UPDATING);
kmod/core: Support live patching on NMI handlers Support live patching on NMI handlers. This adds checks for possible inconsistency of live patching on NMI handlers. The inconsistency problem means that any concurrent execution of old function and new function, which can lead unexpected results. Current kpatch checks possible inconsistency problem with stop_machine, which can cover only threads and normal interrupts. However, beacuse NMI can not stop with it, stop_machine is not enough for live patching on NMI handlers or sub-functions which are invoked in the NMI context. To check for possible inconsistency of live patching on those functions, add an atomic flag to count patching target functions invoked in NMI context while updating kpatch hash table. If the flag is set by the target functions in NMI, we can not ensure there is no concurrent execution on it. This fixes the issue #65. Changes from v5: - Fix to add a NULL check in kpatch_get_committed_func(). Changes from v4: - Change kpatch_operation to atomic_t. - Use smp_rmb/wmb barriers between kpatch_operation and kpatch_status. - Check in_nmi() first and if true, access kpatch_operation. Changes from v3: - Fix kpatch_apply/remove_patch to return 0 if succeeded. Changes from v2: - Clean up kpatch_get_committed_func as same style of kpatch_get_func. - Rename opr to op in kpatch_ftrace_handler. - Consolidate in_nmi() and kpatch_operation check into one condition. - Fix UNPATCH/PATCH mistype in kpatch_register. Changes from v1: - Rename inconsistent_flag to kpatch_status. - Introduce new enums and helper functions for kpatch_status. - Use hash_del_rcu instead of hlist_del_rcu. - Rename get_committed_func to kpatch_get_committed_func. - Use ACCESS_ONCE for kpatch_operation to prevent compiler optimization. - Fix to remove (!func || func->updating) condition from NMI check. - Add more precise comments. - Fix setting order of kpatch_status and kpatch_operation. Signed-off-by: Masami Hiramatsu <masami.hiramatsu.pt@hitachi.com>
2014-04-23 01:58:45 +00:00
}
kmod/core: NMI synchronization improvements This is an attempt to both simplify and improve the correctness of the NMI synchronization code. There's a race in kpatch_ftrace_handler() between the kpatch_get_func() and kpatch_finish_status() calls which could result in func being NULL. The retry was supposed to fix this. However, this race would still be a problem in the repatching case (if the function had already been previously patched), in which case func would not be NULL, but could instead point to the previously patched version of the function. In this case it wouldn't retry and it would be possible for the previous version of the function to run. The fix is to use a memory barrier between accesses of the func hash and the status variable, and then just call kpatch_get_func() *after* accessing the status variable. For OP_PATCH, if status is SUCCESS, then func is guaranteed to point to the new function. If status is FAILURE, func might point to the new function, in which case we can use get_prev_func to get the previous version of the function. I also made some pretty big changes to try to simplify the design so that there are less moving parts and so that it's hopefully easier to understand. I moved the OP field into the kpatch_func struct. This allows us to merge the two global state variables (status + op) into a single global state variable (state), which helps make the code quite a bit simpler. I turned it into a proper state machine and documented the meaning of each state in the comments. Moving the OP field to the kpatch_func struct also paves the way for an upcoming pull request which will allow patch modules to be atomically replaced ("kpatch load --replace <module>").
2014-04-28 16:41:20 +00:00
/* If state is updating, change it to success or failure and return new state */
static inline int kpatch_state_finish(int state)
{
int result;
WARN_ON(state != KPATCH_STATE_SUCCESS && state != KPATCH_STATE_FAILURE);
result = atomic_cmpxchg(&kpatch_state, KPATCH_STATE_UPDATING, state);
return result == KPATCH_STATE_UPDATING ? state : result;
}
kmod/core: Support live patching on NMI handlers Support live patching on NMI handlers. This adds checks for possible inconsistency of live patching on NMI handlers. The inconsistency problem means that any concurrent execution of old function and new function, which can lead unexpected results. Current kpatch checks possible inconsistency problem with stop_machine, which can cover only threads and normal interrupts. However, beacuse NMI can not stop with it, stop_machine is not enough for live patching on NMI handlers or sub-functions which are invoked in the NMI context. To check for possible inconsistency of live patching on those functions, add an atomic flag to count patching target functions invoked in NMI context while updating kpatch hash table. If the flag is set by the target functions in NMI, we can not ensure there is no concurrent execution on it. This fixes the issue #65. Changes from v5: - Fix to add a NULL check in kpatch_get_committed_func(). Changes from v4: - Change kpatch_operation to atomic_t. - Use smp_rmb/wmb barriers between kpatch_operation and kpatch_status. - Check in_nmi() first and if true, access kpatch_operation. Changes from v3: - Fix kpatch_apply/remove_patch to return 0 if succeeded. Changes from v2: - Clean up kpatch_get_committed_func as same style of kpatch_get_func. - Rename opr to op in kpatch_ftrace_handler. - Consolidate in_nmi() and kpatch_operation check into one condition. - Fix UNPATCH/PATCH mistype in kpatch_register. Changes from v1: - Rename inconsistent_flag to kpatch_status. - Introduce new enums and helper functions for kpatch_status. - Use hash_del_rcu instead of hlist_del_rcu. - Rename get_committed_func to kpatch_get_committed_func. - Use ACCESS_ONCE for kpatch_operation to prevent compiler optimization. - Fix to remove (!func || func->updating) condition from NMI check. - Add more precise comments. - Fix setting order of kpatch_status and kpatch_operation. Signed-off-by: Masami Hiramatsu <masami.hiramatsu.pt@hitachi.com>
2014-04-23 01:58:45 +00:00
static struct kpatch_func *kpatch_get_func(unsigned long ip)
{
struct kpatch_func *f;
/* Here, we have to use rcu safe hlist because of NMI concurrency */
hash_for_each_possible_rcu(kpatch_func_hash, f, node, ip)
if (f->old_addr == ip)
return f;
return NULL;
}
kmod/core: NMI synchronization improvements This is an attempt to both simplify and improve the correctness of the NMI synchronization code. There's a race in kpatch_ftrace_handler() between the kpatch_get_func() and kpatch_finish_status() calls which could result in func being NULL. The retry was supposed to fix this. However, this race would still be a problem in the repatching case (if the function had already been previously patched), in which case func would not be NULL, but could instead point to the previously patched version of the function. In this case it wouldn't retry and it would be possible for the previous version of the function to run. The fix is to use a memory barrier between accesses of the func hash and the status variable, and then just call kpatch_get_func() *after* accessing the status variable. For OP_PATCH, if status is SUCCESS, then func is guaranteed to point to the new function. If status is FAILURE, func might point to the new function, in which case we can use get_prev_func to get the previous version of the function. I also made some pretty big changes to try to simplify the design so that there are less moving parts and so that it's hopefully easier to understand. I moved the OP field into the kpatch_func struct. This allows us to merge the two global state variables (status + op) into a single global state variable (state), which helps make the code quite a bit simpler. I turned it into a proper state machine and documented the meaning of each state in the comments. Moving the OP field to the kpatch_func struct also paves the way for an upcoming pull request which will allow patch modules to be atomically replaced ("kpatch load --replace <module>").
2014-04-28 16:41:20 +00:00
static struct kpatch_func *kpatch_get_prev_func(struct kpatch_func *f,
unsigned long ip)
{
kmod/core: NMI synchronization improvements This is an attempt to both simplify and improve the correctness of the NMI synchronization code. There's a race in kpatch_ftrace_handler() between the kpatch_get_func() and kpatch_finish_status() calls which could result in func being NULL. The retry was supposed to fix this. However, this race would still be a problem in the repatching case (if the function had already been previously patched), in which case func would not be NULL, but could instead point to the previously patched version of the function. In this case it wouldn't retry and it would be possible for the previous version of the function to run. The fix is to use a memory barrier between accesses of the func hash and the status variable, and then just call kpatch_get_func() *after* accessing the status variable. For OP_PATCH, if status is SUCCESS, then func is guaranteed to point to the new function. If status is FAILURE, func might point to the new function, in which case we can use get_prev_func to get the previous version of the function. I also made some pretty big changes to try to simplify the design so that there are less moving parts and so that it's hopefully easier to understand. I moved the OP field into the kpatch_func struct. This allows us to merge the two global state variables (status + op) into a single global state variable (state), which helps make the code quite a bit simpler. I turned it into a proper state machine and documented the meaning of each state in the comments. Moving the OP field to the kpatch_func struct also paves the way for an upcoming pull request which will allow patch modules to be atomically replaced ("kpatch load --replace <module>").
2014-04-28 16:41:20 +00:00
hlist_for_each_entry_continue_rcu(f, node)
if (f->old_addr == ip)
return f;
return NULL;
}
static inline int kpatch_compare_addresses(unsigned long stack_addr,
unsigned long func_addr,
unsigned long func_size)
{
if (stack_addr >= func_addr && stack_addr < func_addr + func_size) {
/* TODO: use kallsyms to print symbol name */
pr_err("activeness safety check failed for function at address 0x%lx\n",
stack_addr);
return -EBUSY;
}
return 0;
}
static void kpatch_backtrace_address_verify(void *data, unsigned long address,
int reliable)
{
struct kpatch_backtrace_args *args = data;
struct kpatch_module *kpmod = args->kpmod;
struct kpatch_func *func;
int i;
if (args->ret)
return;
/* check kpmod funcs */
for (i = 0; i < kpmod->num_funcs; i++) {
unsigned long func_addr, func_size;
struct kpatch_func *active_func;
func = &kpmod->funcs[i];
active_func = kpatch_get_func(func->old_addr);
if (!active_func) {
/* patching an unpatched func */
func_addr = func->old_addr;
func_size = func->old_size;
} else {
/* repatching or unpatching */
func_addr = active_func->new_addr;
func_size = active_func->new_size;
}
args->ret = kpatch_compare_addresses(address, func_addr,
func_size);
if (args->ret)
return;
}
/* in the replace case, need to check the func hash as well */
hash_for_each_rcu(kpatch_func_hash, i, func, node) {
if (func->op == KPATCH_OP_UNPATCH) {
args->ret = kpatch_compare_addresses(address,
func->new_addr,
func->new_size);
if (args->ret)
return;
}
}
}
static int kpatch_backtrace_stack(void *data, char *name)
{
return 0;
}
static const struct stacktrace_ops kpatch_backtrace_ops = {
.address = kpatch_backtrace_address_verify,
.stack = kpatch_backtrace_stack,
.walk_stack = print_context_stack_bp,
};
/*
* Verify activeness safety, i.e. that none of the to-be-patched functions are
* on the stack of any task.
