Re: FInal kprobes rollup patches

From: Masami Hiramatsu
Date: Mon Dec 17 2007 - 16:30:08 EST


Hi Harvey,

Harvey Harrison wrote:
> On Mon, 2007-12-17 at 19:52 +0530, Srikar Dronamraju wrote:
>> * Ingo Molnar <mingo@xxxxxxx> [2007-12-15 14:12:04]:
>>
>>
>> Hi Ingo, Harvey
>>
>> In file include/asm-x86/kprobes_32.h
>> typedef u8 kprobe_opcode_t;
>> hence sizeof(kprobe_opcode_t) turns out to be 1.
>>
>> Hence
>>
>> memcpy(p->ainsn.insn, p->addr, MAX_INSN_SIZE * sizeof(kprobe_opcode_t));
>> is correct.
>>
>
> OK, but this would be much clearer to adopt the X86_64 way, define
> MAX_INSN_SIZE one smaller and make this line:
>
> /* Copy original instruction plus space for 1 byte relative jump */
> memcpy(p->ainsn.insn, p->addr, MAX_INSN_SIZE + sizeof(kprobe_opcode_t));
>
> See the first patch of my cleanup work that unified MAX_INSN_SIZE
> and you'll see why this jumped out.
>
> Harvey

If you mention about a relative jump which is inserted by
resume_execution(), I think you might misunderstand that relative jump.

The size of that relative jump, which will be embedded by kprobe-booster, is
5-bytes(not 1 byte). So it needs 5 bytes space.
And we decided not to expand MAX_INSN_SIZE when we developed the booster.
The reasons are:
- it is supplemental feature(just accelerating kprobes), if we have no space,
we can disable it.
- 5 bytes are big enough compared with 15(=MAX_INSN_SIZE)
- the lengths of most of instructions are less than 10 bytes.

Additionally, MAX_INSN_SIZE is used in kernel/kprobes.c to allocate an
instruction buffer which will be assigned to p->ainsn.insn. Since the
instruction buffer size is MAX_INSN_SIZE, you can not copy instructions
more than MAX_INSN_SIZE.

BTW, in my patch, I unified MAX_INSN_SIZE to bigger one(16).
I think it is enough for us.

Thanks,

Best Regards,

--
Masami Hiramatsu

Software Engineer
Hitachi Computer Products (America) Inc.
Software Solutions Division

e-mail: mhiramat@xxxxxxxxxx, masami.hiramatsu.pt@xxxxxxxxxxx

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