* [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs (part1: use kprobe symbol_name/offset instead of address) @ 2008-07-15 18:33 James Bottomley 2008-07-16 22:42 ` Masami Hiramatsu 2008-07-18 9:11 ` [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs (part1: use kprobe symbol_name/offset instead of address) Andi Kleen 0 siblings, 2 replies; 41+ messages in thread From: James Bottomley @ 2008-07-15 18:33 UTC (permalink / raw) To: linux-kernel, systemtap One of the big nasties of systemtap is the way it tries to embed virtually the entirety of the kernel symbol table in the probe modules it constructs. This is highly undesirable because it represents a subversion of the kernel API to gain access to unexported symbols. At least for kprobes, the correct way to do this is to specify the probe point by symbol and offset. This patch converts systemtap to use the correct kprobe symbol_name/offset pair to identify the probe location. This only represents a baby step: after this is done, there are at least three other consumers of the systemtap module relocation machinery: 1. unwind information. I think the consumers of this can be converted to use the arch specific unwinders that already exist within the kernel 2. systemtap specific functions that use kernel internals. This was things like get_cycles() but I think they all now use a sanctioned API ... need to check 3. Access to unexported global variables used by the probes. This one is a bit tricky; the dwarf gives a probe the ability to access any variable available from the probed stack frame, including all globals. We could just make the globals off limits, but that weakens the value of the debugger. Alternatively, we could expand the kprobe API to allow probes access to named global variables (tricky to get right without effectively giving general symbol access). Thoughts? If you're going to try this out, you currently need to specify --kelf on the command line to tell systemtap to use the kernel elf to derive symbol names and offsets (it will just segfault without this ATM). James --- diff --git a/tapsets.cxx b/tapsets.cxx index 9037e15..a6a6dd3 100644 --- a/tapsets.cxx +++ b/tapsets.cxx @@ -2306,13 +2306,15 @@ struct dwarf_derived_probe: public derived_probe const string& module, const string& section, Dwarf_Addr dwfl_addr, - Dwarf_Addr addr, + string symbol, + unsigned int offset, dwarf_query & q, Dwarf_Die* scope_die); string module; string section; - Dwarf_Addr addr; + string kprobe_symbol; + unsigned int kprobe_offset; bool has_return; bool has_maxactive; long maxactive_val; @@ -3260,9 +3262,18 @@ dwarf_query::add_probe_point(const string& funcname, if (! bad) { + struct module_info *mi = dw.mod_info; + if (!mi->sym_table) + mi->get_symtab(this); + struct symbol_table *sym_tab = mi->sym_table; + func_info *symbol = sym_tab->get_func_containing_address(addr); + sess.unwindsym_modules.insert (module); probe = new dwarf_derived_probe(funcname, filename, line, - module, reloc_section, addr, reloc_addr, *this, scope_die); + module, reloc_section, reloc_addr, + symbol->name, + (unsigned int)(addr - symbol->addr), + *this, scope_die); results.push_back(probe); } } @@ -4380,7 +4391,8 @@ dwarf_derived_probe::printsig (ostream& o) const // function instances. This is distinct from the verbose/clog // output, since this part goes into the cache hash calculations. sole_location()->print (o); - o << " /* pc=0x" << hex << addr << dec << " */"; + o << " /* pc=<" << kprobe_symbol << "+0x" << hex + << kprobe_offset << dec << "> */"; printsig_nested (o); } @@ -4406,22 +4418,26 @@ dwarf_derived_probe::dwarf_derived_probe(const string& funcname, // NB: dwfl_addr is the virtualized // address for this symbol. Dwarf_Addr dwfl_addr, - // addr is the section-offset for - // actual relocation. - Dwarf_Addr addr, + // symbol is the closest known symbol + // and offset is the offset from the symbol + string symbol, + unsigned int offset, dwarf_query& q, Dwarf_Die* scope_die /* may be null */) : derived_probe (q.base_probe, new probe_point(*q.base_loc) /* .components soon rewritten */ ), - module (module), section (section), addr (addr), + module (module), section (section), kprobe_symbol(symbol), + kprobe_offset(offset), has_return (q.has_return), has_maxactive (q.has_maxactive), maxactive_val (q.maxactive_val) { // Assert relocation invariants +#if 0 if (section == "" && dwfl_addr != addr) // addr should be absolute throw semantic_error ("missing relocation base against", q.base_loc->tok); if (section != "" && dwfl_addr == addr) // addr should be an offset throw semantic_error ("inconsistent relocation address", q.base_loc->tok); +#endif this->tok = q.base_probe->tok; @@ -4620,8 +4636,8 @@ dwarf_derived_probe_group::emit_module_decls (systemtap_session& s) // Let's find some stats for the three embedded strings. Maybe they // are small and uniform enough to justify putting char[MAX]'s into // the array instead of relocated char*'s. - size_t module_name_max = 0, section_name_max = 0, pp_name_max = 0; - size_t module_name_tot = 0, section_name_tot = 0, pp_name_tot = 0; + size_t pp_name_max = 0, pp_name_tot = 0; + size_t symbol_name_name_max = 0, symbol_name_name_tot = 0; size_t all_name_cnt = probes_by_module.size(); // for average for (p_b_m_iterator it = probes_by_module.begin(); it != probes_by_module.end(); it++) { @@ -4630,9 +4646,8 @@ dwarf_derived_probe_group::emit_module_decls (systemtap_session& s) size_t var##_size = (expr) + 1; \ var##_max = max (var##_max, var##_size); \ var##_tot += var##_size; } while (0) - DOIT(module_name, p->module.size()); - DOIT(section_name, p->section.size()); DOIT(pp_name, lex_cast_qstring(*p->sole_location()).size()); + DOIT(symbol_name_name, p->kprobe_symbol.size()); #undef DOIT } @@ -4652,11 +4667,10 @@ dwarf_derived_probe_group::emit_module_decls (systemtap_session& s) if (s.verbose > 2) clog << "stap_dwarf_probe *" << #var << endl; \ } - CALCIT(module); - CALCIT(section); CALCIT(pp); + CALCIT(symbol_name); - s.op->newline() << "const unsigned long address;"; + s.op->newline() << "unsigned int offset;"; s.op->newline() << "void (* const ph) (struct context*);"; s.op->newline(-1) << "} stap_dwarf_probes[] = {"; s.op->indent(1); @@ -4673,9 +4687,8 @@ dwarf_derived_probe_group::emit_module_decls (systemtap_session& s) assert (p->maxactive_val >= 0 && p->maxactive_val <= USHRT_MAX); s.op->line() << " .maxactive_val=" << p->maxactive_val << ","; } - s.op->line() << " .address=0x" << hex << p->addr << dec << "UL,"; - s.op->line() << " .module=\"" << p->module << "\","; - s.op->line() << " .section=\"" << p->section << "\","; + s.op->line() << " .symbol_name=\"" << p->kprobe_symbol << "\","; + s.op->line() << " .offset=0x" << hex << p->kprobe_offset << dec << ","; s.op->line() << " .pp=" << lex_cast_qstring (*p->sole_location()) << ","; s.op->line() << " .ph=&" << p->name; s.op->line() << " },"; @@ -4735,11 +4748,10 @@ dwarf_derived_probe_group::emit_module_init (systemtap_session& s) s.op->newline() << "for (i=0; i<" << probes_by_module.size() << "; i++) {"; s.op->newline(1) << "struct stap_dwarf_probe *sdp = & stap_dwarf_probes[i];"; s.op->newline() << "struct stap_dwarf_kprobe *kp = & stap_dwarf_kprobes[i];"; - s.op->newline() << "unsigned long relocated_addr = _stp_module_relocate (sdp->module, sdp->section, sdp->address);"; - s.op->newline() << "if (relocated_addr == 0) continue;"; // quietly; assume module is absent s.op->newline() << "probe_point = sdp->pp;"; s.op->newline() << "if (sdp->return_p) {"; - s.op->newline(1) << "kp->u.krp.kp.addr = (void *) relocated_addr;"; + s.op->newline(1) << "kp->u.krp.kp.symbol_name = sdp->symbol_name;"; + s.op->newline(1) << "kp->u.krp.kp.offset = sdp->offset;"; s.op->newline() << "if (sdp->maxactive_p) {"; s.op->newline(1) << "kp->u.krp.maxactive = sdp->maxactive_val;"; s.op->newline(-1) << "} else {"; @@ -4748,7 +4760,8 @@ dwarf_derived_probe_group::emit_module_init (systemtap_session& s) s.op->newline() << "kp->u.krp.handler = &enter_kretprobe_probe;"; s.op->newline() << "rc = register_kretprobe (& kp->u.krp);"; s.op->newline(-1) << "} else {"; - s.op->newline(1) << "kp->u.kp.addr = (void *) relocated_addr;"; + s.op->newline(1) << "kp->u.krp.kp.symbol_name = sdp->symbol_name;"; + s.op->newline(1) << "kp->u.krp.kp.offset = sdp->offset;"; s.op->newline() << "kp->u.kp.pre_handler = &enter_kprobe_probe;"; s.op->newline() << "rc = register_kprobe (& kp->u.kp);"; s.op->newline(-1) << "}"; @@ -4885,12 +4898,20 @@ dwarf_builder::build(systemtap_session & sess, throw semantic_error ("absolute statement probe in unprivileged script", q.base_probe->tok); } + struct module_info *mi = dw->mod_info; + if (!mi->sym_table) + mi->get_symtab(&q); + struct symbol_table *sym_tab = mi->sym_table; + func_info *symbol = sym_tab->get_func_containing_address(q.statement_num_val); + // For kernel.statement(NUM).absolute probe points, we bypass // all the debuginfo stuff: We just wire up a // dwarf_derived_probe right here and now. dwarf_derived_probe* p = new dwarf_derived_probe ("", "", 0, "kernel", "", - q.statement_num_val, q.statement_num_val, + q.statement_num_val, + symbol->name, + (unsigned int)(q.statement_num_val - symbol->addr), q, 0); finished_results.push_back (p); sess.unwindsym_modules.insert ("kernel"); ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 41+ messages in thread
* Re: [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs (part1: use kprobe symbol_name/offset instead of address) 2008-07-15 18:33 [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs (part1: use kprobe symbol_name/offset instead of address) James Bottomley @ 2008-07-16 22:42 ` Masami Hiramatsu 2008-07-16 23:03 ` James Bottomley 2008-07-18 9:11 ` [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs (part1: use kprobe symbol_name/offset instead of address) Andi Kleen 1 sibling, 1 reply; 41+ messages in thread From: Masami Hiramatsu @ 2008-07-16 22:42 UTC (permalink / raw) To: James Bottomley; +Cc: linux-kernel, systemtap James Bottomley wrote: > One of the big nasties of systemtap is the way it tries to embed > virtually the entirety of the kernel symbol table in the probe modules > it constructs. This is highly undesirable because it represents a > subversion of the kernel API to gain access to unexported symbols. At > least for kprobes, the correct way to do this is to specify the probe > point by symbol and offset. > > This patch converts systemtap to use the correct kprobe > symbol_name/offset pair to identify the probe location. Hi James, I think your suggestion is a good step. Of course, it might have to solve some issues. Unfortunately, current kprobe's symbol_name interface is not so clever. For example, if you specify a static function which is defined at several places in the kernel(ex. do_open), it always pick up the first one in kallsyms, even if systemtap can find all of those functions. (you can find many duplicated symbols in /proc/kallsyms) So, we might better improve kallsyms to treat this case and find what is a better way to specify symbols and addresses. > > This only represents a baby step: after this is done, there are at > least three other consumers of the systemtap module relocation > machinery: > > 1. unwind information. I think the consumers of this can be > converted to use the arch specific unwinders that already exist > within the kernel > 2. systemtap specific functions that use kernel internals. This > was things like get_cycles() but I think they all now use a > sanctioned API ... need to check Sure, those functions must be well isolated from other parts of kernel. unfortunately, relayfs is not enough isolated. see below; http://sources.redhat.com/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=6487 > 3. Access to unexported global variables used by the probes. This > one is a bit tricky; the dwarf gives a probe the ability to > access any variable available from the probed stack frame, > including all globals. We could just make the globals off > limits, but that weakens the value of the debugger. > Alternatively, we could expand the kprobe API to allow probes > access to named global variables (tricky to get right without > effectively giving general symbol access). Thoughts? Could we provide a separated GPL'd interface to access named global symbols which is based on kallsyms? Thank you, > If you're going to try this out, you currently need to specify --kelf on > the command line to tell systemtap to use the kernel elf to derive > symbol names and offsets (it will just segfault without this ATM). > > James -- Masami Hiramatsu Software Engineer Hitachi Computer Products (America) Inc. Software Solutions Division e-mail: mhiramat@redhat.com ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 41+ messages in thread
