linux/Documentation/livepatch/livepatch.rst
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   1=========
   2Livepatch
   3=========
   4
   5This document outlines basic information about kernel livepatching.
   6
   7.. Table of Contents:
   8
   9.. contents:: :local:
  10
  11
  121. Motivation
  13=============
  14
  15There are many situations where users are reluctant to reboot a system. It may
  16be because their system is performing complex scientific computations or under
  17heavy load during peak usage. In addition to keeping systems up and running,
  18users want to also have a stable and secure system. Livepatching gives users
  19both by allowing for function calls to be redirected; thus, fixing critical
  20functions without a system reboot.
  21
  22
  232. Kprobes, Ftrace, Livepatching
  24================================
  25
  26There are multiple mechanisms in the Linux kernel that are directly related
  27to redirection of code execution; namely: kernel probes, function tracing,
  28and livepatching:
  29
  30  - The kernel probes are the most generic. The code can be redirected by
  31    putting a breakpoint instruction instead of any instruction.
  32
  33  - The function tracer calls the code from a predefined location that is
  34    close to the function entry point. This location is generated by the
  35    compiler using the '-pg' gcc option.
  36
  37  - Livepatching typically needs to redirect the code at the very beginning
  38    of the function entry before the function parameters or the stack
  39    are in any way modified.
  40
  41All three approaches need to modify the existing code at runtime. Therefore
  42they need to be aware of each other and not step over each other's toes.
  43Most of these problems are solved by using the dynamic ftrace framework as
  44a base. A Kprobe is registered as a ftrace handler when the function entry
  45is probed, see CONFIG_KPROBES_ON_FTRACE. Also an alternative function from
  46a live patch is called with the help of a custom ftrace handler. But there are
  47some limitations, see below.
  48
  49
  503. Consistency model
  51====================
  52
  53Functions are there for a reason. They take some input parameters, get or
  54release locks, read, process, and even write some data in a defined way,
  55have return values. In other words, each function has a defined semantic.
  56
  57Many fixes do not change the semantic of the modified functions. For
  58example, they add a NULL pointer or a boundary check, fix a race by adding
  59a missing memory barrier, or add some locking around a critical section.
  60Most of these changes are self contained and the function presents itself
  61the same way to the rest of the system. In this case, the functions might
  62be updated independently one by one.
  63
  64But there are more complex fixes. For example, a patch might change
  65ordering of locking in multiple functions at the same time. Or a patch
  66might exchange meaning of some temporary structures and update
  67all the relevant functions. In this case, the affected unit
  68(thread, whole kernel) need to start using all new versions of
  69the functions at the same time. Also the switch must happen only
  70when it is safe to do so, e.g. when the affected locks are released
  71or no data are stored in the modified structures at the moment.
  72
  73The theory about how to apply functions a safe way is rather complex.
  74The aim is to define a so-called consistency model. It attempts to define
  75conditions when the new implementation could be used so that the system
  76stays consistent.
  77
  78Livepatch has a consistency model which is a hybrid of kGraft and
  79kpatch:  it uses kGraft's per-task consistency and syscall barrier
  80switching combined with kpatch's stack trace switching.  There are also
  81a number of fallback options which make it quite flexible.
  82
  83Patches are applied on a per-task basis, when the task is deemed safe to
  84switch over.  When a patch is enabled, livepatch enters into a
  85transition state where tasks are converging to the patched state.
  86Usually this transition state can complete in a few seconds.  The same
  87sequence occurs when a patch is disabled, except the tasks converge from
  88the patched state to the unpatched state.
  89
  90An interrupt handler inherits the patched state of the task it
  91interrupts.  The same is true for forked tasks: the child inherits the
  92patched state of the parent.
  93
  94Livepatch uses several complementary approaches to determine when it's
  95safe to patch tasks:
  96
  971. The first and most effective approach is stack checking of sleeping
  98   tasks.  If no affected functions are on the stack of a given task,
  99   the task is patched.  In most cases this will patch most or all of
 100   the tasks on the first try.  Otherwise it'll keep trying
 101   periodically.  This option is only available if the architecture has
 102   reliable stacks (HAVE_RELIABLE_STACKTRACE).
 103
 1042. The second approach, if needed, is kernel exit switching.  A
 105   task is switched when it returns to user space from a system call, a
 106   user space IRQ, or a signal.  It's useful in the following cases:
 107
 108   a) Patching I/O-bound user tasks which are sleeping on an affected
 109      function.  In this case you have to send SIGSTOP and SIGCONT to
 110      force it to exit the kernel and be patched.
