Re: [PATCH 2/2] x86/unwind: add hardcoded ORC entry for NULL

From: Josh Poimboeuf
Date: Fri Mar 01 2019 - 11:26:25 EST


On Fri, Mar 01, 2019 at 04:12:01AM +0100, Jann Horn wrote:
> When the ORC unwinder is invoked for an oops caused by IP==0,
> it currently has no idea what to do because there is no debug information
> for the stack frame of NULL.
>
> But if RIP is NULL, it is very likely that the last successfully executed
> instruction was an indirect CALL/JMP, and it is possible to unwind out in
> the same way as for the first instruction of a normal function. Hardcode
> a corresponding ORC entry.
>
>
> With an artificially-added NULL call in prctl_set_seccomp(), before this
> patch, the trace is:
>
> Call Trace:
> ? __x64_sys_prctl+0x402/0x680
> ? __ia32_sys_prctl+0x6e0/0x6e0
> ? __do_page_fault+0x457/0x620
> ? do_syscall_64+0x6d/0x160
> ? entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0xa9
>
> After this patch, the trace looks like this:
>
> Call Trace:
> __x64_sys_prctl+0x402/0x680
> ? __ia32_sys_prctl+0x6e0/0x6e0
> ? __do_page_fault+0x457/0x620
> do_syscall_64+0x6d/0x160
> entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0xa9
>
> prctl_set_seccomp() still doesn't show up in the trace because for some
> reason, tail call optimization is only disabled in builds that use the
> frame pointer unwinder.
>
> Signed-off-by: Jann Horn <jannh@xxxxxxxxxx>

Thanks for the patches!

Acked-by: Josh Poimboeuf <jpoimboe@xxxxxxxxxx>

> Is there a reason why the top-level Makefile only sets
> -fno-optimize-sibling-calls if CONFIG_FRAME_POINTER is set?
> I suspect that this is just a historical thing, because reliable
> unwinding didn't work without frame pointers until ORC came along.
> I'm not quite sure how best to express "don't do tail optimization if
> either frame pointers are used or ORC is used" in a Makefile, and
> whether we want an indirection through Kconfig for that, so I'm not
> doing anything about it in this series.
> Can someone send a patch to deal with it properly?

Why would sibling calls be a problem for ORC? Once a function does a
sibling call, it has effectively returned and shouldn't show up on the
stack trace anyway.

--
Josh