* Re: [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs (part1: use kprobe symbol_name/offset instead of address) 2008-07-16 22:42 ` Masami Hiramatsu @ 2008-07-16 23:03 ` James Bottomley 2008-07-17 0:07 ` Masami Hiramatsu 0 siblings, 1 reply; 41+ messages in thread From: James Bottomley @ 2008-07-16 23:03 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Masami Hiramatsu; +Cc: linux-kernel, systemtap On Wed, 2008-07-16 at 18:40 -0400, Masami Hiramatsu wrote: > James Bottomley wrote: > > One of the big nasties of systemtap is the way it tries to embed > > virtually the entirety of the kernel symbol table in the probe modules > > it constructs. This is highly undesirable because it represents a > > subversion of the kernel API to gain access to unexported symbols. At > > least for kprobes, the correct way to do this is to specify the probe > > point by symbol and offset. > > > > This patch converts systemtap to use the correct kprobe > > symbol_name/offset pair to identify the probe location. > > Hi James, > > I think your suggestion is a good step. Of course, it might > have to solve some issues. > > Unfortunately, current kprobe's symbol_name interface is not > so clever. For example, if you specify a static function > which is defined at several places in the kernel(ex. do_open), > it always pick up the first one in kallsyms, even if systemtap > can find all of those functions. > (you can find many duplicated symbols in /proc/kallsyms) Right, but realistically only functions which have a strict existence (i.e. those for whom an address could be taken) can be used; functions which are fully inlined (as in have no separate existence) can't. That's why the patch finds the closest function with an address to match on. > So, we might better improve kallsyms to treat this case > and find what is a better way to specify symbols and addresses. Well, both the dwarf and the kallsyms know which are the functions that have a real existence, so the tool can work it out. It has a real meaning too because the chosen symbol must be the parent routine of all the nested inlines. > > This only represents a baby step: after this is done, there are at > > least three other consumers of the systemtap module relocation > > machinery: > > > > 1. unwind information. I think the consumers of this can be > > converted to use the arch specific unwinders that already exist > > within the kernel > > 2. systemtap specific functions that use kernel internals. This > > was things like get_cycles() but I think they all now use a > > sanctioned API ... need to check > > Sure, those functions must be well isolated from other parts of kernel. > unfortunately, relayfs is not enough isolated. see below; > http://sources.redhat.com/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=6487 This is just "who guards the guards" or in this case, you can't probe pieces of the kernel that the probe internals use. However, as long as the separation is tight this shouldn't be too much of a problem. > > 3. Access to unexported global variables used by the probes. This > > one is a bit tricky; the dwarf gives a probe the ability to > > access any variable available from the probed stack frame, > > including all globals. We could just make the globals off > > limits, but that weakens the value of the debugger. > > Alternatively, we could expand the kprobe API to allow probes > > access to named global variables (tricky to get right without > > effectively giving general symbol access). Thoughts? > > Could we provide a separated GPL'd interface to access named global > symbols which is based on kallsyms? Yes, I think so ... it's just a case of working out what and how; but to do that we need a consumer of the interface. James ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 41+ messages in thread
* Re: [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs (part1: use kprobe symbol_name/offset instead of address) 2008-07-16 23:03 ` James Bottomley @ 2008-07-17 0:07 ` Masami Hiramatsu 2008-07-17 1:50 ` James Bottomley 0 siblings, 1 reply; 41+ messages in thread From: Masami Hiramatsu @ 2008-07-17 0:07 UTC (permalink / raw) To: James Bottomley; +Cc: linux-kernel, systemtap James Bottomley wrote: > On Wed, 2008-07-16 at 18:40 -0400, Masami Hiramatsu wrote: >> James Bottomley wrote: >>> One of the big nasties of systemtap is the way it tries to embed >>> virtually the entirety of the kernel symbol table in the probe modules >>> it constructs. This is highly undesirable because it represents a >>> subversion of the kernel API to gain access to unexported symbols. At >>> least for kprobes, the correct way to do this is to specify the probe >>> point by symbol and offset. >>> >>> This patch converts systemtap to use the correct kprobe >>> symbol_name/offset pair to identify the probe location. >> Hi James, >> >> I think your suggestion is a good step. Of course, it might >> have to solve some issues. >> >> Unfortunately, current kprobe's symbol_name interface is not >> so clever. For example, if you specify a static function >> which is defined at several places in the kernel(ex. do_open), >> it always pick up the first one in kallsyms, even if systemtap >> can find all of those functions. >> (you can find many duplicated symbols in /proc/kallsyms) > > Right, but realistically only functions which have a strict existence > (i.e. those for whom an address could be taken) can be used; functions > which are fully inlined (as in have no separate existence) can't. > That's why the patch finds the closest function with an address to match > on. Sure, inlined functions are embedded in a caller function, so the closest function is the correct owner. However, I meant local-scope functions can have same name if they are defined in different scope. And even though, both of them are shown in kallsyms. This mean, you can see the functions which have real different existence but have same symbol. Would you mean systemtap should not probe those name-conflicted functions? >> So, we might better improve kallsyms to treat this case >> and find what is a better way to specify symbols and addresses. > > Well, both the dwarf and the kallsyms know which are the functions that > have a real existence, so the tool can work it out. It has a real > meaning too because the chosen symbol must be the parent routine of all > the nested inlines. Hmm, here is what I got with your patch; $ stap --kelf -e 'probe kernel.function("do_open"){}' -p2 # probes kernel.function("do_open@arch/x86/kernel/apm_32.c:1557") /* pc=<do_open+0x0> */ /* <- kernel.function("do_open") */ kernel.function("do_open@fs/block_dev.c:928") /* pc=<do_open+0x0> */ /* <- kernel.function("do_open") */ kernel.function("do_open@fs/nfsctl.c:24") /* pc=<sys_nfsservctl+0x55> */ /* <- kernel.function("do_open") */ kernel.function("do_open@ipc/mqueue.c:630") /* pc=<do_open+0x0> */ /* <- kernel.function("do_open") */ Without your patch; $ stap -e 'probe kernel.function("do_open"){}' -p2 # probes kernel.function("do_open@arch/x86/kernel/apm_32.c:1557") /* pc=0x10382 */ /* <- kernel.function("do_open") */ kernel.function("do_open@fs/block_dev.c:928") /* pc=0xa0750 */ /* <- kernel.function("do_open") */ kernel.function("do_open@fs/nfsctl.c:24") /* pc=0xa6411 */ /* <- kernel.function("do_open") */ kernel.function("do_open@ipc/mqueue.c:630") /* pc=0xc55a6 */ /* <- kernel.function("do_open") */ Obviously, the 3rd "do_open" is fully inlined, so it can be correctly handled by kprobes, because it has different symbol(sys_nfsservctl). However, other "do_open" have same symbol(do_open). these will be put on same address (at the first symbol on kallsyms list). So, we need a bridge for the gap of function addresses between kallsyms and dwarf. [...] >> Could we provide a separated GPL'd interface to access named global >> symbols which is based on kallsyms? > > Yes, I think so ... it's just a case of working out what and how; but to > do that we need a consumer of the interface. I agree with you, we need to change both of systemtap and kernel. Thank you, > > James > > -- Masami Hiramatsu Software Engineer Hitachi Computer Products (America) Inc. Software Solutions Division e-mail: mhiramat@redhat.com ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 41+ messages in thread
* Re: [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs (part1: use kprobe symbol_name/offset instead of address) 2008-07-17 0:07 ` Masami Hiramatsu @ 2008-07-17 1:50 ` James Bottomley 2008-07-17 14:18 ` James Bottomley 0 siblings, 1 reply; 41+ messages in thread From: James Bottomley @ 2008-07-17 1:50 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Masami Hiramatsu; +Cc: linux-kernel, systemtap On Wed, 2008-07-16 at 20:05 -0400, Masami Hiramatsu wrote: > James Bottomley wrote: > > On Wed, 2008-07-16 at 18:40 -0400, Masami Hiramatsu wrote: > >> James Bottomley wrote: > >>> One of the big nasties of systemtap is the way it tries to embed > >>> virtually the entirety of the kernel symbol table in the probe modules > >>> it constructs. This is highly undesirable because it represents a > >>> subversion of the kernel API to gain access to unexported symbols. At > >>> least for kprobes, the correct way to do this is to specify the probe > >>> point by symbol and offset. > >>> > >>> This patch converts systemtap to use the correct kprobe > >>> symbol_name/offset pair to identify the probe location. > >> Hi James, > >> > >> I think your suggestion is a good step. Of course, it might > >> have to solve some issues. > >> > >> Unfortunately, current kprobe's symbol_name interface is not > >> so clever. For example, if you specify a static function > >> which is defined at several places in the kernel(ex. do_open), > >> it always pick up the first one in kallsyms, even if systemtap > >> can find all of those functions. > >> (you can find many duplicated symbols in /proc/kallsyms) > > > > Right, but realistically only functions which have a strict existence > > (i.e. those for whom an address could be taken) can be used; functions > > which are fully inlined (as in have no separate existence) can't. > > That's why the patch finds the closest function with an address to match > > on. > > Sure, inlined functions are embedded in a caller function, so the > closest function is the correct owner. > > However, I meant local-scope functions can have same name if > they are defined in different scope. And even though, both of > them are shown in kallsyms. This mean, you can see the functions > which have real different existence but have same symbol. > > Would you mean systemtap should not probe those name-conflicted > functions? Actually, I wasn't aware we had any. > >> So, we might better improve kallsyms to treat this case > >> and find what is a better way to specify symbols and addresses. > > > > Well, both the dwarf and the kallsyms know which are the functions that > > have a real existence, so the tool can work it out. It has a real > > meaning too because the chosen symbol must be the parent routine of all > > the nested inlines. > > Hmm, here is what I got with your patch; > $ stap --kelf -e 'probe kernel.function("do_open"){}' -p2 > # probes > kernel.function("do_open@arch/x86/kernel/apm_32.c:1557") /* pc=<do_open+0x0> */ /* <- kernel.function("do_open") */ > kernel.function("do_open@fs/block_dev.c:928") /* pc=<do_open+0x0> */ /* <- kernel.function("do_open") */ > kernel.function("do_open@fs/nfsctl.c:24") /* pc=<sys_nfsservctl+0x55> */ /* <- kernel.function("do_open") */ > kernel.function("do_open@ipc/mqueue.c:630") /* pc=<do_open+0x0> */ /* <- kernel.function("do_open") */ > > Without your patch; > $ stap -e 'probe kernel.function("do_open"){}' -p2 > # probes > kernel.function("do_open@arch/x86/kernel/apm_32.c:1557") /* pc=0x10382 */ /* <- kernel.function("do_open") */ > kernel.function("do_open@fs/block_dev.c:928") /* pc=0xa0750 */ /* <- kernel.function("do_open") */ > kernel.function("do_open@fs/nfsctl.c:24") /* pc=0xa6411 */ /* <- kernel.function("do_open") */ > kernel.function("do_open@ipc/mqueue.c:630") /* pc=0xc55a6 */ /* <- kernel.function("do_open") */ > > Obviously, the 3rd "do_open" is fully inlined, so it can be > correctly handled by kprobes, because it has different > symbol(sys_nfsservctl). However, other "do_open" have > same symbol(do_open). these will be put on same > address (at the first symbol on kallsyms list). > > So, we need a bridge for the gap of function addresses > between kallsyms and dwarf. You mean this particular problem: hobholes:/home/jejb/git/BUILD-2.6# grep do_open /proc/kallsyms c01af160 t do_open c01d5d40 t do_open It's certainly a material defect in the current API. I'll think about it and see if I can come up with a solution. > [...] > >> Could we provide a separated GPL'd interface to access named global > >> symbols which is based on kallsyms? > > > > Yes, I think so ... it's just a case of working out what and how; but to > > do that we need a consumer of the interface. > > I agree with you, we need to change both of systemtap and kernel. > > Thank you, You're welcome. James ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 41+ messages in thread