*
* This function is called from stop_machine() context.
*/
static int kpatch_verify_activeness_safety(struct kpatch_module *kpmod)
{
struct task_struct *g, *t;
int ret = 0;
struct kpatch_backtrace_args args = {
.kpmod = kpmod,
.ret = 0
};
/* Check the stacks of all tasks. */
do_each_thread(g, t) {
dump_trace(t, NULL, NULL, 0, &kpatch_backtrace_ops, &args);
if (args.ret) {
ret = args.ret;
goto out;
}
} while_each_thread(g, t);
out:
return ret;
}
/* Called from stop_machine */
static int kpatch_apply_patch(void *data)
{
struct kpatch_module *kpmod = data;
struct kpatch_func *funcs = kpmod->funcs;
int num_funcs = kpmod->num_funcs;
int i, ret;
ret = kpatch_verify_activeness_safety(kpmod);
kmod/core: NMI synchronization improvements This is an attempt to both simplify and improve the correctness of the NMI synchronization code. There's a race in kpatch_ftrace_handler() between the kpatch_get_func() and kpatch_finish_status() calls which could result in func being NULL. The retry was supposed to fix this. However, this race would still be a problem in the repatching case (if the function had already been previously patched), in which case func would not be NULL, but could instead point to the previously patched version of the function. In this case it wouldn't retry and it would be possible for the previous version of the function to run. The fix is to use a memory barrier between accesses of the func hash and the status variable, and then just call kpatch_get_func() *after* accessing the status variable. For OP_PATCH, if status is SUCCESS, then func is guaranteed to point to the new function. If status is FAILURE, func might point to the new function, in which case we can use get_prev_func to get the previous version of the function. I also made some pretty big changes to try to simplify the design so that there are less moving parts and so that it's hopefully easier to understand. I moved the OP field into the kpatch_func struct. This allows us to merge the two global state variables (status + op) into a single global state variable (state), which helps make the code quite a bit simpler. I turned it into a proper state machine and documented the meaning of each state in the comments. Moving the OP field to the kpatch_func struct also paves the way for an upcoming pull request which will allow patch modules to be atomically replaced ("kpatch load --replace <module>").
2014-04-28 16:41:20 +00:00
if (ret) {
kpatch_state_finish(KPATCH_STATE_FAILURE);
return ret;
kmod/core: NMI synchronization improvements This is an attempt to both simplify and improve the correctness of the NMI synchronization code. There's a race in kpatch_ftrace_handler() between the kpatch_get_func() and kpatch_finish_status() calls which could result in func being NULL. The retry was supposed to fix this. However, this race would still be a problem in the repatching case (if the function had already been previously patched), in which case func would not be NULL, but could instead point to the previously patched version of the function. In this case it wouldn't retry and it would be possible for the previous version of the function to run. The fix is to use a memory barrier between accesses of the func hash and the status variable, and then just call kpatch_get_func() *after* accessing the status variable. For OP_PATCH, if status is SUCCESS, then func is guaranteed to point to the new function. If status is FAILURE, func might point to the new function, in which case we can use get_prev_func to get the previous version of the function. I also made some pretty big changes to try to simplify the design so that there are less moving parts and so that it's hopefully easier to understand. I moved the OP field into the kpatch_func struct. This allows us to merge the two global state variables (status + op) into a single global state variable (state), which helps make the code quite a bit simpler. I turned it into a proper state machine and documented the meaning of each state in the comments. Moving the OP field to the kpatch_func struct also paves the way for an upcoming pull request which will allow patch modules to be atomically replaced ("kpatch load --replace <module>").
2014-04-28 16:41:20 +00:00
}
kmod/core: NMI synchronization improvements This is an attempt to both simplify and improve the correctness of the NMI synchronization code. There's a race in kpatch_ftrace_handler() between the kpatch_get_func() and kpatch_finish_status() calls which could result in func being NULL. The retry was supposed to fix this. However, this race would still be a problem in the repatching case (if the function had already been previously patched), in which case func would not be NULL, but could instead point to the previously patched version of the function. In this case it wouldn't retry and it would be possible for the previous version of the function to run. The fix is to use a memory barrier between accesses of the func hash and the status variable, and then just call kpatch_get_func() *after* accessing the status variable. For OP_PATCH, if status is SUCCESS, then func is guaranteed to point to the new function. If status is FAILURE, func might point to the new function, in which case we can use get_prev_func to get the previous version of the function. I also made some pretty big changes to try to simplify the design so that there are less moving parts and so that it's hopefully easier to understand. I moved the OP field into the kpatch_func struct. This allows us to merge the two global state variables (status + op) into a single global state variable (state), which helps make the code quite a bit simpler. I turned it into a proper state machine and documented the meaning of each state in the comments. Moving the OP field to the kpatch_func struct also paves the way for an upcoming pull request which will allow patch modules to be atomically replaced ("kpatch load --replace <module>").
2014-04-28 16:41:20 +00:00
/* tentatively add the new funcs to the global func hash */
for (i = 0; i < num_funcs; i++)
hash_add_rcu(kpatch_func_hash, &funcs[i].node,
funcs[i].old_addr);
kmod/core: NMI synchronization improvements This is an attempt to both simplify and improve the correctness of the NMI synchronization code. There's a race in kpatch_ftrace_handler() between the kpatch_get_func() and kpatch_finish_status() calls which could result in func being NULL. The retry was supposed to fix this. However, this race would still be a problem in the repatching case (if the function had already been previously patched), in which case func would not be NULL, but could instead point to the previously patched version of the function. In this case it wouldn't retry and it would be possible for the previous version of the function to run. The fix is to use a memory barrier between accesses of the func hash and the status variable, and then just call kpatch_get_func() *after* accessing the status variable. For OP_PATCH, if status is SUCCESS, then func is guaranteed to point to the new function. If status is FAILURE, func might point to the new function, in which case we can use get_prev_func to get the previous version of the function. I also made some pretty big changes to try to simplify the design so that there are less moving parts and so that it's hopefully easier to understand. I moved the OP field into the kpatch_func struct. This allows us to merge the two global state variables (status + op) into a single global state variable (state), which helps make the code quite a bit simpler. I turned it into a proper state machine and documented the meaning of each state in the comments. Moving the OP field to the kpatch_func struct also paves the way for an upcoming pull request which will allow patch modules to be atomically replaced ("kpatch load --replace <module>").
2014-04-28 16:41:20 +00:00
/* memory barrier between func hash add and state change */
smp_wmb();
/*
* Check if any inconsistent NMI has happened while updating. If not,
* move to success state.
*/
ret = kpatch_state_finish(KPATCH_STATE_SUCCESS);
if (ret == KPATCH_STATE_FAILURE) {
pr_err("NMI activeness safety check failed\n");
kmod/core: Support live patching on NMI handlers Support live patching on NMI handlers. This adds checks for possible inconsistency of live patching on NMI handlers. The inconsistency problem means that any concurrent execution of old function and new function, which can lead unexpected results. Current kpatch checks possible inconsistency problem with stop_machine, which can cover only threads and normal interrupts. However, beacuse NMI can not stop with it, stop_machine is not enough for live patching on NMI handlers or sub-functions which are invoked in the NMI context. To check for possible inconsistency of live patching on those functions, add an atomic flag to count patching target functions invoked in NMI context while updating kpatch hash table. If the flag is set by the target functions in NMI, we can not ensure there is no concurrent execution on it. This fixes the issue #65. Changes from v5: - Fix to add a NULL check in kpatch_get_committed_func(). Changes from v4: - Change kpatch_operation to atomic_t. - Use smp_rmb/wmb barriers between kpatch_operation and kpatch_status. - Check in_nmi() first and if true, access kpatch_operation. Changes from v3: - Fix kpatch_apply/remove_patch to return 0 if succeeded. Changes from v2: - Clean up kpatch_get_committed_func as same style of kpatch_get_func. - Rename opr to op in kpatch_ftrace_handler. - Consolidate in_nmi() and kpatch_operation check into one condition. - Fix UNPATCH/PATCH mistype in kpatch_register. Changes from v1: - Rename inconsistent_flag to kpatch_status. - Introduce new enums and helper functions for kpatch_status. - Use hash_del_rcu instead of hlist_del_rcu. - Rename get_committed_func to kpatch_get_committed_func. - Use ACCESS_ONCE for kpatch_operation to prevent compiler optimization. - Fix to remove (!func || func->updating) condition from NMI check. - Add more precise comments. - Fix setting order of kpatch_status and kpatch_operation. Signed-off-by: Masami Hiramatsu <masami.hiramatsu.pt@hitachi.com>
2014-04-23 01:58:45 +00:00
/* Failed, we have to rollback patching process */
for (i = 0; i < num_funcs; i++)
hash_del_rcu(&funcs[i].node);
kmod/core: NMI synchronization improvements This is an attempt to both simplify and improve the correctness of the NMI synchronization code. There's a race in kpatch_ftrace_handler() between the kpatch_get_func() and kpatch_finish_status() calls which could result in func being NULL. The retry was supposed to fix this. However, this race would still be a problem in the repatching case (if the function had already been previously patched), in which case func would not be NULL, but could instead point to the previously patched version of the function. In this case it wouldn't retry and it would be possible for the previous version of the function to run. The fix is to use a memory barrier between accesses of the func hash and the status variable, and then just call kpatch_get_func() *after* accessing the status variable. For OP_PATCH, if status is SUCCESS, then func is guaranteed to point to the new function. If status is FAILURE, func might point to the new function, in which case we can use get_prev_func to get the previous version of the function. I also made some pretty big changes to try to simplify the design so that there are less moving parts and so that it's hopefully easier to understand. I moved the OP field into the kpatch_func struct. This allows us to merge the two global state variables (status + op) into a single global state variable (state), which helps make the code quite a bit simpler. I turned it into a proper state machine and documented the meaning of each state in the comments. Moving the OP field to the kpatch_func struct also paves the way for an upcoming pull request which will allow patch modules to be atomically replaced ("kpatch load --replace <module>").