 111   b) Patching CPU-bound user tasks.  If the task is highly CPU-bound
 112      then it will get patched the next time it gets interrupted by an
 113      IRQ.
 114
 1153. For idle "swapper" tasks, since they don't ever exit the kernel, they
 116   instead have a klp_update_patch_state() call in the idle loop which
 117   allows them to be patched before the CPU enters the idle state.
 118
 119   (Note there's not yet such an approach for kthreads.)
 120
 121Architectures which don't have HAVE_RELIABLE_STACKTRACE solely rely on
 122the second approach. It's highly likely that some tasks may still be
 123running with an old version of the function, until that function
 124returns. In this case you would have to signal the tasks. This
 125especially applies to kthreads. They may not be woken up and would need
 126to be forced. See below for more information.
 127
 128Unless we can come up with another way to patch kthreads, architectures
 129without HAVE_RELIABLE_STACKTRACE are not considered fully supported by
 130the kernel livepatching.
 131
 132The /sys/kernel/livepatch/<patch>/transition file shows whether a patch
 133is in transition.  Only a single patch can be in transition at a given
 134time.  A patch can remain in transition indefinitely, if any of the tasks
 135are stuck in the initial patch state.
 136
 137A transition can be reversed and effectively canceled by writing the
 138opposite value to the /sys/kernel/livepatch/<patch>/enabled file while
 139the transition is in progress.  Then all the tasks will attempt to
 140converge back to the original patch state.
 141
 142There's also a /proc/<pid>/patch_state file which can be used to
 143determine which tasks are blocking completion of a patching operation.
 144If a patch is in transition, this file shows 0 to indicate the task is
 145unpatched and 1 to indicate it's patched.  Otherwise, if no patch is in
 146transition, it shows -1.  Any tasks which are blocking the transition
 147can be signaled with SIGSTOP and SIGCONT to force them to change their
 148patched state. This may be harmful to the system though. Sending a fake signal
 149to all remaining blocking tasks is a better alternative. No proper signal is
 150actually delivered (there is no data in signal pending structures). Tasks are
 151interrupted or woken up, and forced to change their patched state. The fake
 152signal is automatically sent every 15 seconds.
 153
 154Administrator can also affect a transition through
 155/sys/kernel/livepatch/<patch>/force attribute. Writing 1 there clears
 156TIF_PATCH_PENDING flag of all tasks and thus forces the tasks to the patched
 157state. Important note! The force attribute is intended for cases when the
 158transition gets stuck for a long time because of a blocking task. Administrator
 159is expected to collect all necessary data (namely stack traces of such blocking
 160tasks) and request a clearance from a patch distributor to force the transition.
 161Unauthorized usage may cause harm to the system. It depends on the nature of the
 162patch, which functions are (un)patched, and which functions the blocking tasks
 163are sleeping in (/proc/<pid>/stack may help here). Removal (rmmod) of patch
 164modules is permanently disabled when the force feature is used. It cannot be
 165guaranteed there is no task sleeping in such module. It implies unbounded
 166reference count if a patch module is disabled and enabled in a loop.
 167
 168Moreover, the usage of force may also affect future applications of live
 169patches and cause even more harm to the system. Administrator should first
 170consider to simply cancel a transition (see above). If force is used, reboot
 171should be planned and no more live patches applied.
 172
 1733.1 Adding consistency model support to new architectures
 174---------------------------------------------------------
 175
 176For adding consistency model support to new architectures, there are a
 177few options:
 178
 1791) Add CONFIG_HAVE_RELIABLE_STACKTRACE.  This means porting objtool, and
 180   for non-DWARF unwinders, also making sure there's a way for the stack
 181   tracing code to detect interrupts on the stack.
 182
 1832) Alternatively, ensure that every kthread has a call to
 184   klp_update_patch_state() in a safe location.  Kthreads are typically
 185   in an infinite loop which does some action repeatedly.  The safe
 186   location to switch the kthread's patch state would be at a designated
 187   point in the loop where there are no locks taken and all data
 188   structures are in a well-defined state.
 189
 190   The location is clear when using workqueues or the kthread worker
 191   API.  These kthreads process independent actions in a generic loop.
 192
 193   It's much more complicated with kthreads which have a custom loop.
 194   There the safe location must be carefully selected on a case-by-case
 195   basis.