* Re: [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs (part1: use kprobe symbol_name/offset instead of address) 2008-07-17 1:50 ` James Bottomley @ 2008-07-17 14:18 ` James Bottomley 2008-07-17 16:59 ` James Bottomley [not found] ` <1216313914.5515.25.camel__21144.9282979176$1216314027$gmane$org@localhost.localdomain> 0 siblings, 2 replies; 41+ messages in thread From: James Bottomley @ 2008-07-17 14:18 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Masami Hiramatsu; +Cc: linux-kernel, systemtap On Wed, 2008-07-16 at 20:49 -0500, James Bottomley wrote: > On Wed, 2008-07-16 at 20:05 -0400, Masami Hiramatsu wrote: > > Hmm, here is what I got with your patch; > > $ stap --kelf -e 'probe kernel.function("do_open"){}' -p2 > > # probes > > kernel.function("do_open@arch/x86/kernel/apm_32.c:1557") /* pc=<do_open+0x0> */ /* <- kernel.function("do_open") */ > > kernel.function("do_open@fs/block_dev.c:928") /* pc=<do_open+0x0> */ /* <- kernel.function("do_open") */ > > kernel.function("do_open@fs/nfsctl.c:24") /* pc=<sys_nfsservctl+0x55> */ /* <- kernel.function("do_open") */ > > kernel.function("do_open@ipc/mqueue.c:630") /* pc=<do_open+0x0> */ /* <- kernel.function("do_open") */ > > > > Without your patch; > > $ stap -e 'probe kernel.function("do_open"){}' -p2 > > # probes > > kernel.function("do_open@arch/x86/kernel/apm_32.c:1557") /* pc=0x10382 */ /* <- kernel.function("do_open") */ > > kernel.function("do_open@fs/block_dev.c:928") /* pc=0xa0750 */ /* <- kernel.function("do_open") */ > > kernel.function("do_open@fs/nfsctl.c:24") /* pc=0xa6411 */ /* <- kernel.function("do_open") */ > > kernel.function("do_open@ipc/mqueue.c:630") /* pc=0xc55a6 */ /* <- kernel.function("do_open") */ > > > > Obviously, the 3rd "do_open" is fully inlined, so it can be > > correctly handled by kprobes, because it has different > > symbol(sys_nfsservctl). However, other "do_open" have > > same symbol(do_open). these will be put on same > > address (at the first symbol on kallsyms list). > > > > So, we need a bridge for the gap of function addresses > > between kallsyms and dwarf. > > You mean this particular problem: > > hobholes:/home/jejb/git/BUILD-2.6# grep do_open /proc/kallsyms > c01af160 t do_open > c01d5d40 t do_open > > It's certainly a material defect in the current API. I'll think about > it and see if I can come up with a solution. OK, thought about it. There seem to be two possible solutions 1. Get systemtap always to offset from non-static functions. This will use the standard linker to ensure uniqueness (a module qualifier will still need to be added to the struct kprobe for lookup, since modules can duplicate unexported kernel symbols). 2. Add the filename as a discriminator for duplicate symbols in the kallsyms program (would still need module qualifier). This is appealing because the path name would be printed in the kernel trace to help with oops tracking This is where negotiations come in. To me 2. looks to be better because it will help us with oops tracking. On the other hand, it's usually pretty obvious from the stack trace context which files the duplicate symbols are actually in; what do other people think? James ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 41+ messages in thread
* Re: [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs (part1: use kprobe symbol_name/offset instead of address) 2008-07-17 14:18 ` James Bottomley @ 2008-07-17 16:59 ` James Bottomley 2008-07-17 21:38 ` Masami Hiramatsu [not found] ` <1216313914.5515.25.camel__21144.9282979176$1216314027$gmane$org@localhost.localdomain> 1 sibling, 1 reply; 41+ messages in thread From: James Bottomley @ 2008-07-17 16:59 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Masami Hiramatsu; +Cc: linux-kernel, systemtap On Thu, 2008-07-17 at 09:18 -0500, James Bottomley wrote: > OK, thought about it. There seem to be two possible solutions > > 1. Get systemtap always to offset from non-static functions. This > will use the standard linker to ensure uniqueness (a module > qualifier will still need to be added to the struct kprobe for > lookup, since modules can duplicate unexported kernel symbols). > 2. Add the filename as a discriminator for duplicate symbols in the > kallsyms program (would still need module qualifier). This is > appealing because the path name would be printed in the kernel > trace to help with oops tracking > > This is where negotiations come in. To me 2. looks to be better because > it will help us with oops tracking. On the other hand, it's usually > pretty obvious from the stack trace context which files the duplicate > symbols are actually in; what do other people think? Just by way of illustration, this is systemtap fixed up according to suggestion number 1. You can see now using your test case that we get: # probes kernel.function("do_open@fs/block_dev.c:929") /* pc=<lookup_bdev+0x90> */ /* <- kernel.function("do_open") */ kernel.function("do_open@fs/nfsctl.c:24") /* pc=<sys_nfsservctl+0x6a> */ /* <- kernel.function("do_open") */ kernel.function("do_open@ipc/mqueue.c:642") /* pc=<sys_mq_unlink+0x130> */ /* <- kernel.function("do_open") */ James --- From 0203b75a9ca97fc7463e6372baee897d1029b799 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: James Bottomley <James.Bottomley@HansenPartnership.com> Date: Tue, 15 Jul 2008 13:25:00 -0500 Subject: Part1 use symbol_name/offset to locate dwarf probes --- tapsets.cxx | 119 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++------------------ 1 files changed, 83 insertions(+), 36 deletions(-) diff --git a/tapsets.cxx b/tapsets.cxx index 4d1e469..da198c9 100644 --- a/tapsets.cxx +++ b/tapsets.cxx @@ -491,6 +491,7 @@ func_info Dwarf_Addr entrypc; Dwarf_Addr prologue_end; bool weak; + bool global; // Comparison functor for list of functions sorted by address. The // two versions that take a Dwarf_Addr let us use the STL algorithms // upper_bound, equal_range et al., but we don't know whether the @@ -591,6 +592,7 @@ symbol_table module_info *mod_info; // associated module map<string, func_info*> map_by_name; vector<func_info*> list_by_addr; + vector<func_info*> global_list_by_addr; typedef vector<func_info*>::iterator iterator_t; typedef pair<iterator_t, iterator_t> range_t; #ifdef __powerpc__ @@ -598,7 +600,7 @@ symbol_table #endif // add_symbol doesn't leave symbol table in order; call // symbol_table::sort() when done adding symbols. - void add_symbol(const char *name, bool weak, Dwarf_Addr addr, + void add_symbol(const char *name, bool weak, bool global, Dwarf_Addr addr, Dwarf_Addr *high_addr); void sort(); enum info_status read_symbols(FILE *f, const string& path); @@ -611,7 +613,7 @@ symbol_table void purge_syscall_stubs(); func_info *lookup_symbol(const string& name); Dwarf_Addr lookup_symbol_address(const string& name); - func_info *get_func_containing_address(Dwarf_Addr addr); + func_info *get_func_containing_address(Dwarf_Addr addr, bool global); symbol_table(module_info *mi) : mod_info(mi) {} ~symbol_table(); @@ -2306,13 +2308,15 @@ struct dwarf_derived_probe: public derived_probe const string& module, const string& section, Dwarf_Addr dwfl_addr, - Dwarf_Addr addr, + string symbol, + unsigned int offset, dwarf_query & q, Dwarf_Die* scope_die); string module; string section; - Dwarf_Addr addr; + string kprobe_symbol; + unsigned int kprobe_offset; bool has_return; bool has_maxactive; long maxactive_val; @@ -2835,7 +2839,7 @@ dwarf_query::query_module_symtab() // Find the "function" in which the indicated address resides. Dwarf_Addr addr = (has_function_num ? function_num_val : statement_num_val); - fi = sym_table->get_func_containing_address(addr); + fi = sym_table->get_func_containing_address(addr, false); if (!fi) { cerr << "Warning: address " @@ -3260,9 +3264,18 @@ dwarf_query::add_probe_point(const string& funcname, if (! bad) { + struct module_info *mi = dw.mod_info; + if (!mi->sym_table) + mi->get_symtab(this); + struct symbol_table *sym_tab = mi->sym_table; + func_info *symbol = sym_tab->get_func_containing_address(addr, true); + sess.unwindsym_modules.insert (module); probe = new dwarf_derived_probe(funcname, filename, line, - module, reloc_section, addr, reloc_addr, *this, scope_die); + module, reloc_section, reloc_addr, + symbol->name, + (unsigned int)(addr - symbol->addr), + *this, scope_die); results.push_back(probe); } } @@ -4380,7 +4393,8 @@ dwarf_derived_probe::printsig (ostream& o) const // function instances. This is distinct from the verbose/clog // output, since this part goes into the cache hash calculations. sole_location()->print (o); - o << " /* pc=0x" << hex << addr << dec << " */"; + o << " /* pc=<" << kprobe_symbol << "+0x" << hex + << kprobe_offset << dec << "> */"; printsig_nested (o); } @@ -4406,22 +4420,26 @@ dwarf_derived_probe::dwarf_derived_probe(const string& funcname, // NB: dwfl_addr is the virtualized // address for this symbol. Dwarf_Addr dwfl_addr, - // addr is the section-offset for - // actual relocation. - Dwarf_Addr addr, + // symbol is the closest known symbol + // and offset is the offset from the symbol + string symbol, + unsigned int offset, dwarf_query& q, Dwarf_Die* scope_die /* may be null */) : derived_probe (q.base_probe, new probe_point(*q.base_loc) /* .components soon rewritten */ ), - module (module), section (section), addr (addr), + module (module), section (section), kprobe_symbol(symbol), + kprobe_offset(offset), has_return (q.has_return), has_maxactive (q.has_maxactive), maxactive_val (q.maxactive_val) { // Assert relocation invariants +#if 0 if (section == "" && dwfl_addr != addr) // addr should be absolute throw semantic_error ("missing relocation base against", q.base_loc->tok); if (section != "" && dwfl_addr == addr) // addr should be an offset throw semantic_error ("inconsistent relocation address", q.base_loc->tok); +#endif this->tok = q.base_probe->tok; @@ -4620,8 +4638,8 @@ dwarf_derived_probe_group::emit_module_decls (systemtap_session& s) // Let's find some stats for the three embedded strings. Maybe they // are small and uniform enough to justify putting char[MAX]'s into // the array instead of relocated char*'s. - size_t module_name_max = 0, section_name_max = 0, pp_name_max = 0; - size_t module_name_tot = 0, section_name_tot = 0, pp_name_tot = 0; + size_t pp_name_max = 0, pp_name_tot = 0; + size_t symbol_name_name_max = 0, symbol_name_name_tot = 0; size_t all_name_cnt = probes_by_module.size(); // for average for (p_b_m_iterator it = probes_by_module.begin(); it != probes_by_module.end(); it++) { @@ -4630,9 +4648,8 @@ dwarf_derived_probe_group::emit_module_decls (systemtap_session& s) size_t var##_size = (expr) + 1; \ var##_max = max (var##_max, var##_size); \ var##_tot += var##_size; } while (0) - DOIT(module_name, p->module.size()); - DOIT(section_name, p->section.size()); DOIT(pp_name, lex_cast_qstring(*p->sole_location()).size()); + DOIT(symbol_name_name, p->kprobe_symbol.size()); #undef DOIT } @@ -4652,11 +4669,10 @@ dwarf_derived_probe_group::emit_module_decls (systemtap_session& s) if (s.verbose > 2) clog << "stap_dwarf_probe *" << #var << endl; \ } - CALCIT(module); - CALCIT(section); CALCIT(pp); + CALCIT(symbol_name); - s.op->newline() << "const unsigned long address;"; + s.op->newline() << "unsigned int offset;"; s.op->newline() << "void (* const ph) (struct context*);"; s.op->newline(-1) << "} stap_dwarf_probes[] = {"; s.op->indent(1); @@ -4673,9 +4689,8 @@ dwarf_derived_probe_group::emit_module_decls (systemtap_session& s) assert (p->maxactive_val >= 0 && p->maxactive_val <= USHRT_MAX); s.op->line() << " .maxactive_val=" << p->maxactive_val << ","; } - s.op->line() << " .address=0x" << hex << p->addr << dec << "UL,"; - s.op->line() << " .module=\"" << p->module << "\","; - s.op->line() << " .section=\"" << p->section << "\","; + s.op->line() << " .symbol_name=\"" << p->kprobe_symbol << "\","; + s.op->line() << " .offset=0x" << hex << p->kprobe_offset << dec << ","; s.op->line() << " .pp=" << lex_cast_qstring (*p->sole_location()) << ","; s.op->line() << " .ph=&" << p->name; s.op->line() << " },"; @@ -4735,11 +4750,10 @@ dwarf_derived_probe_group::emit_module_init (systemtap_session& s) s.op->newline() << "for (i=0; i<" << probes_by_module.size() << "; i++) {"; s.op->newline(1) << "struct stap_dwarf_probe *sdp = & stap_dwarf_probes[i];"; s.op->newline() << "struct stap_dwarf_kprobe *kp = & stap_dwarf_kprobes[i];"; - s.op->newline() << "unsigned long relocated_addr = _stp_module_relocate (sdp->module, sdp->section, sdp->address);"; - s.op->newline() << "if (relocated_addr == 0) continue;"; // quietly; assume module is absent s.op->newline() << "probe_point = sdp->pp;"; s.op->newline() << "if (sdp->return_p) {"; - s.op->newline(1) << "kp->u.krp.kp.addr = (void *) relocated_addr;"; + s.op->newline(1) << "kp->u.krp.kp.symbol_name = sdp->symbol_name;"; + s.op->newline(1) << "kp->u.krp.kp.offset = sdp->offset;"; s.op->newline() << "if (sdp->maxactive_p) {"; s.op->newline(1) << "kp->u.krp.maxactive = sdp->maxactive_val;"; s.op->newline(-1) << "} else {"; @@ -4748,7 +4762,8 @@ dwarf_derived_probe_group::emit_module_init (systemtap_session& s) s.op->newline() << "kp->u.krp.handler = &enter_kretprobe_probe;"; s.op->newline() << "rc = register_kretprobe (& kp->u.krp);"; s.op->newline(-1) << "} else {"; - s.op->newline(1) << "kp->u.kp.addr = (void *) relocated_addr;"; + s.op->newline(1) << "kp->u.krp.kp.symbol_name = sdp->symbol_name;"; + s.op->newline(1) << "kp->u.krp.kp.offset = sdp->offset;"; s.op->newline() << "kp->u.kp.pre_handler = &enter_kprobe_probe;"; s.op->newline() << "rc = register_kprobe (& kp->u.kp);"; s.op->newline(-1) << "}"; @@ -4885,12 +4900,20 @@ dwarf_builder::build(systemtap_session & sess, throw semantic_error ("absolute statement probe in unprivileged script", q.base_probe->tok); } + struct module_info *mi = dw->mod_info; + if (!mi->sym_table) + mi->get_symtab(&q); + struct symbol_table *sym_tab = mi->sym_table; + func_info *symbol = sym_tab->get_func_containing_address(q.statement_num_val, true); + // For kernel.statement(NUM).absolute probe points, we bypass // all the debuginfo stuff: We just wire up a // dwarf_derived_probe right here and now. dwarf_derived_probe* p = new dwarf_derived_probe ("", "", 0, "kernel", "", - q.statement_num_val, q.statement_num_val, + q.statement_num_val, + symbol->name, + (unsigned int)(q.statement_num_val - symbol->addr), q, 0); finished_results.push_back (p); sess.unwindsym_modules.insert ("kernel"); @@ -4908,8 +4931,8 @@ symbol_table::~symbol_table() } void -symbol_table::add_symbol(const char *name, bool weak, Dwarf_Addr addr, - Dwarf_Addr *high_addr) +symbol_table::add_symbol(const char *name, bool weak, bool global, + Dwarf_Addr addr, Dwarf_Addr *high_addr) { #ifdef __powerpc__ // Map ".sys_foo" to "sys_foo". @@ -4920,10 +4943,13 @@ symbol_table::add_symbol(const char *name, bool weak, Dwarf_Addr addr, fi->addr = addr; fi->name = name; fi->weak = weak; + fi->global = global; map_by_name[fi->name] = fi; // TODO: Use a multimap in case there are multiple static // functions with the same name? list_by_addr.push_back(fi); + if (global) + global_list_by_addr.push_back(fi); } enum info_status @@ -4961,7 +4987,8 @@ symbol_table::read_symbols(FILE *f, const string& path) break; } if (type == 'T' || type == 't' || type == 'W') - add_symbol(name, (type == 'W'), (Dwarf_Addr) addr, &high_addr); + add_symbol(name, (type == 'W'), (type == 'T'), + (Dwarf_Addr) addr, &high_addr); } if (list_by_addr.size() < 1) @@ -5080,7 +5107,8 @@ symbol_table::get_from_elf() if (name && GELF_ST_TYPE(sym.st_info) == STT_FUNC && !reject_section(section)) add_symbol(name, (GELF_ST_BIND(sym.st_info) == STB_WEAK), - sym.st_value, &high_addr); + GELF_ST_BIND(sym.st_info) == STB_GLOBAL, + sym.st_value, &high_addr); } sort(); return info_present; @@ -5121,14 +5149,29 @@ symbol_table::mark_dwarf_redundancies(dwflpp *dw) } func_info * -symbol_table::get_func_containing_address(Dwarf_Addr addr) +symbol_table::get_func_containing_address(Dwarf_Addr addr, bool global) { - iterator_t iter = upper_bound(list_by_addr.begin(), list_by_addr.end(), addr, - func_info::Compare()); - if (iter == list_by_addr.begin()) - return NULL; + iterator_t iter; + + if (global) + { + iter = upper_bound(global_list_by_addr.begin(), + global_list_by_addr.end(), addr, + func_info::Compare()); + if (iter == global_list_by_addr.begin()) + return NULL; + else + return *(iter - 1); + } else - return *(iter - 1); + { + iter = upper_bound(list_by_addr.begin(), list_by_addr.end(), addr, + func_info::Compare()); + if (iter == list_by_addr.begin()) + return NULL; + else + return *(iter - 1); + } } func_info * @@ -5181,12 +5224,16 @@ symbol_table::purge_syscall_stubs() list_by_addr.erase(remove(purge_range.first, purge_range.second, (func_info*)0), purge_range.second); + // NOTE: At the moment global_list_by_addr has no weak symbols + // so nothing needs to be removed from it. } void symbol_table::sort() { stable_sort(list_by_addr.begin(), list_by_addr.end(), func_info::Compare()); + stable_sort(global_list_by_addr.begin(), global_list_by_addr.end(), + func_info::Compare()); } void -- 1.5.6 ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 41+ messages in thread
