/* Standard libdwfl callbacks for debugging the running Linux kernel. Copyright (C) 2005 Red Hat, Inc. This file is part of Red Hat elfutils. Red Hat elfutils is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; version 2 of the License. Red Hat elfutils is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with Red Hat elfutils; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston MA 02110-1301 USA. In addition, as a special exception, Red Hat, Inc. gives You the additional right to link the code of Red Hat elfutils with code licensed under any Open Source Initiative certified open source license (http://www.opensource.org/licenses/index.php) which requires the distribution of source code with any binary distribution and to distribute linked combinations of the two. Non-GPL Code permitted under this exception must only link to the code of Red Hat elfutils through those well defined interfaces identified in the file named EXCEPTION found in the source code files (the "Approved Interfaces"). The files of Non-GPL Code may instantiate templates or use macros or inline functions from the Approved Interfaces without causing the resulting work to be covered by the GNU General Public License. Only Red Hat, Inc. may make changes or additions to the list of Approved Interfaces. Red Hat's grant of this exception is conditioned upon your not adding any new exceptions. If you wish to add a new Approved Interface or exception, please contact Red Hat. You must obey the GNU General Public License in all respects for all of the Red Hat elfutils code and other code used in conjunction with Red Hat elfutils except the Non-GPL Code covered by this exception. If you modify this file, you may extend this exception to your version of the file, but you are not obligated to do so. If you do not wish to provide this exception without modification, you must delete this exception statement from your version and license this file solely under the GPL without exception. Red Hat elfutils is an included package of the Open Invention Network. An included package of the Open Invention Network is a package for which Open Invention Network licensees cross-license their patents. No patent license is granted, either expressly or impliedly, by designation as an included package. Should you wish to participate in the Open Invention Network licensing program, please visit www.openinventionnetwork.com . */ #include #undef _FILE_OFFSET_BITS /* Doesn't jibe with fts. */ #include "libdwflP.h" #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #define MODULEDIRFMT "/lib/modules/%s" #define MODULELIST "/proc/modules" #define SECADDRFMT "/sys/module/%s/sections/%s" /* Try to open the given file as it is or under the debuginfo directory. */ static int try_kernel_name (Dwfl *dwfl, char **fname) { if (*fname == NULL) return -1; int fd = TEMP_FAILURE_RETRY (open64 (*fname, O_RDONLY)); if (fd < 0) { char *debugfname = NULL; Dwfl_Module fakemod = { .dwfl = dwfl }; fd = INTUSE(dwfl_standard_find_debuginfo) (&fakemod, NULL, NULL, 0, *fname, basename (*fname), 0, &debugfname); free (*fname); *fname = debugfname; } return fd; } static inline const char * kernel_release (void) { /* Cache the `uname -r` string we'll use. */ static struct utsname utsname; if (utsname.release[0] == '\0' && uname (&utsname) != 0) return NULL; return utsname.release; } static int report_kernel (Dwfl *dwfl, const char *release, int (*predicate) (const char *module, const char *file)) { if (dwfl == NULL) return -1; char *fname = NULL; if (release[0] == '/') asprintf (&fname, "%s/vmlinux", release); else asprintf (&fname, "/boot/vmlinux-%s", release); int fd = try_kernel_name (dwfl, &fname); if (fd < 0 && release[0] != '/') { free (fname); fname = NULL; asprintf (&fname, MODULEDIRFMT "/vmlinux", release); fd = try_kernel_name (dwfl, &fname); } int result = 0; if (fd < 0) result = ((predicate != NULL && !(*predicate) ("kernel", NULL)) ? 