[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] [PATCH v2 2/2] x86/traps: Dump instruction stream in show_execution_state()
On 11/02/16 12:52, Jan Beulich wrote: >>>> On 11.02.16 at 13:12, <andrew.cooper3@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> On 11/02/16 11:16, Jan Beulich wrote: >>>>>> On 11.02.16 at 11:52, <andrew.cooper3@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>>> --- a/xen/arch/x86/traps.c >>>> +++ b/xen/arch/x86/traps.c >>>> @@ -114,6 +114,56 @@ boolean_param("ler", opt_ler); >>>> #define stack_words_per_line 4 >>>> #define ESP_BEFORE_EXCEPTION(regs) ((unsigned long *)regs->rsp) >>>> >>>> +static void show_code(const struct cpu_user_regs *regs) >>>> +{ >>>> + unsigned char insns_before[8], insns_after[16]; >>>> + unsigned int i, missing_before, missing_after; >>>> + >>>> + if ( guest_mode(regs) ) >>>> + return; >>>> + >>>> + /* >>>> + * This dance with {insns,missing}_{before,after} is to ensure that, >>>> if >>>> + * %rip -8/+16 wraps around a bounday, we read a non-wrapped regs->rip >>>> + * pointer, and calculate which bytes were not read so they may be >>>> + * replaced with dashes in the printed output. >>>> + */ >>>> + missing_before = __copy_from_user( >>>> + insns_before, (void __user *)regs->rip - 8, >>>> ARRAY_SIZE(insns_before)); >>>> + missing_after = __copy_from_user( >>>> + insns_after, (void __user *)regs->rip, ARRAY_SIZE(insns_after)); >>> ... iirc __copy_from_user() doesn't range check the addresses. >>> Also reading the leading bytes is done in kind of a strange way: It'll >>> read initial bytes (farther away from RIP) and perhaps not read >>> later ones (closer to RIP), albeit clearly the ones closer are of more >>> interest. In the extreme case, where RIP is only a few bytes into a >>> page following an unmapped one, no leading bytes would be printed >>> at all despite some actually being readable. >> I think in this specific case, it might be best to hand roll some asm >> using rep movs and the direction flag, with manual fault handling. > That's certainly an option. It is turning out to be much nicer. > >>> Avoiding actual wrapping could be easily done by extending the >>> guest_mode() check above to also range check RIP against the >>> hypervisor image boundaries (post-boot this could even be limited >>> further, but perhaps using the full XEN_VIRT_{START,END} range is >>> the better route with xSplice in mind. >> I would like, where possible, to avoid omitting the instruction stream >> if Xen is outside of its expected boundaries. > Which is because of ...? What useful information do you think can > be gained from the actual instruction when the mere fact of being > outside the boundaries is a bug? Wherever %rip is pointing, the code under %rip is directly relevant to the exact values of the registers and stack dump printed. It will be obvious from the numeric value of %rip whether it is bad (also, whether symbol information is found), and making it work for all cases is easier than restricting to the Xen-only case. ~Andrew _______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xen.org/xen-devel
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