Hard-coding the special section group sizes is unreliable. Instead,
determine them dynamically by finding the related struct definitions in
the DWARF metadata.
Fixes#517.
Fixes#523.
kpatch_verify_patchability can detect the change of .bss or .data or
.init section, but it must be processed before verify num_changed.
Otherwise, for example, if only .init section changed, it will fail
with 'no changed functions were found', but not 'unsupported section
change(s)'.
With this patch,
for .init section: .init section will not a bundled section, so if
the section changed, not sync the function status, kpatch_verify_patchability
will give 'changed section <secname> not selected for inclusion' and
'unsupported section change(s)' error.
for .bss/.data section: kpatch_verify_patchability will ensure not
including .data or .bss section, otherwise it will give 'data section
<secname> selected for inclusion' and 'unsupported section change(s)'
error.
Signed-off-by: Li Bin <huawei.libin@huawei.com>
If a static variable is a pointer, it has rela section.
Example:
static int *p = &a;
changed to:
static int *p = &b;
so its rela section has changed.
Then this change of data should be found and report error.
But if we don't correlate its rela section, we won't
find this change.
Signed-off-by: Zhou ChengMing <zhouchengming1@outlook.com>
The current WARN detection logic catches the majority of cases, but
there are still a lot of outliers which it doesn't catch (thanks, gcc).
I looked at a much larger sample of WARN calls and came up with a more
generic algorithm.
The _rs variable is used for printk ratelimiting, similar to __warned,
which makes it a logical candidate to be "special": don't correlate it,
yet don't mark a function as changed just because it references it.
When patching a kernel module, if we can't find a needed dynrela symbol,
we currently assume it's exported. However, it's also possible that
it's provided by another .o in the patch module. Add support for that.
Fixes#445.
Currently unbundled section references are only replaced if the start of
the symbol is referenced. It's also useful to support replacement of
references which point to inside the symbol.
Improve the static local variable correlation logic, for the case where
a static local is used by multiple functions. For each usage of the
variable, look for a corresponding usage in the base object. If we find
at least one matching usage, consider it a twin.
Allow static locals to be used by two functions. This is possible if
the static's containing function is inlined. We only need to find one
of them to do the correlation.
The __func__ static local variable should be deemed "special", because
it doesn't need to be correlated and should be included when needed by
an include function.
I don't have a test case for F20, but this fixes the following types of
issues when doing a full-tree recompile on RHEL 7:
ERROR: cifssmb.o: object size mismatch: __func__.49322
ERROR: btmrvl_main.o: kpatch_correlate_static_local_variables: 982: static local variable __func__.44657 not used
ERROR: iwch_qp.o: .rodata.__func__.46024 section header details differ
When patching a shared header file, don't spam the user with hundreds of
lines of "no changed functions" messages. We expect the user to be
proactive with verifying that the right functions are being patched
anyway, so this message isn't strictly necessary.
The "descriptor" static local variables and their containing __verbose
section are used for dynamic debug printks. They should be considered
as special static local variable symbols because they have the same
requirements: they should never be correlated and they should only be
included if referenced by an included function.
The fixup_group_size() function assumes that all .fixup rela groups end
with a jmpq instruction. That assumption turns out to be false when you
take into account the ____kvm_handle_fault_on_reboot() macro which is
used by kvm.
This is a new, more reliable method. It turns out that each .fixup
group is referenced by the __ex_table section. The new algorithm goes
through the __ex_table relas to figure out the size of each .fixup
group.
Also the .fixup section is now processed before __ex_table, because it
needs to access the original __ex_table relas before the unused ones
have been stripped.
Fixes the following error:
ERROR: vmx.o: fixup_group_size: 1554: can't find jump instruction in .fixup section
Currently we're checking for several special cases when deciding whether
to convert unbundled section references to their corresponding symbol
references. We do it for all unbundled text sections as well as three
specific data sections.
There's no reason I can think of for why we shouldn't just do it for
_all_ unbundled sections.
There are two distinct usages of "objname" as a variable name:
- the parent object being patched (e.g. vmlinux)
- the child object being analyzed (e.g. meminfo.o)
The name of the global objname variable conflicts with several
functions' usage of a local objname variable, resulting in some error
messages of e.g., "ERROR: vmlinux:" instead of "ERROR: meminfo.o:".
Rename the global objname variable to childobj.
There's no need to process special sections if we're returning due to no
functions changing.
Also this means we don't have to deal with extra-special usage of the
.fixup section (here's looking at you arch/x86/lib/copy_user_64.S -- we
can't patch functions in .S files anyway).
The special sections should be processed after all the other inclusion
logic has run, so that should_keep_rela_group() can work properly.
Otherwise it might remove a needed rela group from a special section.
Fix the mangled function strcmp so that it compares all of the string
except for the numbered parts. foo.isra.35 should match foo.isra.1, but
not foo.isra.35.part.36.
Fixes#352.
It's possible for a static local variable's data section to have
a relocation which refers to the variable symbol itself. Fix the logic
which searches for the user of a static local variable by only looking
in text sections (i.e. functions).
Fixes#411.