2014-04-28 16:41:20 +00:00
return -EBUSY;
}
return 0;
}
/* Called from stop_machine */
static int kpatch_remove_patch(void *data)
{
struct kpatch_module *kpmod = data;
struct kpatch_func *funcs = kpmod->funcs;
int num_funcs = kpmod->num_funcs;
int ret, i;
ret = kpatch_verify_activeness_safety(kpmod);
kmod/core: NMI synchronization improvements This is an attempt to both simplify and improve the correctness of the NMI synchronization code. There's a race in kpatch_ftrace_handler() between the kpatch_get_func() and kpatch_finish_status() calls which could result in func being NULL. The retry was supposed to fix this. However, this race would still be a problem in the repatching case (if the function had already been previously patched), in which case func would not be NULL, but could instead point to the previously patched version of the function. In this case it wouldn't retry and it would be possible for the previous version of the function to run. The fix is to use a memory barrier between accesses of the func hash and the status variable, and then just call kpatch_get_func() *after* accessing the status variable. For OP_PATCH, if status is SUCCESS, then func is guaranteed to point to the new function. If status is FAILURE, func might point to the new function, in which case we can use get_prev_func to get the previous version of the function. I also made some pretty big changes to try to simplify the design so that there are less moving parts and so that it's hopefully easier to understand. I moved the OP field into the kpatch_func struct. This allows us to merge the two global state variables (status + op) into a single global state variable (state), which helps make the code quite a bit simpler. I turned it into a proper state machine and documented the meaning of each state in the comments. Moving the OP field to the kpatch_func struct also paves the way for an upcoming pull request which will allow patch modules to be atomically replaced ("kpatch load --replace <module>").
2014-04-28 16:41:20 +00:00
if (ret) {
kpatch_state_finish(KPATCH_STATE_FAILURE);
return ret;
kmod/core: NMI synchronization improvements This is an attempt to both simplify and improve the correctness of the NMI synchronization code. There's a race in kpatch_ftrace_handler() between the kpatch_get_func() and kpatch_finish_status() calls which could result in func being NULL. The retry was supposed to fix this. However, this race would still be a problem in the repatching case (if the function had already been previously patched), in which case func would not be NULL, but could instead point to the previously patched version of the function. In this case it wouldn't retry and it would be possible for the previous version of the function to run. The fix is to use a memory barrier between accesses of the func hash and the status variable, and then just call kpatch_get_func() *after* accessing the status variable. For OP_PATCH, if status is SUCCESS, then func is guaranteed to point to the new function. If status is FAILURE, func might point to the new function, in which case we can use get_prev_func to get the previous version of the function. I also made some pretty big changes to try to simplify the design so that there are less moving parts and so that it's hopefully easier to understand. I moved the OP field into the kpatch_func struct. This allows us to merge the two global state variables (status + op) into a single global state variable (state), which helps make the code quite a bit simpler. I turned it into a proper state machine and documented the meaning of each state in the comments. Moving the OP field to the kpatch_func struct also paves the way for an upcoming pull request which will allow patch modules to be atomically replaced ("kpatch load --replace <module>").
2014-04-28 16:41:20 +00:00
}
kmod/core: Support live patching on NMI handlers Support live patching on NMI handlers. This adds checks for possible inconsistency of live patching on NMI handlers. The inconsistency problem means that any concurrent execution of old function and new function, which can lead unexpected results. Current kpatch checks possible inconsistency problem with stop_machine, which can cover only threads and normal interrupts. However, beacuse NMI can not stop with it, stop_machine is not enough for live patching on NMI handlers or sub-functions which are invoked in the NMI context. To check for possible inconsistency of live patching on those functions, add an atomic flag to count patching target functions invoked in NMI context while updating kpatch hash table. If the flag is set by the target functions in NMI, we can not ensure there is no concurrent execution on it. This fixes the issue #65. Changes from v5: - Fix to add a NULL check in kpatch_get_committed_func(). Changes from v4: - Change kpatch_operation to atomic_t. - Use smp_rmb/wmb barriers between kpatch_operation and kpatch_status. - Check in_nmi() first and if true, access kpatch_operation. Changes from v3: - Fix kpatch_apply/remove_patch to return 0 if succeeded. Changes from v2: - Clean up kpatch_get_committed_func as same style of kpatch_get_func. - Rename opr to op in kpatch_ftrace_handler. - Consolidate in_nmi() and kpatch_operation check into one condition. - Fix UNPATCH/PATCH mistype in kpatch_register. Changes from v1: - Rename inconsistent_flag to kpatch_status. - Introduce new enums and helper functions for kpatch_status. - Use hash_del_rcu instead of hlist_del_rcu. - Rename get_committed_func to kpatch_get_committed_func. - Use ACCESS_ONCE for kpatch_operation to prevent compiler optimization. - Fix to remove (!func || func->updating) condition from NMI check. - Add more precise comments. - Fix setting order of kpatch_status and kpatch_operation. Signed-off-by: Masami Hiramatsu <masami.hiramatsu.pt@hitachi.com>
2014-04-23 01:58:45 +00:00
/* Check if any inconsistent NMI has happened while updating */
kmod/core: NMI synchronization improvements This is an attempt to both simplify and improve the correctness of the NMI synchronization code. There's a race in kpatch_ftrace_handler() between the kpatch_get_func() and kpatch_finish_status() calls which could result in func being NULL. The retry was supposed to fix this. However, this race would still be a problem in the repatching case (if the function had already been previously patched), in which case func would not be NULL, but could instead point to the previously patched version of the function. In this case it wouldn't retry and it would be possible for the previous version of the function to run. The fix is to use a memory barrier between accesses of the func hash and the status variable, and then just call kpatch_get_func() *after* accessing the status variable. For OP_PATCH, if status is SUCCESS, then func is guaranteed to point to the new function. If status is FAILURE, func might point to the new function, in which case we can use get_prev_func to get the previous version of the function. I also made some pretty big changes to try to simplify the design so that there are less moving parts and so that it's hopefully easier to understand. I moved the OP field into the kpatch_func struct. This allows us to merge the two global state variables (status + op) into a single global state variable (state), which helps make the code quite a bit simpler. I turned it into a proper state machine and documented the meaning of each state in the comments. Moving the OP field to the kpatch_func struct also paves the way for an upcoming pull request which will allow patch modules to be atomically replaced ("kpatch load --replace <module>").
2014-04-28 16:41:20 +00:00
ret = kpatch_state_finish(KPATCH_STATE_SUCCESS);
if (ret == KPATCH_STATE_FAILURE)
return -EBUSY;
/* Succeeded, remove all updating funcs from hash table */
for (i = 0; i < num_funcs; i++)
hash_del_rcu(&funcs[i].node);
return 0;
}
/*
* This is where the magic happens. Update regs->ip to tell ftrace to return
* to the new function.
*
* If there are multiple patch modules that have registered to patch the same
* function, the last one to register wins, as it'll be first in the hash
* bucket.
