On Tue, Dec 22, 2015 at 12:48 PM, Vlastimil Babka <vbabka@xxxxxxx> wrote:
On 22.12.2015 4:40, Laura Abbott wrote:
Each of the different allocators (SLAB/SLUB/SLOB) handles
clearing of objects differently depending on configuration.
Add common infrastructure for selecting sanitization levels
(off, slow path only, partial, full) and marking caches as
appropriate.
All credit for the original work should be given to Brad Spengler and
the PaX Team.
Signed-off-by: Laura Abbott <laura@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
+#ifdef CONFIG_SLAB_MEMORY_SANITIZE
+#ifdef CONFIG_X86_64
+#define SLAB_MEMORY_SANITIZE_VALUE '\xfe'
+#else
+#define SLAB_MEMORY_SANITIZE_VALUE '\xff'
+#endif
+enum slab_sanitize_mode {
+ /* No sanitization */
+ SLAB_SANITIZE_OFF = 0,
+
+ /* Partial sanitization happens only on the slow path */
+ SLAB_SANITIZE_PARTIAL_SLOWPATH = 1,
Can you explain more about this variant? I wonder who might find it useful
except someone getting a false sense of security, but cheaper.
It sounds like wanting the cake and eat it too :)
I would be surprised if such IMHO half-solution existed in the original
PAX_MEMORY_SANITIZE too?
Or is there something that guarantees that the objects freed on hotpath won't
stay there for long so the danger of leak is low? (And what about
use-after-free?) It depends on further slab activity, no? (I'm not that familiar
with SLUB, but I would expect the hotpath there being similar to SLAB freeing
the object on per-cpu array_cache. But, it seems the PARTIAL_SLOWPATH is not
implemented for SLAB, so there might be some fundamental difference I'm missing.)
Perhaps the partial sanitize could be a separate patch so it's
features were more logically separated?