* Re: [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs (part1: use kprobe symbol_name/offset instead of address) 2008-07-17 16:59 ` James Bottomley @ 2008-07-17 21:38 ` Masami Hiramatsu 2008-07-17 22:03 ` James Bottomley 2008-07-21 14:21 ` James Bottomley 0 siblings, 2 replies; 41+ messages in thread From: Masami Hiramatsu @ 2008-07-17 21:38 UTC (permalink / raw) To: James Bottomley; +Cc: linux-kernel, systemtap James Bottomley wrote: > On Thu, 2008-07-17 at 09:18 -0500, James Bottomley wrote: >> OK, thought about it. There seem to be two possible solutions >> >> 1. Get systemtap always to offset from non-static functions. This >> will use the standard linker to ensure uniqueness (a module >> qualifier will still need to be added to the struct kprobe for >> lookup, since modules can duplicate unexported kernel symbols). >> 2. Add the filename as a discriminator for duplicate symbols in the >> kallsyms program (would still need module qualifier). This is >> appealing because the path name would be printed in the kernel >> trace to help with oops tracking >> >> This is where negotiations come in. To me 2. looks to be better because >> it will help us with oops tracking. On the other hand, it's usually >> pretty obvious from the stack trace context which files the duplicate >> symbols are actually in; what do other people think? > > Just by way of illustration, this is systemtap fixed up according to > suggestion number 1. You can see now using your test case that we get: > > # probes > kernel.function("do_open@fs/block_dev.c:929") /* pc=<lookup_bdev+0x90> */ /* <- kernel.function("do_open") */ > kernel.function("do_open@fs/nfsctl.c:24") /* pc=<sys_nfsservctl+0x6a> */ /* <- kernel.function("do_open") */ > kernel.function("do_open@ipc/mqueue.c:642") /* pc=<sys_mq_unlink+0x130> */ /* <- kernel.function("do_open") */ Hi James, Thank you for updating the patch. Unfortunately, I found another scenario; if someone make a module which has EXPORT_SYMBOL(do_open), it's a non-static function. but there are other static version do_open in kallsyms. Here, I tested it and got below; $ stap --kelf -e 'probe module("test").function("do_open"){}' -p2 # probes module("test").function("do_open@?") /* pc=<do_open+0x0> */ /* <- module("test").function("do_open") */ And I think similar issue will occur even if it is embedded in vmlinux. By the way, can this patch solve the issue of -ffunction-sections? Anyway, I think we still need solution no.2. Thank you, -- Masami Hiramatsu Software Engineer Hitachi Computer Products (America) Inc. Software Solutions Division e-mail: mhiramat@redhat.com ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 41+ messages in thread
* Re: [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs (part1: use kprobe symbol_name/offset instead of address) 2008-07-17 21:38 ` Masami Hiramatsu @ 2008-07-17 22:03 ` James Bottomley 2008-07-21 14:21 ` James Bottomley 1 sibling, 0 replies; 41+ messages in thread From: James Bottomley @ 2008-07-17 22:03 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Masami Hiramatsu; +Cc: linux-kernel, systemtap On Thu, 2008-07-17 at 17:36 -0400, Masami Hiramatsu wrote: > James Bottomley wrote: > > On Thu, 2008-07-17 at 09:18 -0500, James Bottomley wrote: > >> OK, thought about it. There seem to be two possible solutions > >> > >> 1. Get systemtap always to offset from non-static functions. This > >> will use the standard linker to ensure uniqueness (a module > >> qualifier will still need to be added to the struct kprobe for > >> lookup, since modules can duplicate unexported kernel symbols). > >> 2. Add the filename as a discriminator for duplicate symbols in the > >> kallsyms program (would still need module qualifier). This is > >> appealing because the path name would be printed in the kernel > >> trace to help with oops tracking > >> > >> This is where negotiations come in. To me 2. looks to be better because > >> it will help us with oops tracking. On the other hand, it's usually > >> pretty obvious from the stack trace context which files the duplicate > >> symbols are actually in; what do other people think? > > > > Just by way of illustration, this is systemtap fixed up according to > > suggestion number 1. You can see now using your test case that we get: > > > > # probes > > kernel.function("do_open@fs/block_dev.c:929") /* pc=<lookup_bdev+0x90> */ /* <- kernel.function("do_open") */ > > kernel.function("do_open@fs/nfsctl.c:24") /* pc=<sys_nfsservctl+0x6a> */ /* <- kernel.function("do_open") */ > > kernel.function("do_open@ipc/mqueue.c:642") /* pc=<sys_mq_unlink+0x130> */ /* <- kernel.function("do_open") */ > > Hi James, > > Thank you for updating the patch. > Unfortunately, I found another scenario; if someone make a module which > has EXPORT_SYMBOL(do_open), it's a non-static function. but there are > other static version do_open in kallsyms. > Here, I tested it and got below; > > $ stap --kelf -e 'probe module("test").function("do_open"){}' -p2 > # probes > module("test").function("do_open@?") /* pc=<do_open+0x0> */ /* <- module("test").function("do_open") */ > > And I think similar issue will occur even if it is embedded in vmlinux. Actually, no. This is only a module problem ... it's triggered by the fact that the module namespace is different from the kernel's global namespace. To get around this, I think the actual module (or null for kernel) has to become an extra parameter to struct kprobe. > By the way, can this patch solve the issue of -ffunction-sections? Actually not entirely, no, if we go for only global symbols. The compiler is entitled to spit out a section even for a static function as long as it has a real body. If the module loader insterts stubs then even an offset from a nearby function could end up being wrong > Anyway, I think we still need solution no.2. I'll cook up a patch and run it by lkml to try to gauge the reaction. James ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 41+ messages in thread
* Re: [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs (part1: use kprobe symbol_name/offset instead of address) 2008-07-17 21:38 ` Masami Hiramatsu 2008-07-17 22:03 ` James Bottomley @ 2008-07-21 14:21 ` James Bottomley 1 sibling, 0 replies; 41+ messages in thread From: James Bottomley @ 2008-07-21 14:21 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Masami Hiramatsu; +Cc: linux-kernel, systemtap On Thu, 2008-07-17 at 17:36 -0400, Masami Hiramatsu wrote: > James Bottomley wrote: > > On Thu, 2008-07-17 at 09:18 -0500, James Bottomley wrote: > >> OK, thought about it. There seem to be two possible solutions > >> > >> 1. Get systemtap always to offset from non-static functions. This > >> will use the standard linker to ensure uniqueness (a module > >> qualifier will still need to be added to the struct kprobe for > >> lookup, since modules can duplicate unexported kernel symbols). > >> 2. Add the filename as a discriminator for duplicate symbols in the > >> kallsyms program (would still need module qualifier). This is > >> appealing because the path name would be printed in the kernel > >> trace to help with oops tracking > >> > >> This is where negotiations come in. To me 2. looks to be better because > >> it will help us with oops tracking. On the other hand, it's usually > >> pretty obvious from the stack trace context which files the duplicate > >> symbols are actually in; what do other people think? > > > > Just by way of illustration, this is systemtap fixed up according to > > suggestion number 1. You can see now using your test case that we get: > > > > # probes > > kernel.function("do_open@fs/block_dev.c:929") /* pc=<lookup_bdev+0x90> */ /* <- kernel.function("do_open") */ > > kernel.function("do_open@fs/nfsctl.c:24") /* pc=<sys_nfsservctl+0x6a> */ /* <- kernel.function("do_open") */ > > kernel.function("do_open@ipc/mqueue.c:642") /* pc=<sys_mq_unlink+0x130> */ /* <- kernel.function("do_open") */ > > Hi James, > > Thank you for updating the patch. > Unfortunately, I found another scenario; if someone make a module which > has EXPORT_SYMBOL(do_open), it's a non-static function. but there are > other static version do_open in kallsyms. > Here, I tested it and got below; > > $ stap --kelf -e 'probe module("test").function("do_open"){}' -p2 > # probes > module("test").function("do_open@?") /* pc=<do_open+0x0> */ /* <- module("test").function("do_open") */ OK, I fixed this. It turns out that kprobes already had a syntax for this problem; it's <module>:<function> (in fact it won't work without this). I updated the code (attached below) to work correctly. I'm still looking at the kallsyms code for a uniqueness solution. James --- From: James Bottomley <James.Bottomley@HansenPartnership.com> Subject: Part1 use symbol_name/offset to locate dwarf probes --- tapsets.cxx | 120 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++------------------ 1 files changed, 83 insertions(+), 37 deletions(-) diff --git a/tapsets.cxx b/tapsets.cxx index a08a8ab..f24dc10 100644 --- a/tapsets.cxx +++ b/tapsets.cxx @@ -491,6 +491,7 @@ func_info Dwarf_Addr entrypc; Dwarf_Addr prologue_end; bool weak; + bool global; // Comparison functor for list of functions sorted by address. The // two versions that take a Dwarf_Addr let us use the STL algorithms // upper_bound, equal_range et al., but we don't know whether the @@ -591,6 +592,7 @@ symbol_table module_info *mod_info; // associated module map<string, func_info*> map_by_name; vector<func_info*> list_by_addr; + vector<func_info*> global_list_by_addr; typedef vector<func_info*>::iterator iterator_t; typedef pair<iterator_t, iterator_t> range_t; #ifdef __powerpc__ @@ -598,7 +600,7 @@ symbol_table #endif // add_symbol doesn't leave symbol table in order; call // symbol_table::sort() when done adding symbols. - void add_symbol(const char *name, bool weak, Dwarf_Addr addr, + void add_symbol(const char *name, bool weak, bool global, Dwarf_Addr addr, Dwarf_Addr *high_addr); void sort(); enum info_status read_symbols(FILE *f, const string& path); @@ -611,7 +613,7 @@ symbol_table void purge_syscall_stubs(); func_info *lookup_symbol(const string& name); Dwarf_Addr lookup_symbol_address(const string& name); - func_info *get_func_containing_address(Dwarf_Addr addr); + func_info *get_func_containing_address(Dwarf_Addr addr, bool global); symbol_table(module_info *mi) : mod_info(mi) {} ~symbol_table(); @@ -2309,13 +2311,15 @@ struct dwarf_derived_probe: public derived_probe const string& module, const string& section, Dwarf_Addr dwfl_addr, - Dwarf_Addr addr, + string symbol, + unsigned int offset, dwarf_query & q, Dwarf_Die* scope_die); string module; string section; - Dwarf_Addr addr; + string kprobe_symbol; + unsigned int kprobe_offset; bool has_return; bool has_maxactive; long maxactive_val; @@ -2840,7 +2844,7 @@ dwarf_query::query_module_symtab() // Find the "function" in which the indicated address resides. Dwarf_Addr addr = (has_function_num ? function_num_val : statement_num_val); - fi = sym_table->get_func_containing_address(addr); + fi = sym_table->get_func_containing_address(addr, false); if (!fi) { cerr << "Warning: address " @@ -3265,9 +3269,18 @@ dwarf_query::add_probe_point(const string& funcname, if (! bad) { + struct module_info *mi = dw.mod_info; + if (!mi->sym_table) + mi->get_symtab(this); + struct symbol_table *sym_tab = mi->sym_table; + func_info *symbol = sym_tab->get_func_containing_address(addr, true); + sess.unwindsym_modules.insert (module); probe = new dwarf_derived_probe(funcname, filename, line, - module, reloc_section, addr, reloc_addr, *this, scope_die); + module, reloc_section, reloc_addr, + symbol->name, + (unsigned int)(addr - symbol->addr), + *this, scope_die); results.push_back(probe); } } @@ -4385,7 +4398,8 @@ dwarf_derived_probe::printsig (ostream& o) const // function instances. This is distinct from the verbose/clog // output, since this part goes into the cache hash calculations. sole_location()->print (o); - o << " /* pc=0x" << hex << addr << dec << " */"; + o << " /* pc=<" << kprobe_symbol << "+0x" << hex + << kprobe_offset << dec << "> */"; printsig_nested (o); } @@ -4411,22 +4425,26 @@ dwarf_derived_probe::dwarf_derived_probe(const string& funcname, // NB: dwfl_addr is the virtualized // address for this symbol. Dwarf_Addr dwfl_addr, - // addr is the section-offset for - // actual relocation. - Dwarf_Addr addr, + // symbol is the closest known symbol + // and offset is the offset from the symbol + string symbol, + unsigned int offset, dwarf_query& q, Dwarf_Die* scope_die /* may be null */) : derived_probe (q.base_probe, new probe_point(*q.base_loc) /* .components soon rewritten */ ), - module (module), section (section), addr (addr), + module (module), section (section), kprobe_symbol(symbol), + kprobe_offset(offset), has_return (q.has_return), has_maxactive (q.has_maxactive), maxactive_val (q.maxactive_val) { // Assert relocation invariants +#if 0 if (section == "" && dwfl_addr != addr) // addr should be absolute throw semantic_error ("missing relocation base against", q.base_loc->tok); if (section != "" && dwfl_addr == addr) // addr should be an offset throw semantic_error ("inconsistent relocation address", q.base_loc->tok); +#endif this->tok = q.base_probe->tok; @@ -4634,8 +4652,8 @@ dwarf_derived_probe_group::emit_module_decls (systemtap_session& s) // Let's find some stats for the three embedded strings. Maybe they // are small and uniform enough to justify putting char[MAX]'s into // the array instead of relocated char*'s. - size_t module_name_max = 0, section_name_max = 0, pp_name_max = 0; - size_t module_name_tot = 0, section_name_tot = 0, pp_name_tot = 0; + size_t pp_name_max = 0, pp_name_tot = 0; + size_t symbol_name_name_max = 0, symbol_name_name_tot = 0; size_t all_name_cnt = probes_by_module.size(); // for average for (p_b_m_iterator it = probes_by_module.begin(); it != probes_by_module.end(); it++) { @@ -4644,9 +4662,8 @@ dwarf_derived_probe_group::emit_module_decls (systemtap_session& s) size_t var##_size = (expr) + 1; \ var##_max = max (var##_max, var##_size); \ var##_tot += var##_size; } while (0) - DOIT(module_name, p->module.size()); - DOIT(section_name, p->section.size()); DOIT(pp_name, lex_cast_qstring(*p->sole_location()).size()); + DOIT(symbol_name_name, p->kprobe_symbol.size()); #undef DOIT } @@ -4666,11 +4683,10 @@ dwarf_derived_probe_group::emit_module_decls (systemtap_session& s) if (s.verbose > 2) clog << "stap_dwarf_probe *" << #var << endl; \ } - CALCIT(module); - CALCIT(section); CALCIT(pp); + CALCIT(symbol_name); - s.op->newline() << "const unsigned long address;"; + s.op->newline() << "unsigned int offset;"; s.op->newline() << "void (* const ph) (struct context*);"; s.op->newline(-1) << "} stap_dwarf_probes[] = {"; s.op->indent(1); @@ -4687,9 +4703,8 @@ dwarf_derived_probe_group::emit_module_decls (systemtap_session& s) assert (p->maxactive_val >= 0 && p->maxactive_val <= USHRT_MAX); s.op->line() << " .maxactive_val=" << p->maxactive_val << ","; } - s.op->line() << " .address=0x" << hex << p->addr << dec << "UL,"; - s.op->line() << " .module=\"" << p->module << "\","; - s.op->line() << " .section=\"" << p->section << "\","; + s.op->line() << " .symbol_name=\"" << p->kprobe_symbol << "\","; + s.op->line() << " .offset=0x" << hex << p->kprobe_offset << dec << ","; s.op->line() << " .pp=" << lex_cast_qstring (*p->sole_location()) << ","; s.op->line() << " .ph=&" << p->name; s.op->line() << " },"; @@ -4749,11 +4764,10 @@ dwarf_derived_probe_group::emit_module_init (systemtap_session& s) s.op->newline() << "for (i=0; i<" << probes_by_module.size() << "; i++) {"; s.op->newline(1) << "struct stap_dwarf_probe *sdp = & stap_dwarf_probes[i];"; s.op->newline() << "struct stap_dwarf_kprobe *kp = & stap_dwarf_kprobes[i];"; - s.op->newline() << "unsigned long relocated_addr = _stp_module_relocate (sdp->module, sdp->section, sdp->address);"; - s.op->newline() << "if (relocated_addr == 0) continue;"; // quietly; assume module is absent s.op->newline() << "probe_point = sdp->pp;"; s.op->newline() << "if (sdp->return_p) {"; - s.op->newline(1) << "kp->u.krp.kp.addr = (void *) relocated_addr;"; + s.op->newline(1) << "kp->u.krp.kp.symbol_name = sdp->symbol_name;"; + s.op->newline(1) << "kp->u.krp.kp.offset = sdp->offset;"; s.op->newline() << "if (sdp->maxactive_p) {"; s.op->newline(1) << "kp->u.krp.maxactive = sdp->maxactive_val;"; s.op->newline(-1) << "} else {"; @@ -4774,8 +4788,8 @@ dwarf_derived_probe_group::emit_module_init (systemtap_session& s) s.op->newline() << "rc = register_kretprobe (& kp->u.krp);"; s.op->newline() << "#endif"; s.op->newline(-1) << "} else {"; - // to ensure safeness of bspcache, always use aggr_kprobe on ia64 - s.op->newline(1) << "kp->u.kp.addr = (void *) relocated_addr;"; + s.op->newline(1) << "kp->u.krp.kp.symbol_name = sdp->symbol_name;"; + s.op->newline(1) << "kp->u.krp.kp.offset = sdp->offset;"; s.op->newline() << "kp->u.kp.pre_handler = &enter_kprobe_probe;"; s.op->newline() << "#ifdef __ia64__"; s.op->newline() << "kp->dummy.addr = kp->u.kp.addr;"; @@ -4939,12 +4953,20 @@ dwarf_builder::build(systemtap_session & sess, throw semantic_error ("absolute statement probe in unprivileged script", q.base_probe->tok); } + struct module_info *mi = dw->mod_info; + if (!mi->sym_table) + mi->get_symtab(&q); + struct symbol_table *sym_tab = mi->sym_table; + func_info *symbol = sym_tab->get_func_containing_address(q.statement_num_val, true); + // For kernel.statement(NUM).absolute probe points, we bypass // all the debuginfo stuff: We just wire up a // dwarf_derived_probe right here and now. dwarf_derived_probe* p = new dwarf_derived_probe ("", "", 0, "kernel", "", - q.statement_num_val, q.statement_num_val, + q.statement_num_val, + symbol->name, + (unsigned int)(q.statement_num_val - symbol->addr), q, 0); finished_results.push_back (p); sess.unwindsym_modules.insert ("kernel"); @@ -4962,8 +4984,8 @@ symbol_table::~symbol_table() } void -symbol_table::add_symbol(const char *name, bool weak, Dwarf_Addr addr, - Dwarf_Addr *high_addr) +symbol_table::add_symbol(const char *name, bool weak, bool global, + Dwarf_Addr addr, Dwarf_Addr *high_addr) { #ifdef __powerpc__ // Map ".sys_foo" to "sys_foo". @@ -4974,10 +4996,13 @@ symbol_table::add_symbol(const char *name, bool weak, Dwarf_Addr addr, fi->addr = addr; fi->name = name; fi->weak = weak; + fi->global = global; map_by_name[fi->name] = fi; // TODO: Use a multimap in case there are multiple static // functions with the same name? list_by_addr.push_back(fi); + if (global) + global_list_by_addr.push_back(fi); } enum info_status @@ -5015,7 +5040,8 @@ symbol_table::read_symbols(FILE *f, const string& path) break; } if (type == 'T' || type == 't' || type == 'W') - add_symbol(name, (type == 'W'), (Dwarf_Addr) addr, &high_addr); + add_symbol(name, (type == 'W'), (type == 'T'), + (Dwarf_Addr) addr, &high_addr); } if (list_by_addr.size() < 1) @@ -5134,7 +5160,8 @@ symbol_table::get_from_elf() if (name && GELF_ST_TYPE(sym.st_info) == STT_FUNC && !reject_section(section)) add_symbol(name, (GELF_ST_BIND(sym.st_info) == STB_WEAK), - sym.st_value, &high_addr); + GELF_ST_BIND(sym.st_info) == STB_GLOBAL, + sym.st_value, &high_addr); } sort(); return info_present; @@ -5175,14 +5202,29 @@ symbol_table::mark_dwarf_redundancies(dwflpp *dw) } func_info * -symbol_table::get_func_containing_address(Dwarf_Addr addr) +symbol_table::get_func_containing_address(Dwarf_Addr addr, bool global) { - iterator_t iter = upper_bound(list_by_addr.begin(), list_by_addr.end(), addr, - func_info::Compare()); - if (iter == list_by_addr.begin()) - return NULL; + iterator_t iter; + + if (global) + { + iter = upper_bound(global_list_by_addr.begin(), + global_list_by_addr.end(), addr, + func_info::Compare()); + if (iter == global_list_by_addr.begin()) + return NULL; + else + return *(iter - 1); + } else - return *(iter - 1); + { + iter = upper_bound(list_by_addr.begin(), list_by_addr.end(), addr, + func_info::Compare()); + if (iter == list_by_addr.begin()) + return NULL; + else + return *(iter - 1); + } } func_info * @@ -5235,12 +5277,16 @@ symbol_table::purge_syscall_stubs() list_by_addr.erase(remove(purge_range.first, purge_range.second, (func_info*)0), purge_range.second); + // NOTE: At the moment global_list_by_addr has no weak symbols + // so nothing needs to be removed from it. } void symbol_table::sort() { stable_sort(list_by_addr.begin(), list_by_addr.end(), func_info::Compare()); + stable_sort(global_list_by_addr.begin(), global_list_by_addr.end(), + func_info::Compare()); } void -- 1.5.6.2 ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 41+ messages in thread
[parent not found: <1216313914.5515.25.camel__21144.9282979176$1216314027$gmane$org@localhost.localdomain>]
* Re: [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs (part1: use kprobe symbol_name/offset instead of address) [not found] ` <1216313914.5515.25.camel__21144.9282979176$1216314027$gmane$org@localhost.localdomain> @ 2008-07-17 18:32 ` Frank Ch. Eigler 2008-07-17 20:13 ` James Bottomley 0 siblings, 1 reply; 41+ messages in thread From: Frank Ch. Eigler @ 2008-07-17 18:32 UTC (permalink / raw) To: James Bottomley; +Cc: Masami Hiramatsu, linux-kernel, systemtap James Bottomley <James.Bottomley@HansenPartnership.com> writes: > [...] > Just by way of illustration, this is systemtap fixed up according to > suggestion number 1. You can see now using your test case that we get: > > # probes > kernel.function("do_open@fs/block_dev.c:929") /* pc=<lookup_bdev+0x90> */ /* <- kernel.function("do_open") */ > kernel.function("do_open@fs/nfsctl.c:24") /* pc=<sys_nfsservctl+0x6a> */ /* <- kernel.function("do_open") */ > kernel.function("do_open@ipc/mqueue.c:642") /* pc=<sys_mq_unlink+0x130> */ /* <- kernel.function("do_open") */ > [...] Can you explain in detail how you believe this is materially different from offsetting from _stext? - FChE ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 41+ messages in thread
* Re: [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs (part1: use kprobe symbol_name/offset instead of address) 2008-07-17 18:32 ` Frank Ch. Eigler @ 2008-07-17 20:13 ` James Bottomley 2008-07-17 20:28 ` Frank Ch. Eigler 0 siblings, 1 reply; 41+ messages in thread From: James Bottomley @ 2008-07-17 20:13 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Frank Ch. Eigler; +Cc: Masami Hiramatsu, linux-kernel, systemtap On Thu, 2008-07-17 at 14:30 -0400, Frank Ch. Eigler wrote: > James Bottomley <James.Bottomley@HansenPartnership.com> writes: > > > [...] > > Just by way of illustration, this is systemtap fixed up according to > > suggestion number 1. You can see now using your test case that we get: > > > > # probes > > kernel.function("do_open@fs/block_dev.c:929") /* pc=<lookup_bdev+0x90> */ /* <- kernel.function("do_open") */ > > kernel.function("do_open@fs/nfsctl.c:24") /* pc=<sys_nfsservctl+0x6a> */ /* <- kernel.function("do_open") */ > > kernel.function("do_open@ipc/mqueue.c:642") /* pc=<sys_mq_unlink+0x130> */ /* <- kernel.function("do_open") */ > > [...] > > Can you explain in detail how you believe this is materially > different from offsetting from _stext? Basically because _stext is an incredibly dangerous symbol; being linker generated it doesn't actually get put in the right place if you look: jejb@sparkweed> nm vmlinux |egrep -w '_stext|_text' ffffffff80209000 T _stext ffffffff80200000 A _text Since we can't do negative offsets, you've lost access to the symbols in the sections that start before _stext. Assuming you meant _text (which is dangerous because it's a define in the kernel linker script and could change). Then you can't offset into other sections, like init sections or modules. James James ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 41+ messages in thread
* Re: [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs (part1: use kprobe symbol_name/offset instead of address) 2008-07-17 20:13 ` James Bottomley @ 2008-07-17 20:28 ` Frank Ch. Eigler 2008-07-17 21:06 ` James Bottomley 0 siblings, 1 reply; 41+ messages in thread From: Frank Ch. Eigler @ 2008-07-17 20:28 UTC (permalink / raw) To: James Bottomley; +Cc: Masami Hiramatsu, linux-kernel, systemtap Hi - On Thu, Jul 17, 2008 at 03:12:26PM -0500, James Bottomley wrote: > [...] > > Can you explain in detail how you believe this is materially > > different from offsetting from _stext? > > Basically because _stext is an incredibly dangerous symbol; being linker > generated it doesn't actually get put in the right place if you look: Thank you for your response. > jejb@sparkweed> nm vmlinux |egrep -w '_stext|_text' > ffffffff80209000 T _stext > ffffffff80200000 A _text > > Since we can't do negative offsets Actually, "we" as in systemtap could do it just fine if that were desired. And really _stext is therefore an arbitrary choice - it could be any other reference. My point is that the proposed effort to identify a nearby function symbol to use as a base for each probe's symbol+offset calculation is wasted. > you've lost access to the symbols in the sections that start before _stext. What's between _text and _stext appears to consist of kernel boot-time functions that are unmapped the time anything like systemtap could run. > Assuming you meant _text (which is dangerous because it's a define > in the kernel linker script and could change). By "dangerous" do you only mean that it may require a one-liner catch-up patch in systemtap if the kernel linker scripts change? > Then you can't offset into other sections, like init sections or > modules. Kernel init sections are unprobeable by definition, so that doesn't matter. Modules are also irrelevant, since their addresses are relative to their relocation bases / sections, not to a kernel (vmlinux) symbol. - FChE ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 41+ messages in thread
