linux/Documentation/livepatch/reliable-stacktrace.rst
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   1===================
   2Reliable Stacktrace
   3===================
   4
   5This document outlines basic information about reliable stacktracing.
   6
   7.. Table of Contents:
   8
   9.. contents:: :local:
  10
  111. Introduction
  12===============
  13
  14The kernel livepatch consistency model relies on accurately identifying which
  15functions may have live state and therefore may not be safe to patch. One way
  16to identify which functions are live is to use a stacktrace.
  17
  18Existing stacktrace code may not always give an accurate picture of all
  19functions with live state, and best-effort approaches which can be helpful for
  20debugging are unsound for livepatching. Livepatching depends on architectures
  21to provide a *reliable* stacktrace which ensures it never omits any live
  22functions from a trace.
  23
  24
  252. Requirements
  26===============
  27
  28Architectures must implement one of the reliable stacktrace functions.
  29Architectures using CONFIG_ARCH_STACKWALK must implement
  30'arch_stack_walk_reliable', and other architectures must implement
  31'save_stack_trace_tsk_reliable'.
  32
  33Principally, the reliable stacktrace function must ensure that either:
  34
  35* The trace includes all functions that the task may be returned to, and the
  36  return code is zero to indicate that the trace is reliable.
  37
  38* The return code is non-zero to indicate that the trace is not reliable.
  39
  40.. note::
  41   In some cases it is legitimate to omit specific functions from the trace,
  42   but all other functions must be reported. These cases are described in
  43   futher detail below.
  44
  45Secondly, the reliable stacktrace function must be robust to cases where
  46the stack or other unwind state is corrupt or otherwise unreliable. The
  47function should attempt to detect such cases and return a non-zero error
  48code, and should not get stuck in an infinite loop or access memory in
  49an unsafe way.  Specific cases are described in further detail below.
  50
  51
  523. Compile-time analysis
  53========================
  54
  55To ensure that kernel code can be correctly unwound in all cases,
  56architectures may need to verify that code has been compiled in a manner
  57expected by the unwinder. For example, an unwinder may expect that
  58functions manipulate the stack pointer in a limited way, or that all
  59functions use specific prologue and epilogue sequences. Architectures
  60with such requirements should verify the kernel compilation using
  61objtool.
  62
  63In some cases, an unwinder may require metadata to correctly unwind.
  64Where necessary, this metadata should be generated at build time using
  65objtool.
  66
  67
  684. Considerations
  69=================
  70
  71The unwinding process varies across architectures, their respective procedure
  72call standards, and kernel configurations. This section describes common
  73details that architectures should consider.
  74
  754.1 Identifying successful termination
  76--------------------------------------
  77
  78Unwinding may terminate early for a number of reasons, including:
  79
  80* Stack or frame pointer corruption.
  81
  82* Missing unwind support for an uncommon scenario, or a bug in the unwinder.
  83
  84* Dynamically generated code (e.g. eBPF) or foreign code (e.g. EFI runtime
  85  services) not following the conventions expected by the unwinder.
  86
  87To ensure that this does not result in functions being omitted from the trace,
  88even if not caught by other checks, it is strongly recommended that
  89architectures verify that a stacktrace ends at an expected location, e.g.
  90
  91* Within a specific function that is an entry point to the kernel.
  92
  93* At a specific location on a stack expected for a kernel entry point.
  94
  95* On a specific stack expected for a kernel entry point (e.g. if the
  96  architecture has separate task and IRQ stacks).
  97
  984.2 Identifying unwindable code
  99-------------------------------
 100
 101Unwinding typically relies on code following specific conventions (e.g.
 102manipulating a frame pointer), but there can be code which may not follow these
 103conventions and may require special handling in the unwinder, e.g.
 104
 105* Exception vectors and entry assembly.
 106
 107* Procedure Linkage Table (PLT) entries and veneer functions.
 108
 109* Trampoline assembly (e.g. ftrace, kprobes).
 110
 111* Dynamically generated code (e.g. eBPF, optprobe trampolines).
