Re: Process-wide watchpoints
From: Peter Zijlstra
Date: Thu Feb 04 2021 - 08:35:15 EST
On Thu, Feb 04, 2021 at 01:53:59PM +0100, Dmitry Vyukov wrote:
> On Thu, Feb 4, 2021 at 1:09 PM Peter Zijlstra <peterz@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > What do we do then? The advantage of IOC_REFRESH is that it disables the
> > event until it gets explicitly re-armed, avoiding recursion issues etc.
> > Do you want those semantics? If so, we'd need to have IOC_REFRESH find
> > the actual event for the current task, which should be doable I suppose.
>
> Frankly, I don't know. I didn't use it in my prototype, nor I fully
> understand what it's doing. Does it make sense for breakpoints?
> I see IOC_REFRESH has a check for !attr.inherit, so it will fail for
> my use case currently. I would say we just leave it as is for now.
Well, the way it works is that currently you set event_limit > 0. Then
each event will decrement, when we hit 0 we disable and raise a signal.
REFRESH will increment event_limit and re-enable.
This means you're guaranteed not to get another signal until you're
ready for it. It allows leaving the signal handler context to handle the
signal.
I suppose you're looking for something like this, which goes in top of
that thread_only thing.
--- a/include/uapi/linux/perf_event.h
+++ b/include/uapi/linux/perf_event.h
@@ -389,7 +389,8 @@ struct perf_event_attr {
cgroup : 1, /* include cgroup events */
text_poke : 1, /* include text poke events */
thread_only : 1, /* only inherit on threads */
- __reserved_1 : 29;
+ sigtrap : 1, /* foo */
+ __reserved_1 : 28;
union {
__u32 wakeup_events; /* wakeup every n events */
--- a/kernel/events/core.c
+++ b/kernel/events/core.c
@@ -6273,6 +6273,13 @@ static void perf_pending_event_disable(s
if (cpu == smp_processor_id()) {
WRITE_ONCE(event->pending_disable, -1);
+
+ if (event->attr.sigtrap) {
+ atomic_inc(&event->event_limit); /* rearm */
+ send_sig_info(SIGTRAP, SEND_SIG_PRIV, current);
+ return;
+ }
+
perf_event_disable_local(event);
return;
}
@@ -8936,6 +8943,7 @@ static int __perf_event_overflow(struct
int throttle, struct perf_sample_data *data,
struct pt_regs *regs)
{
+ perf_overflow_handler_t ovf;
int events = atomic_read(&event->event_limit);
int ret = 0;
@@ -8961,7 +8969,15 @@ static int __perf_event_overflow(struct
perf_event_disable_inatomic(event);
}
- READ_ONCE(event->overflow_handler)(event, data, regs);
+ ovf = READ_ONCE(event->overflow_handler);
+#ifdef CONFIG_RETPOLINE
+ if (ovf == perf_event_output_forward) {
+ perf_event_output_forward(event, data, regs);
+ } else if (ovf == perf_event_output_backward) {
+ perf_event_output_backward(event, data, regs);
+ } else
+#endif
+ ovf(event, data, regs);
if (*perf_event_fasync(event) && event->pending_kill) {
event->pending_wakeup = 1;
@@ -11281,6 +11297,9 @@ perf_event_alloc(struct perf_event_attr
event->state = PERF_EVENT_STATE_INACTIVE;
+ if (event->attr.sigtrap)
+ event->event_limit = ATOMIC_INIT(1);
+
if (task) {
event->attach_state = PERF_ATTACH_TASK;
/*
@@ -11556,6 +11575,9 @@ static int perf_copy_attr(struct perf_ev
if (attr->thread_only && !attr->inherit)
return -EINVAL;
+ if (attr->sigtrap && attr->inherit && !attr->thread_only)
+ return -EINVAL;
+
out:
return ret;