Re: BUG: corrupted list in p9_read_work
From: Dmitry Vyukov
Date: Wed Oct 10 2018 - 10:52:19 EST
On Wed, Oct 10, 2018 at 4:40 PM, Dominique Martinet
<asmadeus@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> Dmitry Vyukov wrote on Wed, Oct 10, 2018:
>> How can they be faked?
>> If we could create a private rdma/virtio stub instance per test
>> process, then we could I think easily use that instance for 9p. But is
>> it possible?
>
> "RDMA" itself can be faked pretty easily nowadays, there's a "rxe"
> driver that is soft RDMA over ethernet and can run over anything.
>
> The problem is that you can't just give the client a file like trans fd;
> you'd need to open an ""rdma socket"" (simplifying wording a bit), and
> afaik there is no standard tool for it ; or rather, the problem is that
> RDMA is packet based so even if there were you can't just write stuff
> in a fd and hope it'll work, so you need a server.
>
> If you're interested, 9p is trivial enough that I could provide you with
> a trivial server that works like your file (just need to reimplement
> something that parses header to packetize it properly; so you could
> write to its stdin for example) ; that'd require some setup in the VM
> (configure rxe and install that tool), but it would definitely be
> possible.
> What do you think ?
I would like to hear more details.
Opening a socket is not a problem. Why do we need a tool for this?
I don't understand the problem with "packet-based" and what does it
mean to have a separate server? Any why?
We definitely don't want to involve a separate third-party server,
that's very problematic for multiple reasons. But we can have a chunk
of custom C code inside of syzkaller.
What exactly setup we need?
I guess it will make things simpler if you provide some kind of "hello
world" C program that mounts 9p/rdma. I don't need exact messages
(they will be same as with pipe transport, right?) nor actual server
implementation, but just the place where to inject these packets.