"Naveen N. Rao" <naveen.n.rao@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes:
Excerpts from Christophe Leroy's message of April 21, 2017 18:32:
diff --git a/arch/powerpc/kernel/ftrace.c
b/arch/powerpc/kernel/ftrace.c
index 32509de6ce4c..06d2ac53f471 100644
--- a/arch/powerpc/kernel/ftrace.c
+++ b/arch/powerpc/kernel/ftrace.c
@@ -46,6 +46,7 @@ static int
@@ -67,10 +68,11 @@ ftrace_modify_code(unsigned long ip, unsigned int old, unsigned int new)
}
/* replace the text with the new text */
- if (patch_instruction((unsigned int *)ip, new))
- return -EPERM;
+ set_kernel_text_rw(ip);
+ err = patch_instruction((unsigned int *)ip, new);
+ set_kernel_text_ro(ip);
Is there a reason to not put those inside patch_instruction()?
Yes and no.
patch_instruction() is called quite early from apply_feature_fixups(), I
haven't looked closely but I suspect the set_kernel_text_rx() routines
won't work that early.
But on the other hand patch_instruction() is used by things other than
ftrace, like jump labels, so we probably want the rw/ro setting in there
so that we don't have to go and fixup jump labels etc.
So probably we need a raw_patch_instruction() which does just the
patching (what patch_instruction() does now), and can be used early in
boot. And then patch_instruction() would have the rw/ro change in it, so
that all users of it are OK.
eg ~=:
int raw_patch_instruction(unsigned int *addr, unsigned int instr)
{
...
}
int patch_instruction(unsigned int *addr, unsigned int instr)
{
int err;
set_kernel_text_rw(ip);
err = raw_patch_instruction((unsigned int *)ip, new);
set_kernel_text_ro(ip);
return err;
}