Re: [PATCH v3 19/23] arm64: mte: Add PTRACE_{PEEK,POKE}MTETAGS support
From: Luis Machado <hidden>
Date: 2020-05-13 15:10:24
Also in:
linux-arch, linux-mm
On 5/13/20 11:11 AM, Catalin Marinas wrote:
On Wed, May 13, 2020 at 09:52:52AM -0300, Luis Machado wrote:quoted
On 5/13/20 7:48 AM, Catalin Marinas wrote:quoted
On Tue, May 12, 2020 at 04:05:15PM -0300, Luis Machado wrote:quoted
On 4/21/20 11:25 AM, Catalin Marinas wrote:quoted
Add support for bulk setting/getting of the MTE tags in a tracee's address space at 'addr' in the ptrace() syscall prototype. 'data' points to a struct iovec in the tracer's address space with iov_base representing the address of a tracer's buffer of length iov_len. The tags to be copied to/from the tracer's buffer are stored as one tag per byte. On successfully copying at least one tag, ptrace() returns 0 and updates the tracer's iov_len with the number of tags copied. In case of error, either -EIO or -EFAULT is returned, trying to follow the ptrace() man page. Note that the tag copying functions are not performance critical, therefore they lack optimisations found in typical memory copy routines. Signed-off-by: Catalin Marinas <catalin.marinas@arm.com> Cc: Will Deacon <will@kernel.org> Cc: Alan Hayward <redacted> Cc: Luis Machado <redacted> Cc: Omair Javaid <redacted>I started working on MTE support for GDB and I'm wondering if we've already defined a way to check for runtime MTE support (as opposed to a HWCAP2-based check) in a traced process. Originally we were going to do it via empty-parameter ptrace calls, but you had mentioned something about a proc-based method, if I'm not mistaken.We could expose more information via proc_pid_arch_status() but that would be the tagged address ABI and tag check fault mode and intended for human consumption mostly. We don't have any ptrace interface that exposes HWCAPs. Since the gdbserver runs on the same machine as the debugged process, it can check the HWCAPs itself, they are the same for all processes.Sorry, I think i haven't made it clear. I already have access to HWCAP2 both from GDB's and gdbserver's side. But HWCAP2 only indicates the availability of a particular feature in a CPU, it doesn't necessarily means the traced process is actively using MTE, right?Right, but "actively" is not well defined either. The only way to tell whether a process is using MTE is to look for any PROT_MTE mappings. You can access these via /proc/<pid>/maps. In theory, one can use MTE without enabling the tagged address ABI or even tag checking (i.e. no prctl() call).
I see the problem. I was hoping for a more immediate form of runtime check. One debuggers would validate and enable all the tag checks and register access at process attach/startup. With that said, checking for PROT_MTE in /proc/<pid>/maps may still be useful, but a process with no immediate PROT_MTE maps doesn't mean such process won't attempt to use PROT_MTE later on. I'll have to factor that in, but I think it'll work. I guess HWCAP2_MTE will be useful after all. We can just assume that whenever we have HWCAP2_MTE, we can fetch MTE registers and check for PROT_MTE.
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So GDB/gdbserver would need runtime checks to be able to tell if a process is using MTE, in which case the tools will pay attention to tags and additional MTE-related registers (sctlr and gcr) we plan to make available to userspace.I'm happy to expose GCR_EL1.Excl and the SCTLR_EL1.TCF0 bits via ptrace as a thread state. The tags, however, are a property of the memory range rather than a per-thread state. That's what makes it different from other register-based features like SVE.
That's my understanding as well. I'm assuming, based on our previous discussion, that we'll have those couple registers under a regset (maybe NT_ARM_MTE).
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The original proposal was to have GDB send PTRACE_PEEKMTETAGS with a NULL address and check the result. Then GDB would be able to decide if the process is using MTE or not.We don't store this information in the kernel as a bool and I don't think it would be useful either. I think gdb, when displaying memory, should attempt to show tags as well if the corresponding range was mapped with PROT_MTE. Just probing whether a thread ever used MTE doesn't help since you need to be more precise on which address supports tags.
Thanks for making this clear. Checking with ptrace won't work then. It seems like /proc/<pid>/maps is the way to go.
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BTW, in my pre-v4 patches (hopefully I'll post v4 this week), I changed the ptrace tag access slightly to return an error (and no tags copied) if the page has not been mapped with PROT_MTE. The other option would have been read-as-zero/write-ignored as per the hardware behaviour. Either option is fine by me but I thought the write-ignored part would be more confusing for the debugger. If you have any preference here, please let me know.I think erroring out is a better alternative, as long as the debugger can tell what the error means, like, for example, "this particular address doesn't make use of tags".And you could use this for probing whether the range has tags or not. With my current patches it returns -EFAULT but happy to change this to -EOPNOTSUPP or -EINVAL. Note that it only returns an error if no tags copied. If gdb asks for a range of two pages and only the first one has PROT_MTE, it will return 0 and set the number of tags copied equivalent to the first page. A subsequent call would return an error. In my discussion with Dave on the documentation patch, I thought retries wouldn't be needed but in the above case it may be useful to get an error code. That's unless we change the interface to return an error and also update the user iovec structure.
Let me think about this for a bit. I'm trying to factor in the /proc/<pid>/maps contents. If debuggers know which pages have PROT_MTE set, then we can teach the tools not to PEEK/POKE tags from/to those memory ranges, which simplifies the error handling a bit. _______________________________________________ linux-arm-kernel mailing list linux-arm-kernel@lists.infradead.org http://lists.infradead.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-arm-kernel