[RFC] Objtool toolchain proposal: -fannotate-{jump-table,noreturn}
Chen Zhongjin
chenzhongjin at huawei.com
Thu Sep 15 12:56:58 AEST 2022
Hi,
On 2022/9/12 22:17, Michael Matz wrote:
> Hey,
>
> On Mon, 12 Sep 2022, Borislav Petkov wrote:
>
>> Micha, any opinions on the below are appreciated.
>>
>> On Fri, Sep 09, 2022 at 11:07:04AM -0700, Josh Poimboeuf wrote:
>>> difficult to ensure correctness. Also, due to kernel live patching, the
>>> kernel relies on 100% correctness of unwinding metadata, whereas the
>>> toolchain treats it as a best effort.
> Unwinding certainly is not best effort. It's 100% reliable as far as the
> source language or compilation options require. But as it doesn't
> touch the discussed features I won't belabor that point.
>
> I will mention that objtool's existence is based on mistrust, of persons
> (not correctly annotating stuff) and of tools (not correctly heeding those
> annotations). The mistrust in persons is understandable and can be dealt
> with by tools, but the mistrust in tools can't be fixed by making tools
> more complicated by emitting even more information; there's no good reason
> to assume that one piece of info can be trusted more than other pieces.
> So, if you mistrust the tools you have already lost. That's somewhat
> philosophical, so I won't beat that horse much more either.
>
> Now, recovering the CFG. I'll switch order of your two items:
>
> 2) noreturn function
>
>>> .pushsection .annotate.noreturn
>>> .quad func1
>>> .quad func2
>>> .quad func3
>>> .popsection
> This won't work for indirect calls to noreturn functions:
>
> void (* __attribute__((noreturn)) noretptr)(void);
> int callnoret (int i)
> {
> noretptr();
> return i + 32;
> }
>
> The return statement is unreachable (and removed by GCC). To know that
> you would have to mark the call statements, not the individual functions.
> All schemes that mark functions that somehow indicates a meaningful
> difference in the calling sequence (e.g. the ABI of functions) have the
> same problem: it's part of the call expressions type, not of individual
> decls.
>
> Second problem: it's not extensible. Today it's noreturn functions you
> want to know, and tomorrow? So, add a flag word per entry, define bit 0
> for now to be NORETURN, and see what comes. Add a header with a version
> (and/or identifier) as well and it's properly extensible. For easy
> linking and identifying the blobs in the linked result include a length in
> the header. If this were in an allocated section it would be a good idea
> to refer to the symbols in a PC-relative manner, so as to not result in
> runtime relocations. In this case, as it's within a non-alloc section
> that doesn't matter. So:
>
> .section .annotate.functions
> .long 1 # version
> .long 0xcafe # ident
> .long 2f-1f # length
> 1:
> .quad func1, 1 # noreturn
> .quad func2, 1 # noreturn
> .quad func3, 32 # something_else_but_not_noreturn
> ...
> 2:
> .long 1b-2b # align and "checksum"
>
> It might be that the length-and-header scheme is cumbersome if you need to
> write those section commands by hand, in which case another scheme might
> be preferrable, but it should somehow be self-delimiting.
>
> For the above problem of indirect calls to noreturns, instead do:
>
> .text
> noretcalllabel:
> call noreturn
> othercall:
> call really_special_thing
> .section .annotate.noretcalls
> .quad noretcalllabel, 1 # noreturn call
> .quad othercall, 32 # call to some special(-ABI?) function
>
> Same thoughts re extensibility and self-delimitation apply.
>
> 1) jump tables
>
>>> Create an .annotate.jump_table section which is an array of the
>>> following variable-length structure:
>>>
>>> struct annotate_jump_table {
>>> void *indirect_jmp;
>>> long num_targets;
>>> void *targets[];
>>> };
> It's very often the case that the compiler already emits what your
> .targets[] member would encode, just at some unknown place, length and
> encoding. So you would save space if you instead only remember the
> encoding and places of those jump tables:
We have found some anonymous information on x86 in .rodata.
I'm not sure if those are *all* of Josh wanted on x86, however for arm64
we did not found that in the same section so it is a problem on arm64 now.
Does the compiler will emit these for all arches? At lease I tried and
didn't find anything meaningful (maybe I omitted it).
Best,
Chen
> struct {
> void *indirect_jump;
> long num_tables;
> struct {
> unsigned num_entries;
> unsigned encoding;
> void *start_of_table;
> } tables[];
> };
>
> The usual encodings are: direct, PC-relative, relative-to-start-of-table.
> Usually for a specific jump instruction there's only one table, so
> optimizing for that makes sense. For strange unthought-of cases it's
> probably a good idea to have your initial scheme as fallback, which could
> be indicated by a special .encoding value.
>
>>> For example, given the following switch statement code:
>>>
>>> .Lswitch_jmp:
>>> // %rax is .Lcase_1 or .Lcase_2
>>> jmp %rax
> So, usually %rax would point into a table (somewhere in .rodata/.text)
> that looks like so:
>
> .Ljump_table:
> .quad .Lcase_1 - .Ljump_table
> .quad .Lcase_2 - .Ljump_table
>
> (for position-independend code)
>
> and hence you would emit this as annotation:
>
> .quad .Lswitch_jmp
> .quad 1 # only a single table
> .long 2 # with two entries
> .long RELATIVE_TO_START # all entries are X - start_of_table
> .quad .Ljump_table
>
> In this case you won't save anything of course, but as soon as there's a
> meaningful number of cases you will.
>
> Again, if that info would be put into an allocated section you would want
> to use relative encodings of the addresses to avoid runtime relocs. And
> the remarks about self-delimitation and extensibility also apply here.
>
>>> Alternatives
>>> ------------
>>>
>>> Another idea which has been floated in the past is for objtool to read
>>> DWARF (or .eh_frame) to help it figure out the control flow. That
>>> hasn't been tried yet, but would be considerably more difficult and
>>> fragile IMO.
> While noreturn functions are marked in the debug info, noreturn
> function types currently aren't quite correct. And jump-tables aren't
> marked at all, so that would lose.
>
>
> Ciao,
> Michael.
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