* Re: [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs (part1: use kprobe symbol_name/offset instead of address) 2008-07-17 20:28 ` Frank Ch. Eigler @ 2008-07-17 21:06 ` James Bottomley 2008-07-17 21:35 ` Frank Ch. Eigler 0 siblings, 1 reply; 41+ messages in thread From: James Bottomley @ 2008-07-17 21:06 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Frank Ch. Eigler; +Cc: Masami Hiramatsu, linux-kernel, systemtap On Thu, 2008-07-17 at 16:26 -0400, Frank Ch. Eigler wrote: > Hi - > > On Thu, Jul 17, 2008 at 03:12:26PM -0500, James Bottomley wrote: > > [...] > > > Can you explain in detail how you believe this is materially > > > different from offsetting from _stext? > > > > Basically because _stext is an incredibly dangerous symbol; being linker > > generated it doesn't actually get put in the right place if you look: > > Thank you for your response. > > > jejb@sparkweed> nm vmlinux |egrep -w '_stext|_text' > > ffffffff80209000 T _stext > > ffffffff80200000 A _text > > > > Since we can't do negative offsets > > Actually, "we" as in systemtap could do it just fine if that were > desired. And really _stext is therefore an arbitrary choice - it > could be any other reference. > > My point is that the proposed effort to identify a nearby function > symbol to use as a base for each probe's symbol+offset calculation is > wasted. It's not exactly wasted ... the calculations have to be done anyway for modules. > > you've lost access to the symbols in the sections that start before _stext. > > What's between _text and _stext appears to consist of kernel boot-time > functions that are unmapped the time anything like systemtap could > run. Well, no, they're the head code. It's actually used in CPU boot and tear down, one of the things it's useful to probe, I think. > > Assuming you meant _text (which is dangerous because it's a define > > in the kernel linker script and could change). > > By "dangerous" do you only mean that it may require a one-liner > catch-up patch in systemtap if the kernel linker scripts change? Dangerous as in it's not necessarily part of the kernel linker scripts. Some arches have it defined as a symbol, some have it as a linker script definition ... that's why it's location is strange. The point, really, is to remove some of the fragile dependencies between systemtap and the kernel. > > Then you can't offset into other sections, like init sections or > > modules. > > Kernel init sections are unprobeable by definition, so that doesn't > matter. Modules are also irrelevant, since their addresses are > relative to their relocation bases / sections, not to a kernel > (vmlinux) symbol. Then the definition needs altering. I can see that the industrial customers aren't interested but kernel developers are ... a lot of problems occur in the init sections. I think you'll find that systemtap will run quite happily from a shell in an initramfs before the init sections are discarded. Plus there's always module init sections which can appear at any time. James ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 41+ messages in thread
* Re: [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs (part1: use kprobe symbol_name/offset instead of address) 2008-07-17 21:06 ` James Bottomley @ 2008-07-17 21:35 ` Frank Ch. Eigler 2008-07-17 22:05 ` Masami Hiramatsu 2008-07-22 18:00 ` Rik van Riel 0 siblings, 2 replies; 41+ messages in thread From: Frank Ch. Eigler @ 2008-07-17 21:35 UTC (permalink / raw) To: James Bottomley; +Cc: Masami Hiramatsu, linux-kernel, systemtap Hi - On Thu, Jul 17, 2008 at 04:06:09PM -0500, James Bottomley wrote: > [...] > > My point is that the proposed effort to identify a nearby function > > symbol to use as a base for each probe's symbol+offset calculation is > > wasted. > > It's not exactly wasted ... the calculations have to be done anyway for > modules. Not really - we just anchor off a different (per-module) reference symbol or address. At the moment, we use the .text* section bases. > > > you've lost access to the symbols in the sections that start before _stext. > > > > What's between _text and _stext appears to consist of kernel boot-time > > functions that are unmapped the time anything like systemtap could > > run. > > Well, no, they're the head code. It's actually used in CPU boot and > tear down, one of the things it's useful to probe, I think. Fair enough - conceivably probing that stuff is useful, as is module initialization. We don't try to do it yet (and indeed kprobes blocks it all). In any case, the method of probe address calculation doesn't affect that issue. We can calculate .init* addresses relative to any convenient reference in exactly the same way as non-.init addresses. > > > Assuming you meant _text (which is dangerous because it's a define > > > in the kernel linker script and could change). > > > > By "dangerous" do you only mean that it may require a one-liner > > catch-up patch in systemtap if the kernel linker scripts change? > > Dangerous as in it's not necessarily part of the kernel linker scripts. > [...] > The point, really, is to remove some of the fragile dependencies between > systemtap and the kernel. Yes, that is generally desirable - each case is usually a question of cost/benefit. One significant requirement for us is to keep working with older kernels. - FChE ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 41+ messages in thread
* Re: [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs (part1: use kprobe symbol_name/offset instead of address) 2008-07-17 21:35 ` Frank Ch. Eigler @ 2008-07-17 22:05 ` Masami Hiramatsu 2008-07-22 18:00 ` Rik van Riel 1 sibling, 0 replies; 41+ messages in thread From: Masami Hiramatsu @ 2008-07-17 22:05 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Frank Ch. Eigler; +Cc: James Bottomley, linux-kernel, systemtap Frank Ch. Eigler wrote: > Hi - > > > On Thu, Jul 17, 2008 at 04:06:09PM -0500, James Bottomley wrote: > >> [...] >>> My point is that the proposed effort to identify a nearby function >>> symbol to use as a base for each probe's symbol+offset calculation is >>> wasted. >> It's not exactly wasted ... the calculations have to be done anyway for >> modules. > > Not really - we just anchor off a different (per-module) reference > symbol or address. At the moment, we use the .text* section bases. > > >>>> you've lost access to the symbols in the sections that start before _stext. >>> What's between _text and _stext appears to consist of kernel boot-time >>> functions that are unmapped the time anything like systemtap could >>> run. >> Well, no, they're the head code. It's actually used in CPU boot and >> tear down, one of the things it's useful to probe, I think. > > Fair enough - conceivably probing that stuff is useful, as is module > initialization. We don't try to do it yet (and indeed kprobes blocks > it all). > > In any case, the method of probe address calculation doesn't affect > that issue. We can calculate .init* addresses relative to any > convenient reference in exactly the same way as non-.init addresses. > > >>>> Assuming you meant _text (which is dangerous because it's a define >>>> in the kernel linker script and could change). >>> By "dangerous" do you only mean that it may require a one-liner >>> catch-up patch in systemtap if the kernel linker scripts change? >> Dangerous as in it's not necessarily part of the kernel linker scripts. >> [...] >> The point, really, is to remove some of the fragile dependencies between >> systemtap and the kernel. > > Yes, that is generally desirable - each case is usually a question of > cost/benefit. One significant requirement for us is to keep working > with older kernels. Hi Frank, I know we'd better archive that requirement. However, if we lose support from developers because we are too much focusing on that, we'll also lose the future of systemtap itself. We have to see the cost/benefit from the long-term of view. Could we separate systemtap parser/elaborator and code generator to support both of old and new kernels? Thank you, -- Masami Hiramatsu Software Engineer Hitachi Computer Products (America) Inc. Software Solutions Division e-mail: mhiramat@redhat.com ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 41+ messages in thread
* Re: [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs (part1: use kprobe symbol_name/offset instead of address) 2008-07-17 21:35 ` Frank Ch. Eigler 2008-07-17 22:05 ` Masami Hiramatsu @ 2008-07-22 18:00 ` Rik van Riel 2008-07-22 18:12 ` Frank Ch. Eigler 2008-07-23 15:06 ` systemtap & backward compatibility, was Re: [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs Frank Ch. Eigler 1 sibling, 2 replies; 41+ messages in thread From: Rik van Riel @ 2008-07-22 18:00 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Frank Ch. Eigler Cc: James Bottomley, Masami Hiramatsu, linux-kernel, systemtap On Thu, 17 Jul 2008 17:33:55 -0400 "Frank Ch. Eigler" <fche@redhat.com> wrote: > Yes, that is generally desirable - each case is usually a question of > cost/benefit. One significant requirement for us is to keep working > with older kernels. You will have to weigh that against the benefits of making systemtap generally useful for kernel developers, which would result in a more active systemtap community and, eventually, more available scripts and easier end user functionality. If a project is not aimed squarely at the developers who could give the project critical mass, it is essentially doomed. -- All rights reversed. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 41+ messages in thread
* Re: [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs (part1: use kprobe symbol_name/offset instead of address) 2008-07-22 18:00 ` Rik van Riel @ 2008-07-22 18:12 ` Frank Ch. Eigler 2008-07-22 18:31 ` Peter Zijlstra [not found] ` <1216751477.7257.115.camel__19834.5970632092$1216751567$gmane$org@twins> 2008-07-23 15:06 ` systemtap & backward compatibility, was Re: [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs Frank Ch. Eigler 1 sibling, 2 replies; 41+ messages in thread From: Frank Ch. Eigler @ 2008-07-22 18:12 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Rik van Riel; +Cc: James Bottomley, Masami Hiramatsu, linux-kernel, systemtap Hi - On Tue, Jul 22, 2008 at 02:00:15PM -0400, Rik van Riel wrote: > [...] > > Yes, that is generally desirable - each case is usually a question of > > cost/benefit. One significant requirement for us is to keep working > > with older kernels. > > You will have to weigh that against the benefits of making > systemtap generally useful for kernel developers [...] Understood & agreed, Rik. If an issue arises where there is genuine conflict between kernel-developer-usability and something else, we'll try to solve it favouring the former if at all possible. (The kprobes addressing argument cannot reasonably be placed into this category.) - FChE ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 41+ messages in thread
* Re: [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs (part1: use kprobe symbol_name/offset instead of address) 2008-07-22 18:12 ` Frank Ch. Eigler @ 2008-07-22 18:31 ` Peter Zijlstra [not found] ` <1216751477.7257.115.camel__19834.5970632092$1216751567$gmane$org@twins> 1 sibling, 0 replies; 41+ messages in thread From: Peter Zijlstra @ 2008-07-22 18:31 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Frank Ch. Eigler Cc: Rik van Riel, James Bottomley, Masami Hiramatsu, linux-kernel, systemtap On Tue, 2008-07-22 at 14:11 -0400, Frank Ch. Eigler wrote: > Hi - > > On Tue, Jul 22, 2008 at 02:00:15PM -0400, Rik van Riel wrote: > > [...] > > > Yes, that is generally desirable - each case is usually a question of > > > cost/benefit. One significant requirement for us is to keep working > > > with older kernels. > > > > You will have to weigh that against the benefits of making > > systemtap generally useful for kernel developers [...] > > Understood & agreed, Rik. If an issue arises where there is genuine > conflict between kernel-developer-usability and something else, we'll > try to solve it favouring the former if at all possible. > > (The kprobes addressing argument cannot reasonably be placed into this > category.) You have your viewpoint inverted, if the kernel developers think you have a problem, and you fail to address it, they will walk away. If you want the kernel people to endorse your project, you'll have to please them. Its that simple. If that means having to radically re-structure your design, and/or break backwards compatibility then so be it. Such are the costs for not collaborating from the start. If you stubbornly refuse to co-operate you'll either break the project or invite a fork/rewrite by someone else if the idea is deemed worthwhile enough. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 41+ messages in thread
