Re: [PATCH 1/2] tracing/syscalls: allow multiple syscall numbers per syscall

From: Marcin Nowakowski
Date: Wed Aug 31 2016 - 03:19:33 EST


On 31.08.2016 01:28, Steven Rostedt wrote:
On Tue, 30 Aug 2016 16:09:04 -0700
Andy Lutomirski <luto@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

But none of this should be a problem at all for MIPS, right? AFAICT
the only problem for MIPS is that there *is* a mapping from metadata
to nr. If that mapping got removed, MIPS should just work, right?

Wait, where's the mapping of metadata to nr. I don't see that, nor do I
see a need for that. The issue is that we have metadata that expresses
how to record a syscall, and we map syscall nr to metadata, because
when tracing is active, the only thing we have to find that metadata is
the syscall nr.

Now if a syscall nr has more than one way to record (a single nr for
multiple syscalls), then we get into trouble. That's why we have
trouble with compat syscalls. The same number maps to different
syscalls, and we don't know how to differentiate that.

Generally it looks like the MIPS case is more simple than other arches - as the syscall numbers for different ABIs are not overlapping, so when trying to get syscall metadata the number is sufficient.
It's just a case that the current code doesn't handle correctly (and just to makes things worse, while the compat syscalls are not supported at the moment for any arch, because of how the syscalls are numbered, tracing for native 64-bit code is currently broken).

But I agree with all the earlier comments that the current solution isn't very nice - and even though my patch would solve the issue for MIPS, all the existing issues would still remain elsewhere.



For x86 compat, I think that adding arch should be sufficient.
Specifically, rather than having just one enter_syscall_files array,
have one per audit arch. Then call syscall_get_arch() as well as
syscall_get_nr() and use both to lookup the metadata. AFAIK this
should work on all architectures, although you might need some arch
helpers to enumerate all the arches and their respective syscall
tables (and max syscall nrs).

OK, if the regs can get us to the arch, then this might work.

That is, perhaps we can have multiple tables (not really sure how to
make that happen in an arch agnostic way), and then have two functions:

trace_get_syscall_nr(current, regs)
trace_get_syscall_arch(current, regs)

Although, that "arch" may be confusing.

-- Steve