*/
static void notrace
kpatch_ftrace_handler(unsigned long ip, unsigned long parent_ip,
struct ftrace_ops *fops, struct pt_regs *regs)
{
kmod/core: Support live patching on NMI handlers Support live patching on NMI handlers. This adds checks for possible inconsistency of live patching on NMI handlers. The inconsistency problem means that any concurrent execution of old function and new function, which can lead unexpected results. Current kpatch checks possible inconsistency problem with stop_machine, which can cover only threads and normal interrupts. However, beacuse NMI can not stop with it, stop_machine is not enough for live patching on NMI handlers or sub-functions which are invoked in the NMI context. To check for possible inconsistency of live patching on those functions, add an atomic flag to count patching target functions invoked in NMI context while updating kpatch hash table. If the flag is set by the target functions in NMI, we can not ensure there is no concurrent execution on it. This fixes the issue #65. Changes from v5: - Fix to add a NULL check in kpatch_get_committed_func(). Changes from v4: - Change kpatch_operation to atomic_t. - Use smp_rmb/wmb barriers between kpatch_operation and kpatch_status. - Check in_nmi() first and if true, access kpatch_operation. Changes from v3: - Fix kpatch_apply/remove_patch to return 0 if succeeded. Changes from v2: - Clean up kpatch_get_committed_func as same style of kpatch_get_func. - Rename opr to op in kpatch_ftrace_handler. - Consolidate in_nmi() and kpatch_operation check into one condition. - Fix UNPATCH/PATCH mistype in kpatch_register. Changes from v1: - Rename inconsistent_flag to kpatch_status. - Introduce new enums and helper functions for kpatch_status. - Use hash_del_rcu instead of hlist_del_rcu. - Rename get_committed_func to kpatch_get_committed_func. - Use ACCESS_ONCE for kpatch_operation to prevent compiler optimization. - Fix to remove (!func || func->updating) condition from NMI check. - Add more precise comments. - Fix setting order of kpatch_status and kpatch_operation. Signed-off-by: Masami Hiramatsu <masami.hiramatsu.pt@hitachi.com>
2014-04-23 01:58:45 +00:00
struct kpatch_func *func;
kmod/core: NMI synchronization improvements This is an attempt to both simplify and improve the correctness of the NMI synchronization code. There's a race in kpatch_ftrace_handler() between the kpatch_get_func() and kpatch_finish_status() calls which could result in func being NULL. The retry was supposed to fix this. However, this race would still be a problem in the repatching case (if the function had already been previously patched), in which case func would not be NULL, but could instead point to the previously patched version of the function. In this case it wouldn't retry and it would be possible for the previous version of the function to run. The fix is to use a memory barrier between accesses of the func hash and the status variable, and then just call kpatch_get_func() *after* accessing the status variable. For OP_PATCH, if status is SUCCESS, then func is guaranteed to point to the new function. If status is FAILURE, func might point to the new function, in which case we can use get_prev_func to get the previous version of the function. I also made some pretty big changes to try to simplify the design so that there are less moving parts and so that it's hopefully easier to understand. I moved the OP field into the kpatch_func struct. This allows us to merge the two global state variables (status + op) into a single global state variable (state), which helps make the code quite a bit simpler. I turned it into a proper state machine and documented the meaning of each state in the comments. Moving the OP field to the kpatch_func struct also paves the way for an upcoming pull request which will allow patch modules to be atomically replaced ("kpatch load --replace <module>").
2014-04-28 16:41:20 +00:00
int state;
preempt_disable_notrace();
kmod/core: NMI synchronization improvements This is an attempt to both simplify and improve the correctness of the NMI synchronization code. There's a race in kpatch_ftrace_handler() between the kpatch_get_func() and kpatch_finish_status() calls which could result in func being NULL. The retry was supposed to fix this. However, this race would still be a problem in the repatching case (if the function had already been previously patched), in which case func would not be NULL, but could instead point to the previously patched version of the function. In this case it wouldn't retry and it would be possible for the previous version of the function to run. The fix is to use a memory barrier between accesses of the func hash and the status variable, and then just call kpatch_get_func() *after* accessing the status variable. For OP_PATCH, if status is SUCCESS, then func is guaranteed to point to the new function. If status is FAILURE, func might point to the new function, in which case we can use get_prev_func to get the previous version of the function. I also made some pretty big changes to try to simplify the design so that there are less moving parts and so that it's hopefully easier to understand. I moved the OP field into the kpatch_func struct. This allows us to merge the two global state variables (status + op) into a single global state variable (state), which helps make the code quite a bit simpler. I turned it into a proper state machine and documented the meaning of each state in the comments. Moving the OP field to the kpatch_func struct also paves the way for an upcoming pull request which will allow patch modules to be atomically replaced ("kpatch load --replace <module>").
2014-04-28 16:41:20 +00:00
if (likely(!in_nmi()))
func = kpatch_get_func(ip);
else {
/* Checking for NMI inconsistency */
state = kpatch_state_finish(KPATCH_STATE_FAILURE);
/* no memory reordering between state and func hash read */
kmod/core: Support live patching on NMI handlers Support live patching on NMI handlers. This adds checks for possible inconsistency of live patching on NMI handlers. The inconsistency problem means that any concurrent execution of old function and new function, which can lead unexpected results. Current kpatch checks possible inconsistency problem with stop_machine, which can cover only threads and normal interrupts. However, beacuse NMI can not stop with it, stop_machine is not enough for live patching on NMI handlers or sub-functions which are invoked in the NMI context. To check for possible inconsistency of live patching on those functions, add an atomic flag to count patching target functions invoked in NMI context while updating kpatch hash table. If the flag is set by the target functions in NMI, we can not ensure there is no concurrent execution on it. This fixes the issue #65. Changes from v5: - Fix to add a NULL check in kpatch_get_committed_func(). Changes from v4: - Change kpatch_operation to atomic_t. - Use smp_rmb/wmb barriers between kpatch_operation and kpatch_status. - Check in_nmi() first and if true, access kpatch_operation. Changes from v3: - Fix kpatch_apply/remove_patch to return 0 if succeeded. Changes from v2: - Clean up kpatch_get_committed_func as same style of kpatch_get_func. - Rename opr to op in kpatch_ftrace_handler. - Consolidate in_nmi() and kpatch_operation check into one condition. - Fix UNPATCH/PATCH mistype in kpatch_register. Changes from v1: - Rename inconsistent_flag to kpatch_status. - Introduce new enums and helper functions for kpatch_status. - Use hash_del_rcu instead of hlist_del_rcu. - Rename get_committed_func to kpatch_get_committed_func. - Use ACCESS_ONCE for kpatch_operation to prevent compiler optimization. - Fix to remove (!func || func->updating) condition from NMI check. - Add more precise comments. - Fix setting order of kpatch_status and kpatch_operation. Signed-off-by: Masami Hiramatsu <masami.hiramatsu.pt@hitachi.com>
2014-04-23 01:58:45 +00:00
smp_rmb();
kmod/core: NMI synchronization improvements This is an attempt to both simplify and improve the correctness of the NMI synchronization code. There's a race in kpatch_ftrace_handler() between the kpatch_get_func() and kpatch_finish_status() calls which could result in func being NULL. The retry was supposed to fix this. However, this race would still be a problem in the repatching case (if the function had already been previously patched), in which case func would not be NULL, but could instead point to the previously patched version of the function. In this case it wouldn't retry and it would be possible for the previous version of the function to run. The fix is to use a memory barrier between accesses of the func hash and the status variable, and then just call kpatch_get_func() *after* accessing the status variable. For OP_PATCH, if status is SUCCESS, then func is guaranteed to point to the new function. If status is FAILURE, func might point to the new function, in which case we can use get_prev_func to get the previous version of the function. I also made some pretty big changes to try to simplify the design so that there are less moving parts and so that it's hopefully easier to understand. I moved the OP field into the kpatch_func struct. This allows us to merge the two global state variables (status + op) into a single global state variable (state), which helps make the code quite a bit simpler. I turned it into a proper state machine and documented the meaning of each state in the comments. Moving the OP field to the kpatch_func struct also paves the way for an upcoming pull request which will allow patch modules to be atomically replaced ("kpatch load --replace <module>").
2014-04-28 16:41:20 +00:00
func = kpatch_get_func(ip);
if (likely(state == KPATCH_STATE_IDLE))
goto done;
if (state == KPATCH_STATE_SUCCESS) {
kmod/core: Support live patching on NMI handlers Support live patching on NMI handlers. This adds checks for possible inconsistency of live patching on NMI handlers. The inconsistency problem means that any concurrent execution of old function and new function, which can lead unexpected results. Current kpatch checks possible inconsistency problem with stop_machine, which can cover only threads and normal interrupts. However, beacuse NMI can not stop with it, stop_machine is not enough for live patching on NMI handlers or sub-functions which are invoked in the NMI context. To check for possible inconsistency of live patching on those functions, add an atomic flag to count patching target functions invoked in NMI context while updating kpatch hash table. If the flag is set by the target functions in NMI, we can not ensure there is no concurrent execution on it. This fixes the issue #65. Changes from v5: - Fix to add a NULL check in kpatch_get_committed_func(). Changes from v4: - Change kpatch_operation to atomic_t. - Use smp_rmb/wmb barriers between kpatch_operation and kpatch_status. - Check in_nmi() first and if true, access kpatch_operation. Changes from v3: - Fix kpatch_apply/remove_patch to return 0 if succeeded. Changes from v2: - Clean up kpatch_get_committed_func as same style of kpatch_get_func. - Rename opr to op in kpatch_ftrace_handler. - Consolidate in_nmi() and kpatch_operation check into one condition. - Fix UNPATCH/PATCH mistype in kpatch_register. Changes from v1: - Rename inconsistent_flag to kpatch_status. - Introduce new enums and helper functions for kpatch_status. - Use hash_del_rcu instead of hlist_del_rcu. - Rename get_committed_func to kpatch_get_committed_func. - Use ACCESS_ONCE for kpatch_operation to prevent compiler optimization. - Fix to remove (!func || func->updating) condition from NMI check. - Add more precise comments. - Fix setting order of kpatch_status and kpatch_operation. Signed-off-by: Masami Hiramatsu <masami.hiramatsu.pt@hitachi.com>
2014-04-23 01:58:45 +00:00
/*
kmod/core: NMI synchronization improvements This is an attempt to both simplify and improve the correctness of the NMI synchronization code. There's a race in kpatch_ftrace_handler() between the kpatch_get_func() and kpatch_finish_status() calls which could result in func being NULL. The retry was supposed to fix this. However, this race would still be a problem in the repatching case (if the function had already been previously patched), in which case func would not be NULL, but could instead point to the previously patched version of the function. In this case it wouldn't retry and it would be possible for the previous version of the function to run. The fix is to use a memory barrier between accesses of the func hash and the status variable, and then just call kpatch_get_func() *after* accessing the status variable. For OP_PATCH, if status is SUCCESS, then func is guaranteed to point to the new function. If status is FAILURE, func might point to the new function, in which case we can use get_prev_func to get the previous version of the function. I also made some pretty big changes to try to simplify the design so that there are less moving parts and so that it's hopefully easier to understand. I moved the OP field into the kpatch_func struct. This allows us to merge the two global state variables (status + op) into a single global state variable (state), which helps make the code quite a bit simpler. I turned it into a proper state machine and documented the meaning of each state in the comments. Moving the OP field to the kpatch_func struct also paves the way for an upcoming pull request which will allow patch modules to be atomically replaced ("kpatch load --replace <module>").