0 : errno ?: ENOENT); else { bool report = true; if (predicate != NULL) { /* Let the predicate decide whether to use this one. */ int want = (*predicate) ("kernel", fname); if (want < 0) result = errno; report = want > 0; } if (report && INTUSE(dwfl_report_elf) (dwfl, "kernel", fname, fd, 0) == NULL) { close (fd); result = -1; } } free (fname); return result; } /* Report a kernel and all its modules found on disk, for offline use. If RELEASE starts with '/', it names a directory to look in; if not, it names a directory to find under /lib/modules/; if null, /lib/modules/`uname -r` is used. Returns zero on success, -1 if dwfl_report_module failed, or an errno code if finding the files on disk failed. */ int dwfl_linux_kernel_report_offline (Dwfl *dwfl, const char *release, int (*predicate) (const char *module, const char *file)) { if (release == NULL) { release = kernel_release (); if (release == NULL) return errno; } /* First report the kernel. */ int result = report_kernel (dwfl, release, predicate); if (result == 0) { /* Do "find /lib/modules/RELEASE/kernel -name *.ko". */ char *modulesdir[] = { NULL, NULL }; if (release[0] == '/') modulesdir[0] = (char *) release; else { asprintf (&modulesdir[0], MODULEDIRFMT "/kernel", release); if (modulesdir[0] == NULL) return errno; } FTS *fts = fts_open (modulesdir, FTS_LOGICAL | FTS_NOSTAT, NULL); if (modulesdir[0] == (char *) release) modulesdir[0] = NULL; if (fts == NULL) { free (modulesdir[0]); return errno; } FTSENT *f; while ((f = fts_read (fts)) != NULL) { switch (f->fts_info) { case FTS_F: case FTS_NSOK: /* See if this file name matches "*.ko". */ if (f->fts_namelen > 3 && !memcmp (f->fts_name + f->fts_namelen - 3, ".ko", 4)) { /* We have a .ko file to report. Following the algorithm by which the kernel makefiles set KBUILD_MODNAME, we replace all ',' or '-' with '_' in the file name and call that the module name. Modules could well be built using different embedded names than their file names. To handle that, we would have to look at the __this_module.name contents in the module's text. */ char name[f->fts_namelen - 3 + 1]; for (size_t i = 0; i < f->fts_namelen - 3U; ++i) if (f->fts_name[i] == '-' || f->fts_name[i] == ',') name[i] = '_'; else name[i] = f->fts_name[i]; name[f->fts_namelen - 3] = '\0'; if (predicate != NULL) { /* Let the predicate decide whether to use this one. */ int want = (*predicate) (name, f->fts_path); if (want < 0) { result = -1; break; } if (!want) continue; } if (dwfl_report_offline (dwfl, name, f->fts_path, -1) == NULL) { result = -1; break; } } continue; case FTS_ERR: case FTS_DNR: case FTS_NS: result = f->fts_errno; break; default: continue; } /* We only get here in error cases. */ break; } fts_close (fts); free (modulesdir[0]); } return result; } INTDEF (dwfl_linux_kernel_report_offline) /* Find the ELF file for the running kernel and dwfl_report_elf it. */ int dwfl_linux_kernel_report_kernel (Dwfl *dwfl) { const char *release = kernel_release (); if (release == NULL) return errno; return report_kernel (dwfl, release, NULL); } INTDEF (dwfl_linux_kernel_report_kernel) /* Dwfl_Callbacks.find_elf for the running Linux kernel and its modules. */ int dwfl_linux_kernel_find_elf (Dwfl_Module *mod __attribute__ ((unused)), void **userdata __attribute__ ((unused)), const char *module_name, Dwarf_Addr base __attribute__ ((unused)), char **file_name, Elf **elfp __attribute__ ((unused))) { const char *release = kernel_release (); if (release == NULL) return errno; /* Do "find /lib/modules/`uname -r`/kernel -name MODULE_NAME.ko". */ char *modulesdir[] = { NULL, NULL }; asprintf (&modulesdir[0], MODULEDIRFMT "/kernel", release); if (modulesdir[0] == NULL) return -1; FTS *fts = fts_open (modulesdir, FTS_LOGICAL | FTS_NOSTAT, NULL); if (fts == NULL) { free (modulesdir[0]); return -1; } size_t namelen = strlen (module_name); /* This is a kludge. There is no actual necessary relationship between the name of the .ko file installed and the module name the kernel knows it by when it's loaded. The kernel's only idea of the module name comes from the name embedded in the object's magic .gnu.linkonce.this_module