Re: [PATCH v8 8/8] livepatch: Detect offset for the ftrace location during build

From: Petr Mladek
Date: Fri Feb 12 2016 - 11:45:28 EST


On Sat 2016-02-13 03:13:29, Balbir Singh wrote:
> On Thu, 2016-01-28 at 16:32 +0100, Torsten Duwe wrote:
> > From: Petr Mladek <pmladek@xxxxxxxx>
> >
> > Livepatch works on x86_64 and s390 only when the ftrace call
> > is at the very beginning of the function. But PPC is different.
> > We need to handle TOC and save LR there before calling the
> > global ftrace handler.
> >
> > Now, the problem is that the extra operations have different
> > length on PPC depending on the used gcc version. It is
> > 4 instructions (16 bytes) before gcc-6 and only 3 instructions
> > (12 bytes) with gcc-6.
> >
> > This patch tries to detect the offset a generic way during
> > build. It assumes that the offset of the ftrace location
> > is the same for all functions. It modifies the existing
> > recordmcount tool that is able to find read mcount locations
> > directly from the object files. It adds an option -p
> > to print the first found offset.
> >
> > The recordmcount tool is then used in the kernel/livepatch
> > subdirectory to generate a header file. It defines
> > a constant that is used to compute the ftrace location
> > from the function address.
> >
> > Finally, we have to enable the C implementation of the
> > recordmcount tool to be used on PPC and S390. It seems
> > to work fine there. It should be more reliable because
> > it reads the standardized elf structures. The old perl
> > implementation uses rather complex regular expressions
> > to parse objdump output and is therefore much more tricky.
>
> I'm still missing something, I'm getting offset as 8
>
> When I run, I get
>
> scripts/recordmcount -p kernel/livepatch/core.o 
> #define KLP_FTRACE_LOCATION 8
>
> scripts/recordmcount -p kernel/livepatch/ftrace-test.o 
> #define KLP_FTRACE_LOCATION 8
>
> My sample fails as well, since the expected offset is 16.
> I guess the script is being run against a not so good
> test.

I guess that you used a broken gcc and cheated the check
to pass the compilation. Did you, please?

The test used to detect the offset is using a minimalistic
function is is afftected by the gcc bug.

The patch below might be used to cheat the offset check as well.

Torsten, please mention this somewhere if you, just by chance,
send a new version of the patchset.