2
0
mirror of https://github.com/edk2-porting/linux-next.git synced 2024-12-18 18:23:53 +08:00
linux-next/Documentation/livepatch/callbacks.rst
Petr Mladek d9defe448f docs/livepatch: Unify style of livepatch documentation in the ReST format
Make the structure of "Livepatch module Elf format" document similar
to the main "Livepatch" document.

Also make the structure of "(Un)patching Callbacks" document similar
to the "Shadow Variables" document.

It fixes the most visible inconsistencies of the documentation
generated from the ReST format.

Signed-off-by: Petr Mladek <pmladek@suse.com>
Acked-by: Joe Lawrence <joe.lawrence@redhat.com>
Acked-by: Josh Poimboeuf <jpoimboe@redhat.com>
Acked-by: Miroslav Benes <mbenes@suse.cz>
Reviewed-by: Mauro Carvalho Chehab <mchehab+samsung@kernel.org>
Reviewed-by: Kamalesh Babulal <kamalesh@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Corbet <corbet@lwn.net>
2019-05-07 16:06:28 -06:00

134 lines
5.1 KiB
ReStructuredText

======================
(Un)patching Callbacks
======================
Livepatch (un)patch-callbacks provide a mechanism for livepatch modules
to execute callback functions when a kernel object is (un)patched. They
can be considered a **power feature** that **extends livepatching abilities**
to include:
- Safe updates to global data
- "Patches" to init and probe functions
- Patching otherwise unpatchable code (i.e. assembly)
In most cases, (un)patch callbacks will need to be used in conjunction
with memory barriers and kernel synchronization primitives, like
mutexes/spinlocks, or even stop_machine(), to avoid concurrency issues.
1. Motivation
=============
Callbacks differ from existing kernel facilities:
- Module init/exit code doesn't run when disabling and re-enabling a
patch.
- A module notifier can't stop a to-be-patched module from loading.
Callbacks are part of the klp_object structure and their implementation
is specific to that klp_object. Other livepatch objects may or may not
be patched, irrespective of the target klp_object's current state.
2. Callback types
=================
Callbacks can be registered for the following livepatch actions:
* Pre-patch
- before a klp_object is patched
* Post-patch
- after a klp_object has been patched and is active
across all tasks
* Pre-unpatch
- before a klp_object is unpatched (ie, patched code is
active), used to clean up post-patch callback
resources
* Post-unpatch
- after a klp_object has been patched, all code has
been restored and no tasks are running patched code,
used to cleanup pre-patch callback resources
3. How it works
===============
Each callback is optional, omitting one does not preclude specifying any
other. However, the livepatching core executes the handlers in
symmetry: pre-patch callbacks have a post-unpatch counterpart and
post-patch callbacks have a pre-unpatch counterpart. An unpatch
callback will only be executed if its corresponding patch callback was
executed. Typical use cases pair a patch handler that acquires and
configures resources with an unpatch handler tears down and releases
those same resources.
A callback is only executed if its host klp_object is loaded. For
in-kernel vmlinux targets, this means that callbacks will always execute
when a livepatch is enabled/disabled. For patch target kernel modules,
callbacks will only execute if the target module is loaded. When a
module target is (un)loaded, its callbacks will execute only if the
livepatch module is enabled.
The pre-patch callback, if specified, is expected to return a status
code (0 for success, -ERRNO on error). An error status code indicates
to the livepatching core that patching of the current klp_object is not
safe and to stop the current patching request. (When no pre-patch
callback is provided, the transition is assumed to be safe.) If a
pre-patch callback returns failure, the kernel's module loader will:
- Refuse to load a livepatch, if the livepatch is loaded after
targeted code.
or:
- Refuse to load a module, if the livepatch was already successfully
loaded.
No post-patch, pre-unpatch, or post-unpatch callbacks will be executed
for a given klp_object if the object failed to patch, due to a failed
pre_patch callback or for any other reason.
If a patch transition is reversed, no pre-unpatch handlers will be run
(this follows the previously mentioned symmetry -- pre-unpatch callbacks
will only occur if their corresponding post-patch callback executed).
If the object did successfully patch, but the patch transition never
started for some reason (e.g., if another object failed to patch),
only the post-unpatch callback will be called.
4. Use cases
============
Sample livepatch modules demonstrating the callback API can be found in
samples/livepatch/ directory. These samples were modified for use in
kselftests and can be found in the lib/livepatch directory.
Global data update
------------------
A pre-patch callback can be useful to update a global variable. For
example, 75ff39ccc1bd ("tcp: make challenge acks less predictable")
changes a global sysctl, as well as patches the tcp_send_challenge_ack()
function.
In this case, if we're being super paranoid, it might make sense to
patch the data *after* patching is complete with a post-patch callback,
so that tcp_send_challenge_ack() could first be changed to read
sysctl_tcp_challenge_ack_limit with READ_ONCE.
__init and probe function patches support
-----------------------------------------
Although __init and probe functions are not directly livepatch-able, it
may be possible to implement similar updates via pre/post-patch
callbacks.
The commit ``48900cb6af42 ("virtio-net: drop NETIF_F_FRAGLIST")`` change the way that
virtnet_probe() initialized its driver's net_device features. A
pre/post-patch callback could iterate over all such devices, making a
similar change to their hw_features value. (Client functions of the
value may need to be updated accordingly.)