 112
 113* Foreign code (e.g. EFI runtime services).
 114
 115To ensure that such cases do not result in functions being omitted from a
 116trace, it is strongly recommended that architectures positively identify code
 117which is known to be reliable to unwind from, and reject unwinding from all
 118other code.
 119
 120Kernel code including modules and eBPF can be distinguished from foreign code
 121using '__kernel_text_address()'. Checking for this also helps to detect stack
 122corruption.
 123
 124There are several ways an architecture may identify kernel code which is deemed
 125unreliable to unwind from, e.g.
 126
 127* Placing such code into special linker sections, and rejecting unwinding from
 128  any code in these sections.
 129
 130* Identifying specific portions of code using bounds information.
 131
 1324.3 Unwinding across interrupts and exceptions
 133----------------------------------------------
 134
 135At function call boundaries the stack and other unwind state is expected to be
 136in a consistent state suitable for reliable unwinding, but this may not be the
 137case part-way through a function. For example, during a function prologue or
 138epilogue a frame pointer may be transiently invalid, or during the function
 139body the return address may be held in an arbitrary general purpose register.
 140For some architectures this may change at runtime as a result of dynamic
 141instrumentation.
 142
 143If an interrupt or other exception is taken while the stack or other unwind
 144state is in an inconsistent state, it may not be possible to reliably unwind,
 145and it may not be possible to identify whether such unwinding will be reliable.
 146See below for examples.
 147
 148Architectures which cannot identify when it is reliable to unwind such cases
 149(or where it is never reliable) must reject unwinding across exception
 150boundaries. Note that it may be reliable to unwind across certain
 151exceptions (e.g. IRQ) but unreliable to unwind across other exceptions
 152(e.g. NMI).
 153
 154Architectures which can identify when it is reliable to unwind such cases (or
 155have no such cases) should attempt to unwind across exception boundaries, as
 156doing so can prevent unnecessarily stalling livepatch consistency checks and
 157permits livepatch transitions to complete more quickly.
 158
 1594.4 Rewriting of return addresses
 160---------------------------------
 161
 162Some trampolines temporarily modify the return address of a function in order
 163to intercept when that function returns with a return trampoline, e.g.
 164
 165* An ftrace trampoline may modify the return address so that function graph
 166  tracing can intercept returns.
 167
 168* A kprobes (or optprobes) trampoline may modify the return address so that
 169  kretprobes can intercept returns.
 170
 171When this happens, the original return address will not be in its usual
 172location. For trampolines which are not subject to live patching, where an
 173unwinder can reliably determine the original return address and no unwind state
 174is altered by the trampoline, the unwinder may report the original return
 175address in place of the trampoline and report this as reliable. Otherwise, an
 176unwinder must report these cases as unreliable.
 177
 178Special care is required when identifying the original return address, as this
 179information is not in a consistent location for the duration of the entry
 180trampoline or return trampoline. For example, considering the x86_64
 181'return_to_handler' return trampoline:
 182
 183.. code-block:: none
 184
 185   SYM_CODE_START(return_to_handler)
 186           UNWIND_HINT_EMPTY
 187           subq  $24, %rsp
 188
 189           /* Save the return values */
 190           movq %rax, (%rsp)
 191           movq %rdx, 8(%rsp)
 192           movq %rbp, %rdi
 193
 194           call ftrace_return_to_handler
 195
 196           movq %rax, %rdi
 197           movq 8(%rsp), %rdx
 198           movq (%rsp), %rax
 199           addq $24, %rsp
 200           JMP_NOSPEC rdi
 201   SYM_CODE_END(return_to_handler)
 202
 203While the traced function runs its return address on the stack points to
 204the start of return_to_handler, and the original return address is stored in
 205the task's cur_ret_stack. During this time the unwinder can find the return
 206address using ftrace_graph_ret_addr().
 207
 208When the traced function returns to return_to_handler, there is no longer a
 209return address on the stack, though the original return address is still stored
 210in the task's cur_ret_stack. Within ftrace_return_to_handler(), the original
 211return address is removed from cur_ret_stack and is transiently moved
 212arbitrarily by the compiler before being returned in rax. The return_to_handler
 213trampoline moves this into rdi before jumping to it.
