|
[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] [PATCH v3 1/9] x86: infrastructure to allow converting certain indirect calls to direct ones
On Fri, Sep 21, 2018 at 05:47:54AM -0600, Jan Beulich wrote:
> >>> On 21.09.18 at 12:49, <wei.liu2@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > On Tue, Sep 11, 2018 at 07:32:04AM -0600, Jan Beulich wrote:
> >> @@ -218,6 +219,13 @@ void init_or_livepatch apply_alternative
> >
> > I think you need to fix the comment before this if statement. At the
> > very least you're now using two ->priv to make decision on patching.
>
> I've been considering this, but even a very close look didn't turn up
> anything I could do to this comment to improve it. Suggestions
> welcome.
Just remove the sentence about using single ->priv field?
>
> > Also I wonder why you keep base, since ...
> >
> >> if ( ALT_ORIG_PTR(base) != orig )
> >> base = a;
> >>
> >> + /* Skip patch sites already handled during the first pass. */
> >> + if ( a->priv )
> >> + {
> >> + ASSERT(force);
> >> + continue;
> >> + }
> >> +
> >> /* If there is no replacement to make, see about optimising the
> >> nops. */
> >> if ( !boot_cpu_has(a->cpuid) )
> >> {
> >> @@ -225,7 +233,7 @@ void init_or_livepatch apply_alternative
> >> if ( base->priv )
> >> continue;
> >
> > ... base is guaranteed to be a at this point, furthermore there is
> > already a check to skip patching added in this patch.
>
> Why would base equal a here?
No they aren't necessarily equal. I have misread the code.
Your code is fine as-is.
> >> @@ -236,20 +244,74 @@ void init_or_livepatch apply_alternative
> >> continue;
> >> }
> >>
> >> - base->priv = 1;
> >> -
> >> memcpy(buf, repl, a->repl_len);
> >>
> >> /* 0xe8/0xe9 are relative branches; fix the offset. */
> >> if ( a->repl_len >= 5 && (*buf & 0xfe) == 0xe8 )
> >> - *(int32_t *)(buf + 1) += repl - orig;
> >> + {
> >> + /*
> >> + * Detect the special case of indirect-to-direct branch
> >> patching:
> >> + * - replacement is a direct CALL/JMP (opcodes 0xE8/0xE9;
> >> already
> >> + * checked above),
> >> + * - replacement's displacement is -5 (pointing back at the
> >> very
> >> + * insn, which makes no sense in a real replacement insn),
> >> + * - original is an indirect CALL/JMP (opcodes 0xFF/2 or
> >> 0xFF/4)
> >> + * using RIP-relative addressing.
> >> + * Some function targets may not be available when we come
> >> here
> >> + * the first time. Defer patching of those until the
> >> post-presmp-
> >> + * initcalls re-invocation. If at that point the target
> >> pointer is
> >> + * still NULL, insert "UD2; UD0" (for ease of recognition)
> >> instead
> >> + * of CALL/JMP.
> >> + */
> >> + if ( a->cpuid == X86_FEATURE_ALWAYS &&
> >> + *(int32_t *)(buf + 1) == -5 &&
> >> + a->orig_len >= 6 &&
> >> + orig[0] == 0xff &&
> >> + orig[1] == (*buf & 1 ? 0x25 : 0x15) )
> >> + {
> >> + long disp = *(int32_t *)(orig + 2);
> >> + const uint8_t *dest = *(void **)(orig + 6 + disp);
> >> +
> >> + if ( dest )
> >> + {
> >> + disp = dest - (orig + 5);
> >> + ASSERT(disp == (int32_t)disp);
> >> + *(int32_t *)(buf + 1) = disp;
> >> + }
> >> + else if ( force )
> >> + {
> >> + buf[0] = 0x0f;
> >> + buf[1] = 0x0b;
> >> + buf[2] = 0x0f;
> >> + buf[3] = 0xff;
> >> + buf[4] = 0xff;
> >
> > I think these are opcodes for "UD2; UD0". Please add a comment for them.
> > Having to go through SDM to figure out what they are isn't nice.
>
> Well, I'm saying so in the relatively big comment ahead of this block of
> code. I don't want to say the same thing twice.
It is all fine when one is rather familiar with the code and x86-ism,
but it is rather difficult for a casual reader when you refer to
"target" in comment but "dest" in code. Lacking comment of what "force"
means also doesn't help.
>
> > At this point I also think the name "force" is not very good. What/who
> > is forced here? Why not use a more descriptive name like "post_init" or
> > "system_active"?
>
> _Patching_ is being forced here, i.e. even if we still can't find a non-NULL
> pointer, we still patch the site. I'm certainly open for suggestions, but
> I don't really like either of the two suggestions you make any better than
> the current "force". The next best option I had been thinking about back
> then was to pass in a number, to identify the stage / phase / pass we're in.
I had to reverse-engineer when force is supposed to be true. It would
help a lot if you add a comment regarding "force" at the beginning of
the function.
Wei.
>
> Jan
>
_______________________________________________
Xen-devel mailing list
Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
https://lists.xenproject.org/mailman/listinfo/xen-devel
|
![]() |
Lists.xenproject.org is hosted with RackSpace, monitoring our |