 196
 197   In that case, arches without HAVE_RELIABLE_STACKTRACE would still be
 198   able to use the non-stack-checking parts of the consistency model:
 199
 200   a) patching user tasks when they cross the kernel/user space
 201      boundary; and
 202
 203   b) patching kthreads and idle tasks at their designated patch points.
 204
 205   This option isn't as good as option 1 because it requires signaling
 206   user tasks and waking kthreads to patch them.  But it could still be
 207   a good backup option for those architectures which don't have
 208   reliable stack traces yet.
 209
 210
 2114. Livepatch module
 212===================
 213
 214Livepatches are distributed using kernel modules, see
 215samples/livepatch/livepatch-sample.c.
 216
 217The module includes a new implementation of functions that we want
 218to replace. In addition, it defines some structures describing the
 219relation between the original and the new implementation. Then there
 220is code that makes the kernel start using the new code when the livepatch
 221module is loaded. Also there is code that cleans up before the
 222livepatch module is removed. All this is explained in more details in
 223the next sections.
 224
 225
 2264.1. New functions
 227------------------
 228
 229New versions of functions are typically just copied from the original
 230sources. A good practice is to add a prefix to the names so that they
 231can be distinguished from the original ones, e.g. in a backtrace. Also
 232they can be declared as static because they are not called directly
 233and do not need the global visibility.
 234
 235The patch contains only functions that are really modified. But they
 236might want to access functions or data from the original source file
 237that may only be locally accessible. This can be solved by a special
 238relocation section in the generated livepatch module, see
 239Documentation/livepatch/module-elf-format.rst for more details.
 240
 241
 2424.2. Metadata
 243-------------
 244
 245The patch is described by several structures that split the information
 246into three levels:
 247
 248  - struct klp_func is defined for each patched function. It describes
 249    the relation between the original and the new implementation of a
 250    particular function.
 251
 252    The structure includes the name, as a string, of the original function.
 253    The function address is found via kallsyms at runtime.
 254
 255    Then it includes the address of the new function. It is defined
 256    directly by assigning the function pointer. Note that the new
 257    function is typically defined in the same source file.
 258
 259    As an optional parameter, the symbol position in the kallsyms database can
 260    be used to disambiguate functions of the same name. This is not the
 261    absolute position in the database, but rather the order it has been found
 262    only for a particular object ( vmlinux or a kernel module ). Note that
 263    kallsyms allows for searching symbols according to the object name.
 264
 265  - struct klp_object defines an array of patched functions (struct
 266    klp_func) in the same object. Where the object is either vmlinux
 267    (NULL) or a module name.
 268
 269    The structure helps to group and handle functions for each object
 270    together. Note that patched modules might be loaded later than
 271    the patch itself and the relevant functions might be patched
 272    only when they are available.
 273
 274
 275  - struct klp_patch defines an array of patched objects (struct
 276    klp_object).
 277
 278    This structure handles all patched functions consistently and eventually,
 279    synchronously. The whole patch is applied only when all patched
 280    symbols are found. The only exception are symbols from objects
 281    (kernel modules) that have not been loaded yet.
 282
 283    For more details on how the patch is applied on a per-task basis,
 284    see the "Consistency model" section.
 285
 286
 2875. Livepatch life-cycle
 288=======================
 289
 290Livepatching can be described by five basic operations:
 291loading, enabling, replacing, disabling, removing.
 292
 293Where the replacing and the disabling operations are mutually
 294exclusive. They have the same result for the given patch but
 295not for the system.
 296
 297
 2985.1. Loading
 299------------
 300
 301The only reasonable way is to enable the patch when the livepatch kernel
 302module is being loaded. For this, klp_enable_patch() has to be called
 303in the module_init() callback. There are two main reasons:
 304
 305First, only the module has an easy access to the related struct klp_patch.
 306
 307Second, the error code might be used to refuse loading the module when
 308the patch cannot get enabled.
 309
 310
 3115.2. Enabling
 312-------------
 313
 314The livepatch gets enabled by calling klp_enable_patch() from
 315the module_init() callback. The system will start using the new
 316implementation of the patched functions at this stage.
 317
 318First, the addresses of the patched functions are found according to their
 319names. The special relocations, mentioned in the section "New functions",
 320are applied. The relevant entries are created under
 321/sys/kernel/livepatch/<name>. The patch is rejected when any above
 322operation fails.