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* Re: [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs (part1: use kprobe symbol_name/offset instead of address) [not found] ` <1216751477.7257.115.camel__19834.5970632092$1216751567$gmane$org@twins> @ 2008-07-22 18:50 ` Frank Ch. Eigler 0 siblings, 0 replies; 41+ messages in thread From: Frank Ch. Eigler @ 2008-07-22 18:50 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Peter Zijlstra Cc: Rik van Riel, James Bottomley, Masami Hiramatsu, linux-kernel, systemtap Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org> writes: > [...] >> > You will have to weigh that against the benefits of making >> > systemtap generally useful for kernel developers [...] >> >> Understood & agreed, Rik. If an issue arises where there is genuine >> conflict between kernel-developer-usability and something else, we'll >> try to solve it favouring the former if at all possible. >> >> (The kprobes addressing argument cannot reasonably be placed into this >> category.) > You have your viewpoint inverted, if the kernel developers think you > have a problem, and you fail to address it, they will walk away. > > If you want the kernel people to endorse your project, you'll have > to please them. It's that simple. [...] We have and will try to accomodate anything reasonable. I trust no one is suggesting that every systemtap-related suggestion from lkml is to be treated as if infallible, and that we can continue to debate the wisdom of each idea on its merits. - FChE ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 41+ messages in thread
* systemtap & backward compatibility, was Re: [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs 2008-07-22 18:00 ` Rik van Riel 2008-07-22 18:12 ` Frank Ch. Eigler @ 2008-07-23 15:06 ` Frank Ch. Eigler 2008-07-23 15:29 ` Arjan van de Ven ` (2 more replies) 1 sibling, 3 replies; 41+ messages in thread From: Frank Ch. Eigler @ 2008-07-23 15:06 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Rik van Riel; +Cc: James Bottomley, Masami Hiramatsu, linux-kernel, systemtap Hi - I wrote: > > [...] One significant requirement for us is to keep working with > > older kernels. [...] Maybe it's worth elaborating on why the need for backward compatibility is different for systemtap than for typical kernel-side code. The bulk of systemtap is a user-space program, and it does very user-spacey things like parsing dwarf and invoking compilers, running network servers. Soon it will include user-space libraries. It is so different from the stuff normally found there that no one has AFAIK seriously proposed that the entire software be made part of the kernel git tree. So it is an ordinary separate user-space package, built by users and distributors. It does happen to *generate* kernel modules. The way that such a module must interface with any particular kernel is naturally subject to the whims & desires of the kernel du jour. This is why we have a mass of mechanism to try to automatically speak to each kernel version as appropriate. It is desirable to minimize this mass for obvious reasons. When a new upstream kernel comes out with a tasty new feature -- or a less tasty API rewrite -- we need to extend systemtap to support that too. We cannot easily take old support away, because then the same user-space code base would no longer run against actually installed kernels. To draw an analogy, systemtap is somewhat like low-level userspace code like glibc or syslogd or udevd. I hope no one would seriously propose casually committing code to those packages that would make them unusable on prior kernel versions. Accepting such a patch would require their maintainers to fork outright every time a kernel change occurs. Things are good however if the low-level userspace changes are backward-compatible, so that the new kernel facility is used when present, but the software does not regress if it is not. I believe this is what we need to aim for, even though it puts the bulk of the burden on systemtap (or glibc, or ...). I hope this fills in some of the gaps in the background. - FChE ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 41+ messages in thread
* Re: systemtap & backward compatibility, was Re: [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs 2008-07-23 15:06 ` systemtap & backward compatibility, was Re: [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs Frank Ch. Eigler @ 2008-07-23 15:29 ` Arjan van de Ven 2008-07-23 15:33 ` Peter Zijlstra [not found] ` <20080723082856.334f9c17__2909.60763018138$1216827051$gmane$org@infradead.org> 2 siblings, 0 replies; 41+ messages in thread From: Arjan van de Ven @ 2008-07-23 15:29 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Frank Ch. Eigler Cc: Rik van Riel, James Bottomley, Masami Hiramatsu, linux-kernel, systemtap On Wed, 23 Jul 2008 11:04:34 -0400 "Frank Ch. Eigler" <fche@redhat.com> wrote: > Hi - > > I wrote: > > > > [...] One significant requirement for us is to keep working with > > > older kernels. [...] > > Maybe it's worth elaborating on why the need for backward > compatibility is different for systemtap than for typical kernel-side > code. > > The bulk of systemtap is a user-space program, and it does very > user-spacey things like parsing dwarf and invoking compilers, running > network servers. Soon it will include user-space libraries. It is so > different from the stuff normally found there that no one has AFAIK > seriously proposed that the entire software be made part of the kernel > git tree. So it is an ordinary separate user-space package, built by > users and distributors. so far so good... > > It does happen to *generate* kernel modules. The way that such a > module must interface with any particular kernel is naturally subject > to the whims & desires of the kernel du jour. This is why we have a > mass of mechanism to try to automatically speak to each kernel version > as appropriate. and this is where I strongly disagree. THIS part *has* to be in the kernel source, so that we can change it WITH the kernel as we change it. If this means that there's some userland .so code in the kernel source, so be it. If it means we provide some template files that your userland fills in the blanks for, even better. (paint-by-number kernel modules!) But to have any chance at all of systemtap being sustainable, this part of the stack has to be together with where the changes happen. > > It is desirable to minimize this mass for obvious reasons. When a new > upstream kernel comes out with a tasty new feature -- or a less tasty > API rewrite -- we need to extend systemtap to support that too. At that point you are already 3 months too late for me, and probably for most of my fellow kernel hackers. THIS is exactly what makes systemtap not usable for kernel hackers, and this is exactly why you see very little contributions from kernel hackers. (and when it's seen it gets a rather luke warm reception, but that's a different story). It also means that unless I want to package and build systemtap myself, I have to wait for my OS vendor to think about moving to the kernel I'm on before I can use systemtap. For me as kernel developer.. that's the second show stopper already. > To draw an analogy, systemtap is somewhat like low-level userspace > code like glibc or syslogd or udevd. I hope no one would seriously > propose casually committing code to those packages that would make > them unusable on prior kernel versions. Accepting such a patch would > require their maintainers to fork outright every time a kernel change > occurs. we've discussed pulling udev into the kernel source several times, and the jury is still out on it. But systemtap is NOT like udev or glibc or .. it's a kernel component.. at least the part that generates the kernel code is. it needs to breathe and move together with the kernel. > > I hope this fills in some of the gaps in the background. it explains where you're coming from, which is good. However I for one really disagree with the assumption, and i just tried to point out that the consequences of this are rather dreadful. -- If you want to reach me at my work email, use arjan@linux.intel.com For development, discussion and tips for power savings, visit http://www.lesswatts.org ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 41+ messages in thread
* Re: systemtap & backward compatibility, was Re: [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs 2008-07-23 15:06 ` systemtap & backward compatibility, was Re: [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs Frank Ch. Eigler 2008-07-23 15:29 ` Arjan van de Ven @ 2008-07-23 15:33 ` Peter Zijlstra 2008-07-23 20:26 ` Masami Hiramatsu [not found] ` <20080723082856.334f9c17__2909.60763018138$1216827051$gmane$org@infradead.org> 2 siblings, 1 reply; 41+ messages in thread From: Peter Zijlstra @ 2008-07-23 15:33 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Frank Ch. Eigler Cc: Rik van Riel, James Bottomley, Masami Hiramatsu, linux-kernel, systemtap On Wed, 2008-07-23 at 11:04 -0400, Frank Ch. Eigler wrote: > Hi - > > I wrote: > > > > [...] One significant requirement for us is to keep working with > > > older kernels. [...] > > Maybe it's worth elaborating on why the need for backward > compatibility is different for systemtap than for typical kernel-side > code. > > The bulk of systemtap is a user-space program, and it does very > user-spacey things like parsing dwarf and invoking compilers, running > network servers. Soon it will include user-space libraries. It is so > different from the stuff normally found there that no one has AFAIK > seriously proposed that the entire software be made part of the kernel > git tree. So it is an ordinary separate user-space package, built by > users and distributors. > > It does happen to *generate* kernel modules. The way that such a > module must interface with any particular kernel is naturally subject > to the whims & desires of the kernel du jour. This is why we have a > mass of mechanism to try to automatically speak to each kernel version > as appropriate. > > It is desirable to minimize this mass for obvious reasons. When a new > upstream kernel comes out with a tasty new feature -- or a less tasty > API rewrite -- we need to extend systemtap to support that too. We > cannot easily take old support away, because then the same user-space > code base would no longer run against actually installed kernels. > > To draw an analogy, systemtap is somewhat like low-level userspace > code like glibc or syslogd or udevd. I hope no one would seriously > propose casually committing code to those packages that would make > them unusable on prior kernel versions. Accepting such a patch would > require their maintainers to fork outright every time a kernel change > occurs. > > Things are good however if the low-level userspace changes are > backward-compatible, so that the new kernel facility is used when > present, but the software does not regress if it is not. I believe > this is what we need to aim for, even though it puts the bulk of the > burden on systemtap (or glibc, or ...). > > I hope this fills in some of the gaps in the background. Why does a new version of stap have to work on ancient kernels? A new gnome version requires a new gtk version, a new kde version requires a new qt etc.. so why does a new stap not require a new kernel? Why isn't only supporting the last few kernels, say for example as far back as there are -stable series at the moment of release, good enough? People who insist on running stale kernels are usually the same people who run stale userspace - we call those enterprise people - so why can't they run matching stale version of the kernel and stap? ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 41+ messages in thread
* Re: systemtap & backward compatibility, was Re: [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs 2008-07-23 15:33 ` Peter Zijlstra @ 2008-07-23 20:26 ` Masami Hiramatsu 0 siblings, 0 replies; 41+ messages in thread From: Masami Hiramatsu @ 2008-07-23 20:26 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Peter Zijlstra, Frank Ch. Eigler Cc: Rik van Riel, James Bottomley, linux-kernel, systemtap Hi, Peter Zijlstra wrote: > On Wed, 2008-07-23 at 11:04 -0400, Frank Ch. Eigler wrote: >> Hi - >> >> I wrote: >> >>>> [...] One significant requirement for us is to keep working with >>>> older kernels. [...] >> Maybe it's worth elaborating on why the need for backward >> compatibility is different for systemtap than for typical kernel-side >> code. >> >> The bulk of systemtap is a user-space program, and it does very >> user-spacey things like parsing dwarf and invoking compilers, running >> network servers. Soon it will include user-space libraries. It is so >> different from the stuff normally found there that no one has AFAIK >> seriously proposed that the entire software be made part of the kernel >> git tree. So it is an ordinary separate user-space package, built by >> users and distributors. >> >> It does happen to *generate* kernel modules. The way that such a >> module must interface with any particular kernel is naturally subject >> to the whims & desires of the kernel du jour. This is why we have a >> mass of mechanism to try to automatically speak to each kernel version >> as appropriate. >> >> It is desirable to minimize this mass for obvious reasons. When a new >> upstream kernel comes out with a tasty new feature -- or a less tasty >> API rewrite -- we need to extend systemtap to support that too. We >> cannot easily take old support away, because then the same user-space >> code base would no longer run against actually installed kernels. >> >> To draw an analogy, systemtap is somewhat like low-level userspace >> code like glibc or syslogd or udevd. I hope no one would seriously >> propose casually committing code to those packages that would make >> them unusable on prior kernel versions. Accepting such a patch would >> require their maintainers to fork outright every time a kernel change >> occurs. >> >> Things are good however if the low-level userspace changes are >> backward-compatible, so that the new kernel facility is used when >> present, but the software does not regress if it is not. I believe >> this is what we need to aim for, even though it puts the bulk of the >> burden on systemtap (or glibc, or ...). >> >> I hope this fills in some of the gaps in the background. > > Why does a new version of stap have to work on ancient kernels? > > A new gnome version requires a new gtk version, a new kde version > requires a new qt etc.. so why does a new stap not require a new kernel? > > Why isn't only supporting the last few kernels, say for example as far > back as there are -stable series at the moment of release, good enough? > > People who insist on running stale kernels are usually the same people > who run stale userspace - we call those enterprise people - so why can't > they run matching stale version of the kernel and stap? I agree with you. currently, systemtap is increasingly evolving on single source tree. But it is obvious that this developing style can't catch up the upstream development. I'd like to suggest that we might better branch the tree -- one is stable tree for old kernel, another aims to merge into upstream. Thank you, -- Masami Hiramatsu Software Engineer Hitachi Computer Products (America) Inc. Software Solutions Division e-mail: mhiramat@redhat.com ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 41+ messages in thread