2014-04-28 16:41:20 +00:00
* Patching succeeded. If the function was being
* unpatched, roll back to the previous version.
kmod/core: Support live patching on NMI handlers Support live patching on NMI handlers. This adds checks for possible inconsistency of live patching on NMI handlers. The inconsistency problem means that any concurrent execution of old function and new function, which can lead unexpected results. Current kpatch checks possible inconsistency problem with stop_machine, which can cover only threads and normal interrupts. However, beacuse NMI can not stop with it, stop_machine is not enough for live patching on NMI handlers or sub-functions which are invoked in the NMI context. To check for possible inconsistency of live patching on those functions, add an atomic flag to count patching target functions invoked in NMI context while updating kpatch hash table. If the flag is set by the target functions in NMI, we can not ensure there is no concurrent execution on it. This fixes the issue #65. Changes from v5: - Fix to add a NULL check in kpatch_get_committed_func(). Changes from v4: - Change kpatch_operation to atomic_t. - Use smp_rmb/wmb barriers between kpatch_operation and kpatch_status. - Check in_nmi() first and if true, access kpatch_operation. Changes from v3: - Fix kpatch_apply/remove_patch to return 0 if succeeded. Changes from v2: - Clean up kpatch_get_committed_func as same style of kpatch_get_func. - Rename opr to op in kpatch_ftrace_handler. - Consolidate in_nmi() and kpatch_operation check into one condition. - Fix UNPATCH/PATCH mistype in kpatch_register. Changes from v1: - Rename inconsistent_flag to kpatch_status. - Introduce new enums and helper functions for kpatch_status. - Use hash_del_rcu instead of hlist_del_rcu. - Rename get_committed_func to kpatch_get_committed_func. - Use ACCESS_ONCE for kpatch_operation to prevent compiler optimization. - Fix to remove (!func || func->updating) condition from NMI check. - Add more precise comments. - Fix setting order of kpatch_status and kpatch_operation. Signed-off-by: Masami Hiramatsu <masami.hiramatsu.pt@hitachi.com>
2014-04-23 01:58:45 +00:00
*/
kmod/core: NMI synchronization improvements This is an attempt to both simplify and improve the correctness of the NMI synchronization code. There's a race in kpatch_ftrace_handler() between the kpatch_get_func() and kpatch_finish_status() calls which could result in func being NULL. The retry was supposed to fix this. However, this race would still be a problem in the repatching case (if the function had already been previously patched), in which case func would not be NULL, but could instead point to the previously patched version of the function. In this case it wouldn't retry and it would be possible for the previous version of the function to run. The fix is to use a memory barrier between accesses of the func hash and the status variable, and then just call kpatch_get_func() *after* accessing the status variable. For OP_PATCH, if status is SUCCESS, then func is guaranteed to point to the new function. If status is FAILURE, func might point to the new function, in which case we can use get_prev_func to get the previous version of the function. I also made some pretty big changes to try to simplify the design so that there are less moving parts and so that it's hopefully easier to understand. I moved the OP field into the kpatch_func struct. This allows us to merge the two global state variables (status + op) into a single global state variable (state), which helps make the code quite a bit simpler. I turned it into a proper state machine and documented the meaning of each state in the comments. Moving the OP field to the kpatch_func struct also paves the way for an upcoming pull request which will allow patch modules to be atomically replaced ("kpatch load --replace <module>").
2014-04-28 16:41:20 +00:00
if (func && func->op == KPATCH_OP_UNPATCH)
func = kpatch_get_prev_func(func, ip);
kmod/core: Support live patching on NMI handlers Support live patching on NMI handlers. This adds checks for possible inconsistency of live patching on NMI handlers. The inconsistency problem means that any concurrent execution of old function and new function, which can lead unexpected results. Current kpatch checks possible inconsistency problem with stop_machine, which can cover only threads and normal interrupts. However, beacuse NMI can not stop with it, stop_machine is not enough for live patching on NMI handlers or sub-functions which are invoked in the NMI context. To check for possible inconsistency of live patching on those functions, add an atomic flag to count patching target functions invoked in NMI context while updating kpatch hash table. If the flag is set by the target functions in NMI, we can not ensure there is no concurrent execution on it. This fixes the issue #65. Changes from v5: - Fix to add a NULL check in kpatch_get_committed_func(). Changes from v4: - Change kpatch_operation to atomic_t. - Use smp_rmb/wmb barriers between kpatch_operation and kpatch_status. - Check in_nmi() first and if true, access kpatch_operation. Changes from v3: - Fix kpatch_apply/remove_patch to return 0 if succeeded. Changes from v2: - Clean up kpatch_get_committed_func as same style of kpatch_get_func. - Rename opr to op in kpatch_ftrace_handler. - Consolidate in_nmi() and kpatch_operation check into one condition. - Fix UNPATCH/PATCH mistype in kpatch_register. Changes from v1: - Rename inconsistent_flag to kpatch_status. - Introduce new enums and helper functions for kpatch_status. - Use hash_del_rcu instead of hlist_del_rcu. - Rename get_committed_func to kpatch_get_committed_func. - Use ACCESS_ONCE for kpatch_operation to prevent compiler optimization. - Fix to remove (!func || func->updating) condition from NMI check. - Add more precise comments. - Fix setting order of kpatch_status and kpatch_operation. Signed-off-by: Masami Hiramatsu <masami.hiramatsu.pt@hitachi.com>
2014-04-23 01:58:45 +00:00
} else {
/*
kmod/core: NMI synchronization improvements This is an attempt to both simplify and improve the correctness of the NMI synchronization code. There's a race in kpatch_ftrace_handler() between the kpatch_get_func() and kpatch_finish_status() calls which could result in func being NULL. The retry was supposed to fix this. However, this race would still be a problem in the repatching case (if the function had already been previously patched), in which case func would not be NULL, but could instead point to the previously patched version of the function. In this case it wouldn't retry and it would be possible for the previous version of the function to run. The fix is to use a memory barrier between accesses of the func hash and the status variable, and then just call kpatch_get_func() *after* accessing the status variable. For OP_PATCH, if status is SUCCESS, then func is guaranteed to point to the new function. If status is FAILURE, func might point to the new function, in which case we can use get_prev_func to get the previous version of the function. I also made some pretty big changes to try to simplify the design so that there are less moving parts and so that it's hopefully easier to understand. I moved the OP field into the kpatch_func struct. This allows us to merge the two global state variables (status + op) into a single global state variable (state), which helps make the code quite a bit simpler. I turned it into a proper state machine and documented the meaning of each state in the comments. Moving the OP field to the kpatch_func struct also paves the way for an upcoming pull request which will allow patch modules to be atomically replaced ("kpatch load --replace <module>").
2014-04-28 16:41:20 +00:00
* Patching failed. If the function was being patched,
* roll back to the previous version.
kmod/core: Support live patching on NMI handlers Support live patching on NMI handlers. This adds checks for possible inconsistency of live patching on NMI handlers. The inconsistency problem means that any concurrent execution of old function and new function, which can lead unexpected results. Current kpatch checks possible inconsistency problem with stop_machine, which can cover only threads and normal interrupts. However, beacuse NMI can not stop with it, stop_machine is not enough for live patching on NMI handlers or sub-functions which are invoked in the NMI context. To check for possible inconsistency of live patching on those functions, add an atomic flag to count patching target functions invoked in NMI context while updating kpatch hash table. If the flag is set by the target functions in NMI, we can not ensure there is no concurrent execution on it. This fixes the issue #65. Changes from v5: - Fix to add a NULL check in kpatch_get_committed_func(). Changes from v4: - Change kpatch_operation to atomic_t. - Use smp_rmb/wmb barriers between kpatch_operation and kpatch_status. - Check in_nmi() first and if true, access kpatch_operation. Changes from v3: - Fix kpatch_apply/remove_patch to return 0 if succeeded. Changes from v2: - Clean up kpatch_get_committed_func as same style of kpatch_get_func. - Rename opr to op in kpatch_ftrace_handler. - Consolidate in_nmi() and kpatch_operation check into one condition. - Fix UNPATCH/PATCH mistype in kpatch_register. Changes from v1: - Rename inconsistent_flag to kpatch_status. - Introduce new enums and helper functions for kpatch_status. - Use hash_del_rcu instead of hlist_del_rcu. - Rename get_committed_func to kpatch_get_committed_func. - Use ACCESS_ONCE for kpatch_operation to prevent compiler optimization. - Fix to remove (!func || func->updating) condition from NMI check. - Add more precise comments. - Fix setting order of kpatch_status and kpatch_operation. Signed-off-by: Masami Hiramatsu <masami.hiramatsu.pt@hitachi.com>
2014-04-23 01:58:45 +00:00
*/
kmod/core: NMI synchronization improvements This is an attempt to both simplify and improve the correctness of the NMI synchronization code. There's a race in kpatch_ftrace_handler() between the kpatch_get_func() and kpatch_finish_status() calls which could result in func being NULL. The retry was supposed to fix this. However, this race would still be a problem in the repatching case (if the function had already been previously patched), in which case func would not be NULL, but could instead point to the previously patched version of the function. In this case it wouldn't retry and it would be possible for the previous version of the function to run. The fix is to use a memory barrier between accesses of the func hash and the status variable, and then just call kpatch_get_func() *after* accessing the status variable. For OP_PATCH, if status is SUCCESS, then func is guaranteed to point to the new function. If status is FAILURE, func might point to the new function, in which case we can use get_prev_func to get the previous version of the function. I also made some pretty big changes to try to simplify the design so that there are less moving parts and so that it's hopefully easier to understand. I moved the OP field into the kpatch_func struct. This allows us to merge the two global state variables (status + op) into a single global state variable (state), which helps make the code quite a bit simpler. I turned it into a proper state machine and documented the meaning of each state in the comments. Moving the OP field to the kpatch_func struct also paves the way for an upcoming pull request which will allow patch modules to be atomically replaced ("kpatch load --replace <module>").