 214
 215Architectures might not always be able to unwind such sequences, such as when
 216ftrace_return_to_handler() has removed the address from cur_ret_stack, and the
 217location of the return address cannot be reliably determined.
 218
 219It is recommended that architectures unwind cases where return_to_handler has
 220not yet been returned to, but architectures are not required to unwind from the
 221middle of return_to_handler and can report this as unreliable. Architectures
 222are not required to unwind from other trampolines which modify the return
 223address.
 224
 2254.5 Obscuring of return addresses
 226---------------------------------
 227
 228Some trampolines do not rewrite the return address in order to intercept
 229returns, but do transiently clobber the return address or other unwind state.
 230
 231For example, the x86_64 implementation of optprobes patches the probed function
 232with a JMP instruction which targets the associated optprobe trampoline. When
 233the probe is hit, the CPU will branch to the optprobe trampoline, and the
 234address of the probed function is not held in any register or on the stack.
 235
 236Similarly, the arm64 implementation of DYNAMIC_FTRACE_WITH_REGS patches traced
 237functions with the following:
 238
 239.. code-block:: none
 240
 241   MOV X9, X30
 242   BL <trampoline>
 243
 244The MOV saves the link register (X30) into X9 to preserve the return address
 245before the BL clobbers the link register and branches to the trampoline. At the
 246start of the trampoline, the address of the traced function is in X9 rather
 247than the link register as would usually be the case.
 248
 249Architectures must either ensure that unwinders either reliably unwind
 250such cases, or report the unwinding as unreliable.
 251
 2524.6 Link register unreliability
 253-------------------------------
 254
 255On some other architectures, 'call' instructions place the return address into a
 256link register, and 'return' instructions consume the return address from the
 257link register without modifying the register. On these architectures software
 258must save the return address to the stack prior to making a function call. Over
 259the duration of a function call, the return address may be held in the link
 260register alone, on the stack alone, or in both locations.
 261
 262Unwinders typically assume the link register is always live, but this
 263assumption can lead to unreliable stack traces. For example, consider the
 264following arm64 assembly for a simple function:
 265
 266.. code-block:: none
 267
 268   function:
 269           STP X29, X30, [SP, -16]!
 270           MOV X29, SP
 271           BL <other_function>
 272           LDP X29, X30, [SP], #16
 273           RET
 274
 275At entry to the function, the link register (x30) points to the caller, and the
 276frame pointer (X29) points to the caller's frame including the caller's return
 277address. The first two instructions create a new stackframe and update the
 278frame pointer, and at this point the link register and the frame pointer both
 279describe this function's return address. A trace at this point may describe
 280this function twice, and if the function return is being traced, the unwinder
 281may consume two entries from the fgraph return stack rather than one entry.
 282
 283The BL invokes 'other_function' with the link register pointing to this
 284function's LDR and the frame pointer pointing to this function's stackframe.
 285When 'other_function' returns, the link register is left pointing at the BL,
 286and so a trace at this point could result in 'function' appearing twice in the
 287backtrace.
 288
 289Similarly, a function may deliberately clobber the LR, e.g.
 290
 291.. code-block:: none
 292
 293   caller:
 294           STP X29, X30, [SP, -16]!
 295           MOV X29, SP
 296           ADR LR, <callee>
 297           BLR LR
 298           LDP X29, X30, [SP], #16
 299           RET
 300
 301The ADR places the address of 'callee' into the LR, before the BLR branches to
 302this address. If a trace is made immediately after the ADR, 'callee' will
 303appear to be the parent of 'caller', rather than the child.
 304
 305Due to cases such as the above, it may only be possible to reliably consume a
 306link register value at a function call boundary. Architectures where this is
 307the case must reject unwinding across exception boundaries unless they can
 308reliably identify when the LR or stack value should be used (e.g. using
 309metadata generated by objtool).
 310