 323
 324Second, livepatch enters into a transition state where tasks are converging
 325to the patched state. If an original function is patched for the first
 326time, a function specific struct klp_ops is created and an universal
 327ftrace handler is registered\ [#]_. This stage is indicated by a value of '1'
 328in /sys/kernel/livepatch/<name>/transition. For more information about
 329this process, see the "Consistency model" section.
 330
 331Finally, once all tasks have been patched, the 'transition' value changes
 332to '0'.
 333
 334.. [#]
 335
 336    Note that functions might be patched multiple times. The ftrace handler
 337    is registered only once for a given function. Further patches just add
 338    an entry to the list (see field `func_stack`) of the struct klp_ops.
 339    The right implementation is selected by the ftrace handler, see
 340    the "Consistency model" section.
 341
 342    That said, it is highly recommended to use cumulative livepatches
 343    because they help keeping the consistency of all changes. In this case,
 344    functions might be patched two times only during the transition period.
 345
 346
 3475.3. Replacing
 348--------------
 349
 350All enabled patches might get replaced by a cumulative patch that
 351has the .replace flag set.
 352
 353Once the new patch is enabled and the 'transition' finishes then
 354all the functions (struct klp_func) associated with the replaced
 355patches are removed from the corresponding struct klp_ops. Also
 356the ftrace handler is unregistered and the struct klp_ops is
 357freed when the related function is not modified by the new patch
 358and func_stack list becomes empty.
 359
 360See Documentation/livepatch/cumulative-patches.rst for more details.
 361
 362
 3635.4. Disabling
 364--------------
 365
 366Enabled patches might get disabled by writing '0' to
 367/sys/kernel/livepatch/<name>/enabled.
 368
 369First, livepatch enters into a transition state where tasks are converging
 370to the unpatched state. The system starts using either the code from
 371the previously enabled patch or even the original one. This stage is
 372indicated by a value of '1' in /sys/kernel/livepatch/<name>/transition.
 373For more information about this process, see the "Consistency model"
 374section.
 375
 376Second, once all tasks have been unpatched, the 'transition' value changes
 377to '0'. All the functions (struct klp_func) associated with the to-be-disabled
 378patch are removed from the corresponding struct klp_ops. The ftrace handler
 379is unregistered and the struct klp_ops is freed when the func_stack list
 380becomes empty.
 381
 382Third, the sysfs interface is destroyed.
 383
 384
 3855.5. Removing
 386-------------
 387
 388Module removal is only safe when there are no users of functions provided
 389by the module. This is the reason why the force feature permanently
 390disables the removal. Only when the system is successfully transitioned
 391to a new patch state (patched/unpatched) without being forced it is
 392guaranteed that no task sleeps or runs in the old code.
 393
 394
 3956. Sysfs
 396========
 397
 398Information about the registered patches can be found under
 399/sys/kernel/livepatch. The patches could be enabled and disabled
 400by writing there.
 401
 402/sys/kernel/livepatch/<patch>/force attributes allow administrator to affect a
 403patching operation.
 404
 405See Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-kernel-livepatch for more details.
 406
 407
 4087. Limitations
 409==============
 410
 411The current Livepatch implementation has several limitations:
 412
 413  - Only functions that can be traced could be patched.
 414
 415    Livepatch is based on the dynamic ftrace. In particular, functions
 416    implementing ftrace or the livepatch ftrace handler could not be
 417    patched. Otherwise, the code would end up in an infinite loop. A
 418    potential mistake is prevented by marking the problematic functions
 419    by "notrace".
 420
 421
 422
 423  - Livepatch works reliably only when the dynamic ftrace is located at
 424    the very beginning of the function.
 425
 426    The function need to be redirected before the stack or the function
 427    parameters are modified in any way. For example, livepatch requires
 428    using -fentry gcc compiler option on x86_64.
 429
 430    One exception is the PPC port. It uses relative addressing and TOC.
 431    Each function has to handle TOC and save LR before it could call
 432    the ftrace handler. This operation has to be reverted on return.
 433    Fortunately, the generic ftrace code has the same problem and all
 434    this is handled on the ftrace level.
 435
 436
 437  - Kretprobes using the ftrace framework conflict with the patched
 438    functions.
 439
 440    Both kretprobes and livepatches use a ftrace handler that modifies
 441    the return address. The first user wins. Either the probe or the patch
 442    is rejected when the handler is already in use by the other.
 443
 444
 445  - Kprobes in the original function are ignored when the code is
 446    redirected to the new implementation.
 447
 448    There is a work in progress to add warnings about this situation.
 449