2014-04-28 16:41:20 +00:00
if (func && func->op == KPATCH_OP_PATCH)
func = kpatch_get_prev_func(func, ip);
}
}
kmod/core: Support live patching on NMI handlers Support live patching on NMI handlers. This adds checks for possible inconsistency of live patching on NMI handlers. The inconsistency problem means that any concurrent execution of old function and new function, which can lead unexpected results. Current kpatch checks possible inconsistency problem with stop_machine, which can cover only threads and normal interrupts. However, beacuse NMI can not stop with it, stop_machine is not enough for live patching on NMI handlers or sub-functions which are invoked in the NMI context. To check for possible inconsistency of live patching on those functions, add an atomic flag to count patching target functions invoked in NMI context while updating kpatch hash table. If the flag is set by the target functions in NMI, we can not ensure there is no concurrent execution on it. This fixes the issue #65. Changes from v5: - Fix to add a NULL check in kpatch_get_committed_func(). Changes from v4: - Change kpatch_operation to atomic_t. - Use smp_rmb/wmb barriers between kpatch_operation and kpatch_status. - Check in_nmi() first and if true, access kpatch_operation. Changes from v3: - Fix kpatch_apply/remove_patch to return 0 if succeeded. Changes from v2: - Clean up kpatch_get_committed_func as same style of kpatch_get_func. - Rename opr to op in kpatch_ftrace_handler. - Consolidate in_nmi() and kpatch_operation check into one condition. - Fix UNPATCH/PATCH mistype in kpatch_register. Changes from v1: - Rename inconsistent_flag to kpatch_status. - Introduce new enums and helper functions for kpatch_status. - Use hash_del_rcu instead of hlist_del_rcu. - Rename get_committed_func to kpatch_get_committed_func. - Use ACCESS_ONCE for kpatch_operation to prevent compiler optimization. - Fix to remove (!func || func->updating) condition from NMI check. - Add more precise comments. - Fix setting order of kpatch_status and kpatch_operation. Signed-off-by: Masami Hiramatsu <masami.hiramatsu.pt@hitachi.com>
2014-04-23 01:58:45 +00:00
done:
if (func)
regs->ip = func->new_addr;
preempt_enable_notrace();
}
static struct ftrace_ops kpatch_ftrace_ops __read_mostly = {
.func = kpatch_ftrace_handler,
.flags = FTRACE_OPS_FL_SAVE_REGS,
};
/* Remove kpatch_funcs from ftrace filter */
static void kpatch_remove_funcs_from_filter(struct kpatch_func *funcs,
int num_funcs)
{
int i, ret = 0;
for (i = 0; i < num_funcs; i++) {
struct kpatch_func *func = &funcs[i];
/*
* If any other modules have also patched this function, don't
* remove its ftrace handler.
*/
if (kpatch_get_func(func->old_addr))
continue;
/* Remove the ftrace handler for this function. */
ret = ftrace_set_filter_ip(&kpatch_ftrace_ops, func->old_addr,
1, 0);
WARN(ret, "can't remove ftrace filter at address 0x%lx (rc=%d)",
func->old_addr, ret);
}
}
int kpatch_register(struct kpatch_module *kpmod, bool replace)
{
int ret, i;
struct kpatch_func *funcs = kpmod->funcs;
struct kpatch_func *func;
int num_funcs = kpmod->num_funcs;
if (!kpmod->mod || !funcs || !num_funcs)
return -EINVAL;
kpmod->enabled = false;
down(&kpatch_mutex);
if (!try_module_get(kpmod->mod)) {
ret = -ENODEV;
goto err_up;
}
for (i = 0; i < num_funcs; i++) {
func = &funcs[i];
kmod/core: NMI synchronization improvements This is an attempt to both simplify and improve the correctness of the NMI synchronization code. There's a race in kpatch_ftrace_handler() between the kpatch_get_func() and kpatch_finish_status() calls which could result in func being NULL. The retry was supposed to fix this. However, this race would still be a problem in the repatching case (if the function had already been previously patched), in which case func would not be NULL, but could instead point to the previously patched version of the function. In this case it wouldn't retry and it would be possible for the previous version of the function to run. The fix is to use a memory barrier between accesses of the func hash and the status variable, and then just call kpatch_get_func() *after* accessing the status variable. For OP_PATCH, if status is SUCCESS, then func is guaranteed to point to the new function. If status is FAILURE, func might point to the new function, in which case we can use get_prev_func to get the previous version of the function. I also made some pretty big changes to try to simplify the design so that there are less moving parts and so that it's hopefully easier to understand. I moved the OP field into the kpatch_func struct. This allows us to merge the two global state variables (status + op) into a single global state variable (state), which helps make the code quite a bit simpler. I turned it into a proper state machine and documented the meaning of each state in the comments. Moving the OP field to the kpatch_func struct also paves the way for an upcoming pull request which will allow patch modules to be atomically replaced ("kpatch load --replace <module>").
2014-04-28 16:41:20 +00:00
func->op = KPATCH_OP_PATCH;
func->kpmod = kpmod;
2013-01-18 18:31:14 +00:00
/*
* If any other modules have also patched this function, it
* already has an ftrace handler.
*/
if (kpatch_get_func(func->old_addr))
continue;
/* Add an ftrace handler for this function. */
ret = ftrace_set_filter_ip(&kpatch_ftrace_ops, func->old_addr,
0, 0);
if (ret) {
pr_err("can't set ftrace filter at address 0x%lx\n",
func->old_addr);
num_funcs = i;
goto err_rollback;
}
}
/* Register the ftrace handler if it hasn't been done already. */
if (!kpatch_num_registered) {
ret = register_ftrace_function(&kpatch_ftrace_ops);
if (ret) {
pr_err("can't register ftrace handler\n");
goto err_rollback;
}
}
kpatch_num_registered++;
if (replace)
hash_for_each_rcu(kpatch_func_hash, i, func, node)
func->op = KPATCH_OP_UNPATCH;
kmod/core: NMI synchronization improvements This is an attempt to both simplify and improve the correctness of the NMI synchronization code. There's a race in kpatch_ftrace_handler() between the kpatch_get_func() and kpatch_finish_status() calls which could result in func being NULL. The retry was supposed to fix this. However, this race would still be a problem in the repatching case (if the function had already been previously patched), in which case func would not be NULL, but could instead point to the previously patched version of the function. In this case it wouldn't retry and it would be possible for the previous version of the function to run. The fix is to use a memory barrier between accesses of the func hash and the status variable, and then just call kpatch_get_func() *after* accessing the status variable. For OP_PATCH, if status is SUCCESS, then func is guaranteed to point to the new function. If status is FAILURE, func might point to the new function, in which case we can use get_prev_func to get the previous version of the function. I also made some pretty big changes to try to simplify the design so that there are less moving parts and so that it's hopefully easier to understand. I moved the OP field into the kpatch_func struct. This allows us to merge the two global state variables (status + op) into a single global state variable (state), which helps make the code quite a bit simpler. I turned it into a proper state machine and documented the meaning of each state in the comments. Moving the OP field to the kpatch_func struct also paves the way for an upcoming pull request which will allow patch modules to be atomically replaced ("kpatch load --replace <module>").
2014-04-28 16:41:20 +00:00
/* memory barrier between func hash and state write */
kmod/core: Support live patching on NMI handlers Support live patching on NMI handlers. This adds checks for possible inconsistency of live patching on NMI handlers. The inconsistency problem means that any concurrent execution of old function and new function, which can lead unexpected results. Current kpatch checks possible inconsistency problem with stop_machine, which can cover only threads and normal interrupts. However, beacuse NMI can not stop with it, stop_machine is not enough for live patching on NMI handlers or sub-functions which are invoked in the NMI context. To check for possible inconsistency of live patching on those functions, add an atomic flag to count patching target functions invoked in NMI context while updating kpatch hash table. If the flag is set by the target functions in NMI, we can not ensure there is no concurrent execution on it. This fixes the issue #65. Changes from v5: - Fix to add a NULL check in kpatch_get_committed_func(). Changes from v4: - Change kpatch_operation to atomic_t. - Use smp_rmb/wmb barriers between kpatch_operation and kpatch_status. - Check in_nmi() first and if true, access kpatch_operation. Changes from v3: - Fix kpatch_apply/remove_patch to return 0 if succeeded. Changes from v2: - Clean up kpatch_get_committed_func as same style of kpatch_get_func. - Rename opr to op in kpatch_ftrace_handler. - Consolidate in_nmi() and kpatch_operation check into one condition. - Fix UNPATCH/PATCH mistype in kpatch_register. Changes from v1: - Rename inconsistent_flag to kpatch_status. - Introduce new enums and helper functions for kpatch_status. - Use hash_del_rcu instead of hlist_del_rcu. - Rename get_committed_func to kpatch_get_committed_func. - Use ACCESS_ONCE for kpatch_operation to prevent compiler optimization. - Fix to remove (!func || func->updating) condition from NMI check. - Add more precise comments. - Fix setting order of kpatch_status and kpatch_operation. Signed-off-by: Masami Hiramatsu <masami.hiramatsu.pt@hitachi.com>
2014-04-23 01:58:45 +00:00
smp_wmb();
kmod/core: NMI synchronization improvements This is an attempt to both simplify and improve the correctness of the NMI synchronization code. There's a race in kpatch_ftrace_handler() between the kpatch_get_func() and kpatch_finish_status() calls which could result in func being NULL. The retry was supposed to fix this. However, this race would still be a problem in the repatching case (if the function had already been previously patched), in which case func would not be NULL, but could instead point to the previously patched version of the function. In this case it wouldn't retry and it would be possible for the previous version of the function to run. The fix is to use a memory barrier between accesses of the func hash and the status variable, and then just call kpatch_get_func() *after* accessing the status variable. For OP_PATCH, if status is SUCCESS, then func is guaranteed to point to the new function. If status is FAILURE, func might point to the new function, in which case we can use get_prev_func to get the previous version of the function. I also made some pretty big changes to try to simplify the design so that there are less moving parts and so that it's hopefully easier to understand. I moved the OP field into the kpatch_func struct. This allows us to merge the two global state variables (status + op) into a single global state variable (state), which helps make the code quite a bit simpler. I turned it into a proper state machine and documented the meaning of each state in the comments. Moving the OP field to the kpatch_func struct also paves the way for an upcoming pull request which will allow patch modules to be atomically replaced ("kpatch load --replace <module>").