section. In practice, these module names match the .ko file names except for some using '_' and some using '-'. So our cheap kludge is to look for two files when either a '_' or '-' appears in a module name, one using only '_' and one only using '-'. */ char alternate_name[namelen + 1]; inline bool subst_name (char from, char to) { const char *n = memchr (module_name, from, namelen); if (n == NULL) return false; char *a = mempcpy (alternate_name, module_name, n - module_name); *a++ = to; ++n; const char *p; while ((p = memchr (n, from, namelen - (n - module_name))) != NULL) { a = mempcpy (a, n, p - n); *a++ = to; n = p + 1; } memcpy (a, n, namelen - (n - module_name) + 1); return true; } if (!subst_name ('-', '_') && !subst_name ('_', '-')) alternate_name[0] = '\0'; FTSENT *f; int error = ENOENT; while ((f = fts_read (fts)) != NULL) { error = ENOENT; switch (f->fts_info) { case FTS_F: case FTS_NSOK: /* See if this file name is "MODULE_NAME.ko". */ if (f->fts_namelen == namelen + 3 && !memcmp (f->fts_name + namelen, ".ko", 4) && (!memcmp (f->fts_name, module_name, namelen) || !memcmp (f->fts_name, alternate_name, namelen))) { int fd = open64 (f->fts_accpath, O_RDONLY); *file_name = strdup (f->fts_path); fts_close (fts); free (modulesdir[0]); if (fd < 0) free (*file_name); else if (*file_name == NULL) { close (fd); fd = -1; } return fd; } break; case FTS_ERR: case FTS_DNR: case FTS_NS: error = f->fts_errno; break; default: break; } } fts_close (fts); free (modulesdir[0]); errno = error; return -1; } INTDEF (dwfl_linux_kernel_find_elf) /* Dwfl_Callbacks.section_address for kernel modules in the running Linux. We read the information from /sys/module directly. */ int dwfl_linux_kernel_module_section_address (Dwfl_Module *mod __attribute__ ((unused)), void **userdata __attribute__ ((unused)), const char *modname, Dwarf_Addr base __attribute__ ((unused)), const char *secname, Elf32_Word shndx __attribute__ ((unused)), const GElf_Shdr *shdr __attribute__ ((unused)), Dwarf_Addr *addr) { char *sysfile = NULL; asprintf (&sysfile, SECADDRFMT, modname, secname); if (sysfile == NULL) return ENOMEM; FILE *f = fopen (sysfile, "r"); free (sysfile); if (f == NULL) { if (errno == ENOENT) { /* The .modinfo and .data.percpu sections are never kept loaded in the kernel. If the kernel was compiled without CONFIG_MODULE_UNLOAD, the .exit.* sections are not actually loaded at all. Just relocate these bogusly to zero. This part of the debug information will not be of any use. */ if (!strcmp (secname, ".modinfo") || !strcmp (secname, ".data.percpu") || !strncmp (secname, ".exit", 5)) { *addr = 0; return DWARF_CB_OK; } /* The goofy PPC64 module_frob_arch_sections function tweaks the section names as a way to control other kernel code's behavior, and this cruft leaks out into the /sys information. The file name for ".init*" may actually look like "_init*". */ if (!strncmp (secname, ".init", 5)) { sysfile = NULL; asprintf (&sysfile, SECADDRFMT "%s", modname, "_", &secname[1]); if (sysfile == NULL) return ENOMEM; f = fopen (sysfile, "r"); free (sysfile); if (f != NULL) goto ok; } } return DWARF_CB_ABORT; } ok: (void) __fsetlocking (f, FSETLOCKING_BYCALLER); int result = (fscanf (f, "%" PRIx64 "\n", addr) == 1 ? 0 : ferror_unlocked (f) ? errno : ENOEXEC); fclose (f); if (result == 0) return DWARF_CB_OK; errno = result; return DWARF_CB_ABORT; } INTDEF (dwfl_linux_kernel_module_section_address) int dwfl_linux_kernel_report_modules (Dwfl *dwfl) { FILE *f = fopen (MODULELIST, "r"); if (f == NULL) return errno; (void) __fsetlocking (f, FSETLOCKING_BYCALLER); int result = 0; Dwarf_Addr modaddr; unsigned long int modsz; char modname[128]; while (fscanf (f, "%128s %lu %*s %*s %*s %" PRIx64 "\n", modname, &modsz, &modaddr) == 3) if (INTUSE(dwfl_report_module) (dwfl, modname, modaddr, modaddr + modsz) == NULL) { result = -1; break; } if (result == 0) result = ferror_unlocked (f) ? errno : feof_unlocked (f) ? 0 : ENOEXEC; fclose (f); return result; } INTDEF (dwfl_linux_kernel_report_modules)