Frank Ch. Eigler
2013-Nov-20 17:36 UTC
[PATCH -tip v3 00/23] kprobes: introduce NOKPROBE_SYMBOL() and general cleaning of kprobe blacklist
Hi -> > Does this new blacklist cover enough that the kernel now survives a > > broadly wildcarded perf-probe, e.g. over e.g. all of its kallsyms? > > That's generally the purpose of the annotations - if it doesn't then > that's a bug.AFAIK, no kernel since kprobes was introduced has ever stood up to that test. perf probe lacks the wildcarding powers of systemtap, so one needs to resort to something like: # cat /proc/kallsyms | grep ' [tT] ' | while read addr type symbol; do perf probe $symbol done then wait for a few hours for that to finish. Then, or while the loop is still running, run # perf record -e 'probe:*' -aR sleep 1 to take a kernel down. - FChE
Steven Rostedt
2013-Nov-20 17:56 UTC
[PATCH -tip v3 00/23] kprobes: introduce NOKPROBE_SYMBOL() and general cleaning of kprobe blacklist
On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 12:36:00 -0500 "Frank Ch. Eigler" <fche at redhat.com> wrote:> Hi - > > > > Does this new blacklist cover enough that the kernel now survives a > > > broadly wildcarded perf-probe, e.g. over e.g. all of its kallsyms? > > > > That's generally the purpose of the annotations - if it doesn't then > > that's a bug. > > AFAIK, no kernel since kprobes was introduced has ever stood up to > that test. perf probe lacks the wildcarding powers of systemtap, so > one needs to resort to something like: > > # cat /proc/kallsyms | grep ' [tT] ' | while read addr type symbol; do > perf probe $symbol > doneI'm curious to why one would do that. IIUC, perf now has function tracing support. -- Steve> > then wait for a few hours for that to finish. Then, or while the loop > is still running, run > > # perf record -e 'probe:*' -aR sleep 1 > > to take a kernel down. > > > - FChE
Josh Stone
2013-Nov-20 18:09 UTC
[PATCH -tip v3 00/23] kprobes: introduce NOKPROBE_SYMBOL() and general cleaning of kprobe blacklist
On 11/20/2013 09:56 AM, Steven Rostedt wrote:> On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 12:36:00 -0500 > "Frank Ch. Eigler" <fche at redhat.com> wrote: > >> Hi - >> >>>> Does this new blacklist cover enough that the kernel now survives a >>>> broadly wildcarded perf-probe, e.g. over e.g. all of its kallsyms? >>> >>> That's generally the purpose of the annotations - if it doesn't then >>> that's a bug. >> >> AFAIK, no kernel since kprobes was introduced has ever stood up to >> that test. perf probe lacks the wildcarding powers of systemtap, so >> one needs to resort to something like: >> >> # cat /proc/kallsyms | grep ' [tT] ' | while read addr type symbol; do >> perf probe $symbol >> done > > I'm curious to why one would do that. IIUC, perf now has function > tracing support.Then consider something like probing all inline "call" sites, which will be sprinkled in the middle where ftrace doesn't apply. The point is not whether there's an alternative - kprobes really ought to be wholly safe regardless. Slow, if you did such broad probing, sure, but still safe. And a real use-case probably wouldn't probe *all* functions/inlines, but it illustrates that there are at least a few in the full set that don't behave well.
Masami Hiramatsu
2013-Nov-21 02:14 UTC
[PATCH -tip v3 00/23] kprobes: introduce NOKPROBE_SYMBOL() and general cleaning of kprobe blacklist
(2013/11/21 2:36), Frank Ch. Eigler wrote:> Hi - > >>> Does this new blacklist cover enough that the kernel now survives a >>> broadly wildcarded perf-probe, e.g. over e.g. all of its kallsyms? >> >> That's generally the purpose of the annotations - if it doesn't then >> that's a bug. > > AFAIK, no kernel since kprobes was introduced has ever stood up to > that test. perf probe lacks the wildcarding powers of systemtap, so > one needs to resort to something like: > > # cat /proc/kallsyms | grep ' [tT] ' | while read addr type symbol; do > perf probe $symbol > done > > then wait for a few hours for that to finish. Then, or while the loop > is still running, run > > # perf record -e 'probe:*' -aR sleep 1 > > to take a kernel down.Um, indeed, current blacklist is not perfect. As I reported in this series, I've found 2 more patterns. I guess there still have some others. But anyway, I don't think it is good to fix all such bugs in this series. This is just the first step to do it. :) Thank you, -- Masami HIRAMATSU IT Management Research Dept. Linux Technology Center Hitachi, Ltd., Yokohama Research Laboratory E-mail: masami.hiramatsu.pt at hitachi.com
Ingo Molnar
2013-Nov-21 07:29 UTC
[PATCH -tip v3 00/23] kprobes: introduce NOKPROBE_SYMBOL() and general cleaning of kprobe blacklist
* Masami Hiramatsu <masami.hiramatsu.pt at hitachi.com> wrote:> (2013/11/21 2:36), Frank Ch. Eigler wrote:[ ... ]> > one needs to resort to something like: > > > > # cat /proc/kallsyms | grep ' [tT] ' | while read addr type symbol; do > > perf probe $symbol > > done > > > > then wait for a few hours for that to finish. Then, or while the loop > > is still running, run > > > > # perf record -e 'probe:*' -aR sleep 1 > > > > to take a kernel down. > > Um, indeed, current blacklist is not perfect. [...]Then it needs to be fixed ASAP!> [...] As I reported in this series, I've found 2 more patterns. I > guess there still have some others. > > But anyway, I don't think it is good to fix all such bugs in this > series.Fixing these bugs is far more important than any cleanup work. We can apply the fixes together with your cleanup series to make it all simpler, but the bug fixing absolutely needs to happen right now. Thanks, Ingo
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