2014-04-28 16:41:20 +00:00
kpatch_state_updating();
/*
* Idle the CPUs, verify activeness safety, and atomically make the new
* functions visible to the ftrace handler.
*/
ret = stop_machine(kpatch_apply_patch, kpmod, NULL);
kmod/core: NMI synchronization improvements This is an attempt to both simplify and improve the correctness of the NMI synchronization code. There's a race in kpatch_ftrace_handler() between the kpatch_get_func() and kpatch_finish_status() calls which could result in func being NULL. The retry was supposed to fix this. However, this race would still be a problem in the repatching case (if the function had already been previously patched), in which case func would not be NULL, but could instead point to the previously patched version of the function. In this case it wouldn't retry and it would be possible for the previous version of the function to run. The fix is to use a memory barrier between accesses of the func hash and the status variable, and then just call kpatch_get_func() *after* accessing the status variable. For OP_PATCH, if status is SUCCESS, then func is guaranteed to point to the new function. If status is FAILURE, func might point to the new function, in which case we can use get_prev_func to get the previous version of the function. I also made some pretty big changes to try to simplify the design so that there are less moving parts and so that it's hopefully easier to understand. I moved the OP field into the kpatch_func struct. This allows us to merge the two global state variables (status + op) into a single global state variable (state), which helps make the code quite a bit simpler. I turned it into a proper state machine and documented the meaning of each state in the comments. Moving the OP field to the kpatch_func struct also paves the way for an upcoming pull request which will allow patch modules to be atomically replaced ("kpatch load --replace <module>").
2014-04-28 16:41:20 +00:00
/*
* For the replace case, remove any obsolete funcs from the hash and
* the ftrace filter, and disable the owning patch module so that it
* can be removed.
*/
if (!ret && replace)
hash_for_each_rcu(kpatch_func_hash, i, func, node) {
if (func->op != KPATCH_OP_UNPATCH)
continue;
hash_del_rcu(&func->node);
kpatch_remove_funcs_from_filter(func, 1);
if (func->kpmod->enabled) {
kpatch_num_registered--;
func->kpmod->enabled = false;
pr_notice("unloaded patch module \"%s\"\n",
func->kpmod->mod->name);
module_put(func->kpmod->mod);
}
}
/* memory barrier between func hash and state write */
smp_wmb();
kmod/core: NMI synchronization improvements This is an attempt to both simplify and improve the correctness of the NMI synchronization code. There's a race in kpatch_ftrace_handler() between the kpatch_get_func() and kpatch_finish_status() calls which could result in func being NULL. The retry was supposed to fix this. However, this race would still be a problem in the repatching case (if the function had already been previously patched), in which case func would not be NULL, but could instead point to the previously patched version of the function. In this case it wouldn't retry and it would be possible for the previous version of the function to run. The fix is to use a memory barrier between accesses of the func hash and the status variable, and then just call kpatch_get_func() *after* accessing the status variable. For OP_PATCH, if status is SUCCESS, then func is guaranteed to point to the new function. If status is FAILURE, func might point to the new function, in which case we can use get_prev_func to get the previous version of the function. I also made some pretty big changes to try to simplify the design so that there are less moving parts and so that it's hopefully easier to understand. I moved the OP field into the kpatch_func struct. This allows us to merge the two global state variables (status + op) into a single global state variable (state), which helps make the code quite a bit simpler. I turned it into a proper state machine and documented the meaning of each state in the comments. Moving the OP field to the kpatch_func struct also paves the way for an upcoming pull request which will allow patch modules to be atomically replaced ("kpatch load --replace <module>").
2014-04-28 16:41:20 +00:00
/* NMI handlers can return to normal now */
kpatch_state_idle();
/*
* Wait for all existing NMI handlers to complete so that they don't
* see any changes to funcs or funcs->op that might occur after this
* point.
*
* Any NMI handlers starting after this point will see the IDLE state.
*/
synchronize_rcu();
if (ret)
goto err_unregister;
kmod/core: NMI synchronization improvements This is an attempt to both simplify and improve the correctness of the NMI synchronization code. There's a race in kpatch_ftrace_handler() between the kpatch_get_func() and kpatch_finish_status() calls which could result in func being NULL. The retry was supposed to fix this. However, this race would still be a problem in the repatching case (if the function had already been previously patched), in which case func would not be NULL, but could instead point to the previously patched version of the function. In this case it wouldn't retry and it would be possible for the previous version of the function to run. The fix is to use a memory barrier between accesses of the func hash and the status variable, and then just call kpatch_get_func() *after* accessing the status variable. For OP_PATCH, if status is SUCCESS, then func is guaranteed to point to the new function. If status is FAILURE, func might point to the new function, in which case we can use get_prev_func to get the previous version of the function. I also made some pretty big changes to try to simplify the design so that there are less moving parts and so that it's hopefully easier to understand. I moved the OP field into the kpatch_func struct. This allows us to merge the two global state variables (status + op) into a single global state variable (state), which helps make the code quite a bit simpler. I turned it into a proper state machine and documented the meaning of each state in the comments. Moving the OP field to the kpatch_func struct also paves the way for an upcoming pull request which will allow patch modules to be atomically replaced ("kpatch load --replace <module>").
2014-04-28 16:41:20 +00:00
for (i = 0; i < num_funcs; i++)
funcs[i].op = KPATCH_OP_NONE;
/* TODO: need TAINT_KPATCH */
pr_notice_once("tainting kernel with TAINT_USER\n");
add_taint(TAINT_USER, LOCKDEP_STILL_OK);
pr_notice("loaded patch module \"%s\"\n", kpmod->mod->name);
kpmod->enabled = true;
up(&kpatch_mutex);
return 0;
err_unregister:
if (replace)
hash_for_each_rcu(kpatch_func_hash, i, func, node)
func->op = KPATCH_OP_NONE;
if (kpatch_num_registered == 1) {
int ret2 = unregister_ftrace_function(&kpatch_ftrace_ops);
if (ret2) {
pr_err("ftrace unregister failed (%d)\n", ret2);
goto err_rollback;
}
}
kpatch_num_registered--;
err_rollback:
kpatch_remove_funcs_from_filter(funcs, num_funcs);
module_put(kpmod->mod);
err_up:
up(&kpatch_mutex);
return ret;
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(kpatch_register);
int kpatch_unregister(struct kpatch_module *kpmod)
{
struct kpatch_func *funcs = kpmod->funcs;
int num_funcs = kpmod->num_funcs;
kmod/core: Support live patching on NMI handlers Support live patching on NMI handlers. This adds checks for possible inconsistency of live patching on NMI handlers. The inconsistency problem means that any concurrent execution of old function and new function, which can lead unexpected results. Current kpatch checks possible inconsistency problem with stop_machine, which can cover only threads and normal interrupts. However, beacuse NMI can not stop with it, stop_machine is not enough for live patching on NMI handlers or sub-functions which are invoked in the NMI context. To check for possible inconsistency of live patching on those functions, add an atomic flag to count patching target functions invoked in NMI context while updating kpatch hash table. If the flag is set by the target functions in NMI, we can not ensure there is no concurrent execution on it. This fixes the issue #65. Changes from v5: - Fix to add a NULL check in kpatch_get_committed_func(). Changes from v4: - Change kpatch_operation to atomic_t. - Use smp_rmb/wmb barriers between kpatch_operation and kpatch_status. - Check in_nmi() first and if true, access kpatch_operation. Changes from v3: - Fix kpatch_apply/remove_patch to return 0 if succeeded. Changes from v2: - Clean up kpatch_get_committed_func as same style of kpatch_get_func. - Rename opr to op in kpatch_ftrace_handler. - Consolidate in_nmi() and kpatch_operation check into one condition. - Fix UNPATCH/PATCH mistype in kpatch_register. Changes from v1: - Rename inconsistent_flag to kpatch_status. - Introduce new enums and helper functions for kpatch_status. - Use hash_del_rcu instead of hlist_del_rcu. - Rename get_committed_func to kpatch_get_committed_func. - Use ACCESS_ONCE for kpatch_operation to prevent compiler optimization. - Fix to remove (!func || func->updating) condition from NMI check. - Add more precise comments. - Fix setting order of kpatch_status and kpatch_operation. Signed-off-by: Masami Hiramatsu <masami.hiramatsu.pt@hitachi.com>
2014-04-23 01:58:45 +00:00
int i, ret;
if (!kpmod->enabled)
return -EINVAL;
down(&kpatch_mutex);
kmod/core: Support live patching on NMI handlers Support live patching on NMI handlers. This adds checks for possible inconsistency of live patching on NMI handlers. The inconsistency problem means that any concurrent execution of old function and new function, which can lead unexpected results. Current kpatch checks possible inconsistency problem with stop_machine, which can cover only threads and normal interrupts. However, beacuse NMI can not stop with it, stop_machine is not enough for live patching on NMI handlers or sub-functions which are invoked in the NMI context. To check for possible inconsistency of live patching on those functions, add an atomic flag to count patching target functions invoked in NMI context while updating kpatch hash table. If the flag is set by the target functions in NMI, we can not ensure there is no concurrent execution on it. This fixes the issue #65. Changes from v5: - Fix to add a NULL check in kpatch_get_committed_func(). Changes from v4: - Change kpatch_operation to atomic_t. - Use smp_rmb/wmb barriers between kpatch_operation and kpatch_status. - Check in_nmi() first and if true, access kpatch_operation. Changes from v3: - Fix kpatch_apply/remove_patch to return 0 if succeeded. Changes from v2: - Clean up kpatch_get_committed_func as same style of kpatch_get_func. - Rename opr to op in kpatch_ftrace_handler. - Consolidate in_nmi() and kpatch_operation check into one condition. - Fix UNPATCH/PATCH mistype in kpatch_register. Changes from v1: - Rename inconsistent_flag to kpatch_status. - Introduce new enums and helper functions for kpatch_status. - Use hash_del_rcu instead of hlist_del_rcu. - Rename get_committed_func to kpatch_get_committed_func. - Use ACCESS_ONCE for kpatch_operation to prevent compiler optimization. - Fix to remove (!func || func->updating) condition from NMI check. - Add more precise comments. - Fix setting order of kpatch_status and kpatch_operation. Signed-off-by: Masami Hiramatsu <masami.hiramatsu.pt@hitachi.com>
2014-04-23 01:58:45 +00:00
for (i = 0; i < num_funcs; i++)
kmod/core: NMI synchronization improvements This is an attempt to both simplify and improve the correctness of the NMI synchronization code. There's a race in kpatch_ftrace_handler() between the kpatch_get_func() and kpatch_finish_status() calls which could result in func being NULL. The retry was supposed to fix this. However, this race would still be a problem in the repatching case (if the function had already been previously patched), in which case func would not be NULL, but could instead point to the previously patched version of the function. In this case it wouldn't retry and it would be possible for the previous version of the function to run. The fix is to use a memory barrier between accesses of the func hash and the status variable, and then just call kpatch_get_func() *after* accessing the status variable. For OP_PATCH, if status is SUCCESS, then func is guaranteed to point to the new function. If status is FAILURE, func might point to the new function, in which case we can use get_prev_func to get the previous version of the function. I also made some pretty big changes to try to simplify the design so that there are less moving parts and so that it's hopefully easier to understand. I moved the OP field into the kpatch_func struct. This allows us to merge the two global state variables (status + op) into a single global state variable (state), which helps make the code quite a bit simpler. I turned it into a proper state machine and documented the meaning of each state in the comments. Moving the OP field to the kpatch_func struct also paves the way for an upcoming pull request which will allow patch modules to be atomically replaced ("kpatch load --replace <module>").
2014-04-28 16:41:20 +00:00
funcs[i].op = KPATCH_OP_UNPATCH;
/* memory barrier between func hash and state write */
smp_wmb();
kpatch_state_updating();
kmod/core: Support live patching on NMI handlers Support live patching on NMI handlers. This adds checks for possible inconsistency of live patching on NMI handlers. The inconsistency problem means that any concurrent execution of old function and new function, which can lead unexpected results. Current kpatch checks possible inconsistency problem with stop_machine, which can cover only threads and normal interrupts. However, beacuse NMI can not stop with it, stop_machine is not enough for live patching on NMI handlers or sub-functions which are invoked in the NMI context. To check for possible inconsistency of live patching on those functions, add an atomic flag to count patching target functions invoked in NMI context while updating kpatch hash table. If the flag is set by the target functions in NMI, we can not ensure there is no concurrent execution on it. This fixes the issue #65. Changes from v5: - Fix to add a NULL check in kpatch_get_committed_func(). Changes from v4: - Change kpatch_operation to atomic_t. - Use smp_rmb/wmb barriers between kpatch_operation and kpatch_status. - Check in_nmi() first and if true, access kpatch_operation. Changes from v3: - Fix kpatch_apply/remove_patch to return 0 if succeeded. Changes from v2: - Clean up kpatch_get_committed_func as same style of kpatch_get_func. - Rename opr to op in kpatch_ftrace_handler. - Consolidate in_nmi() and kpatch_operation check into one condition. - Fix UNPATCH/PATCH mistype in kpatch_register. Changes from v1: - Rename inconsistent_flag to kpatch_status. - Introduce new enums and helper functions for kpatch_status. - Use hash_del_rcu instead of hlist_del_rcu. - Rename get_committed_func to kpatch_get_committed_func. - Use ACCESS_ONCE for kpatch_operation to prevent compiler optimization. - Fix to remove (!func || func->updating) condition from NMI check. - Add more precise comments. - Fix setting order of kpatch_status and kpatch_operation. Signed-off-by: Masami Hiramatsu <masami.hiramatsu.pt@hitachi.com>
2014-04-23 01:58:45 +00:00
ret = stop_machine(kpatch_remove_patch, kpmod, NULL);
kmod/core: NMI synchronization improvements This is an attempt to both simplify and improve the correctness of the NMI synchronization code. There's a race in kpatch_ftrace_handler() between the kpatch_get_func() and kpatch_finish_status() calls which could result in func being NULL. The retry was supposed to fix this. However, this race would still be a problem in the repatching case (if the function had already been previously patched), in which case func would not be NULL, but could instead point to the previously patched version of the function. In this case it wouldn't retry and it would be possible for the previous version of the function to run. The fix is to use a memory barrier between accesses of the func hash and the status variable, and then just call kpatch_get_func() *after* accessing the status variable. For OP_PATCH, if status is SUCCESS, then func is guaranteed to point to the new function. If status is FAILURE, func might point to the new function, in which case we can use get_prev_func to get the previous version of the function. I also made some pretty big changes to try to simplify the design so that there are less moving parts and so that it's hopefully easier to understand. I moved the OP field into the kpatch_func struct. This allows us to merge the two global state variables (status + op) into a single global state variable (state), which helps make the code quite a bit simpler. I turned it into a proper state machine and documented the meaning of each state in the comments. Moving the OP field to the kpatch_func struct also paves the way for an upcoming pull request which will allow patch modules to be atomically replaced ("kpatch load --replace <module>").
2014-04-28 16:41:20 +00:00
/* NMI handlers can return to normal now */
kpatch_state_idle();
/*
* Wait for all existing NMI handlers to complete so that they don't
* see any changes to funcs or funcs->op that might occur after this
* point.
*
* Any NMI handlers starting after this point will see the IDLE state.
*/
synchronize_rcu();
if (ret) {
for (i = 0; i < num_funcs; i++)
funcs[i].op = KPATCH_OP_NONE;
goto out;
kmod/core: NMI synchronization improvements This is an attempt to both simplify and improve the correctness of the NMI synchronization code. There's a race in kpatch_ftrace_handler() between the kpatch_get_func() and kpatch_finish_status() calls which could result in func being NULL. The retry was supposed to fix this. However, this race would still be a problem in the repatching case (if the function had already been previously patched), in which case func would not be NULL, but could instead point to the previously patched version of the function. In this case it wouldn't retry and it would be possible for the previous version of the function to run. The fix is to use a memory barrier between accesses of the func hash and the status variable, and then just call kpatch_get_func() *after* accessing the status variable. For OP_PATCH, if status is SUCCESS, then func is guaranteed to point to the new function. If status is FAILURE, func might point to the new function, in which case we can use get_prev_func to get the previous version of the function. I also made some pretty big changes to try to simplify the design so that there are less moving parts and so that it's hopefully easier to understand. I moved the OP field into the kpatch_func struct. This allows us to merge the two global state variables (status + op) into a single global state variable (state), which helps make the code quite a bit simpler. I turned it into a proper state machine and documented the meaning of each state in the comments. Moving the OP field to the kpatch_func struct also paves the way for an upcoming pull request which will allow patch modules to be atomically replaced ("kpatch load --replace <module>").
2014-04-28 16:41:20 +00:00
}
kpatch_num_registered--;
if (!kpatch_num_registered) {
ret = unregister_ftrace_function(&kpatch_ftrace_ops);
if (ret) {
WARN(1, "can't unregister ftrace handler");
kpatch_num_registered++;
}
}
kpatch_remove_funcs_from_filter(funcs, num_funcs);
pr_notice("unloaded patch module \"%s\"\n", kpmod->mod->name);
kpmod->enabled = false;
module_put(kpmod->mod);
out:
up(&kpatch_mutex);
return ret;
}
EXPORT_SYMBOL(kpatch_unregister);
static int kpatch_init(void)
{
kpatch_root_kobj = kobject_create_and_add("kpatch", kernel_kobj);
if (!kpatch_root_kobj)
return -ENOMEM;
kpatch_patches_kobj = kobject_create_and_add("patches",
kpatch_root_kobj);
if (!kpatch_patches_kobj)
return -ENOMEM;
return 0;
}
static void kpatch_exit(void)
{
WARN_ON(kpatch_num_registered != 0);
kobject_put(kpatch_patches_kobj);
kobject_put(kpatch_root_kobj);
}
module_init(kpatch_init);
module_exit(kpatch_exit);
MODULE_LICENSE("GPL");