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* Re: systemtap & backward compatibility, was Re: [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs [not found] ` <20080723082856.334f9c17__2909.60763018138$1216827051$gmane$org@infradead.org> @ 2008-07-23 16:43 ` Frank Ch. Eigler 2008-07-23 16:54 ` Adrian Bunk 2008-07-23 22:14 ` Masami Hiramatsu 0 siblings, 2 replies; 41+ messages in thread From: Frank Ch. Eigler @ 2008-07-23 16:43 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Arjan van de Ven Cc: Rik van Riel, James Bottomley, Masami Hiramatsu, linux-kernel, systemtap Arjan van de Ven <arjan@infradead.org> writes: > [...] >> It does happen to *generate* kernel modules. The way that such a >> module must interface with any particular kernel is naturally subject >> to the whims & desires of the kernel du jour. This is why we have a >> mass of mechanism to try to automatically speak to each kernel version >> as appropriate. > and this is where I strongly disagree. THIS part *has* to be in the > kernel source, so that we can change it WITH the kernel as we change > it. [...] But to have any chance at all of systemtap being > sustainable, this part of the stack has to be together with where > the changes happen. OK. It will take us some time to figure out to what extent this would be feasible. Maybe a topic for Portland. >> It is desirable to minimize this mass for obvious reasons. When a new >> upstream kernel comes out with a tasty new feature -- or a less tasty >> API rewrite -- we need to extend systemtap to support that too. > > At that point you are already 3 months too late for me, and probably > for most of my fellow kernel hackers. (Really? Have we ever been 3 months behind supporting the git kernel?) > (and when it's seen it gets a rather luke warm reception, but that's > a different story). I hope the backward compatibility issue, as it stands today, helps explain the reasons for the current deal with kprobes. In the interim (before we come up with a way of moving more kernel-coupled systemtap code into kernel.org/git), would y'all consider an arrangement? Those of you who care about systemtap, and are intending to make an incompatible kernel/module interface change, please run the systemtap testsuite before & after. If it regresses, send us a note or a patch. If practical, we'll integrate it (and add any backward-compatibility hacks if needed) into systemtap. - FChE ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 41+ messages in thread
* Re: systemtap & backward compatibility, was Re: [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs 2008-07-23 16:43 ` Frank Ch. Eigler @ 2008-07-23 16:54 ` Adrian Bunk 2008-07-23 17:43 ` Frank Ch. Eigler 2008-07-23 22:14 ` Masami Hiramatsu 1 sibling, 1 reply; 41+ messages in thread From: Adrian Bunk @ 2008-07-23 16:54 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Frank Ch. Eigler Cc: Arjan van de Ven, Rik van Riel, James Bottomley, Masami Hiramatsu, linux-kernel, systemtap On Wed, Jul 23, 2008 at 12:41:37PM -0400, Frank Ch. Eigler wrote: >... > In the interim (before we come up with a way of moving more > kernel-coupled systemtap code into kernel.org/git), would y'all > consider an arrangement? Those of you who care about systemtap, and > are intending to make an incompatible kernel/module interface change, > please run the systemtap testsuite before & after. If it regresses, > send us a note or a patch. If practical, we'll integrate it (and add > any backward-compatibility hacks if needed) into systemtap. The number of incompatible kernel/module interface changes per kernel is most likely some medium three digit number. What you have in mind is therefore not really feasible. But we have several levels of kernels that incorporate future stuff, from -rc over -next to -mm, and you could implement automated runs of the systemtap testsuite against the latest ones. > - FChE cu Adrian -- "Is there not promise of rain?" Ling Tan asked suddenly out of the darkness. There had been need of rain for many days. "Only a promise," Lao Er said. Pearl S. Buck - Dragon Seed ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 41+ messages in thread
* Re: systemtap & backward compatibility, was Re: [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs 2008-07-23 16:54 ` Adrian Bunk @ 2008-07-23 17:43 ` Frank Ch. Eigler 2008-07-23 18:41 ` Adrian Bunk 0 siblings, 1 reply; 41+ messages in thread From: Frank Ch. Eigler @ 2008-07-23 17:43 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Adrian Bunk Cc: Arjan van de Ven, Rik van Riel, James Bottomley, Masami Hiramatsu, linux-kernel, systemtap Hi - On Wed, Jul 23, 2008 at 07:54:05PM +0300, Adrian Bunk wrote: > On Wed, Jul 23, 2008 at 12:41:37PM -0400, Frank Ch. Eigler wrote: > >... > > In the interim (before we come up with a way of moving more > > kernel-coupled systemtap code into kernel.org/git), would y'all > > consider an arrangement? Those of you who care about systemtap, and > > are intending to make an incompatible kernel/module interface change, > > please run the systemtap testsuite before & after. [...] > The number of incompatible kernel/module interface changes per > kernel is most likely some medium three digit number. What you have > in mind is therefore not really feasible. Do you think so, even if the historical pattern continues that only a small fraction of those changes actually impact systemtap? > But we have several levels of kernels that incorporate future stuff, > from -rc over -next to -mm, and you could implement automated runs > of the systemtap testsuite against the latest ones. We do some of that already and should do more. - FChE ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 41+ messages in thread
* Re: systemtap & backward compatibility, was Re: [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs 2008-07-23 17:43 ` Frank Ch. Eigler @ 2008-07-23 18:41 ` Adrian Bunk 0 siblings, 0 replies; 41+ messages in thread From: Adrian Bunk @ 2008-07-23 18:41 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Frank Ch. Eigler Cc: Arjan van de Ven, Rik van Riel, James Bottomley, Masami Hiramatsu, linux-kernel, systemtap On Wed, Jul 23, 2008 at 01:34:38PM -0400, Frank Ch. Eigler wrote: > Hi - > > On Wed, Jul 23, 2008 at 07:54:05PM +0300, Adrian Bunk wrote: > > On Wed, Jul 23, 2008 at 12:41:37PM -0400, Frank Ch. Eigler wrote: > > >... > > > In the interim (before we come up with a way of moving more > > > kernel-coupled systemtap code into kernel.org/git), would y'all > > > consider an arrangement? Those of you who care about systemtap, and > > > are intending to make an incompatible kernel/module interface change, > > > please run the systemtap testsuite before & after. [...] > > > The number of incompatible kernel/module interface changes per > > kernel is most likely some medium three digit number. What you have > > in mind is therefore not really feasible. > > Do you think so, even if the historical pattern continues that only a > small fraction of those changes actually impact systemtap? But which are these? All commits that either remove EXPORT_SYMBOL's or touch include/ are candidates would have to be checked, and that's a four digit number of commits per kernel release. What is not feasible is to check each of thesse commits. > > But we have several levels of kernels that incorporate future stuff, > > from -rc over -next to -mm, and you could implement automated runs > > of the systemtap testsuite against the latest ones. > > We do some of that already and should do more. > > - FChE cu Adrian -- "Is there not promise of rain?" Ling Tan asked suddenly out of the darkness. There had been need of rain for many days. "Only a promise," Lao Er said. Pearl S. Buck - Dragon Seed ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 41+ messages in thread
* Re: systemtap & backward compatibility, was Re: [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs 2008-07-23 16:43 ` Frank Ch. Eigler 2008-07-23 16:54 ` Adrian Bunk @ 2008-07-23 22:14 ` Masami Hiramatsu 1 sibling, 0 replies; 41+ messages in thread From: Masami Hiramatsu @ 2008-07-23 22:14 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Frank Ch. Eigler Cc: Arjan van de Ven, Rik van Riel, James Bottomley, linux-kernel, systemtap Hi Frank, Frank Ch. Eigler wrote: > Arjan van de Ven <arjan@infradead.org> writes: [...] >> (and when it's seen it gets a rather luke warm reception, but that's >> a different story). > > I hope the backward compatibility issue, as it stands today, helps > explain the reasons for the current deal with kprobes. I understood that the current deal with kprobes is also for integrating user probe logic and kernel probe logic. Obviously, it is hard uprobe to provide same symbol_name interface, because it requires to access(and analyze) userspace symbol information from kernel. > In the interim (before we come up with a way of moving more > kernel-coupled systemtap code into kernel.org/git), would y'all > consider an arrangement? Those of you who care about systemtap, and > are intending to make an incompatible kernel/module interface change, > please run the systemtap testsuite before & after. If it regresses, > send us a note or a patch. If practical, we'll integrate it (and add > any backward-compatibility hacks if needed) into systemtap. Hmm, I think it's very costly way for both of kernel developers and systemtap developers. From the long term of viewpoint, I think it's better (less costly) to merge systemtap runtime/tapset into upstream kernel and maintain it. Then, we can stabilize its API by ourselves on upstream. Since it reduces the catchup/maintenance cost and it enables users to use stap on upstream kernel, I think it is benefit for both. Thank you, -- Masami Hiramatsu Software Engineer Hitachi Computer Products (America) Inc. Software Solutions Division e-mail: mhiramat@redhat.com ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 41+ messages in thread
* Re: [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs (part1: use kprobe symbol_name/offset instead of address) 2008-07-15 18:33 [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs (part1: use kprobe symbol_name/offset instead of address) James Bottomley 2008-07-16 22:42 ` Masami Hiramatsu @ 2008-07-18 9:11 ` Andi Kleen 2008-07-18 9:23 ` Peter Zijlstra 1 sibling, 1 reply; 41+ messages in thread From: Andi Kleen @ 2008-07-18 9:11 UTC (permalink / raw) To: James Bottomley; +Cc: linux-kernel, systemtap, jbeulich James Bottomley <James.Bottomley@HansenPartnership.com> writes: > One of the big nasties of systemtap is the way it tries to embed > virtually the entirety of the kernel symbol table in the probe modules > it constructs. This is highly undesirable because it represents a > subversion of the kernel API to gain access to unexported symbols. At > least for kprobes, the correct way to do this is to specify the probe > point by symbol and offset. > > This patch converts systemtap to use the correct kprobe > symbol_name/offset pair to identify the probe location. > > This only represents a baby step: after this is done, there are at > least three other consumers of the systemtap module relocation > machinery: > > 1. unwind information. I think the consumers of this can be > converted to use the arch specific unwinders that already exist > within the kernel Right now x86 doesn't really have a good reliable unwinder that works without frame pointer. I think systemtap recently switched to Jan Beulich's dwarf2 unwinder. Before switching to the in kernel unwinder that one would need to be re-merged again. -Andi ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 41+ messages in thread
* Re: [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs (part1: use kprobe symbol_name/offset instead of address) 2008-07-18 9:11 ` [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs (part1: use kprobe symbol_name/offset instead of address) Andi Kleen @ 2008-07-18 9:23 ` Peter Zijlstra 2008-07-18 10:31 ` Andi Kleen 2008-07-18 13:04 ` Frank Ch. Eigler 0 siblings, 2 replies; 41+ messages in thread From: Peter Zijlstra @ 2008-07-18 9:23 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Andi Kleen; +Cc: James Bottomley, linux-kernel, systemtap, jbeulich On Fri, 2008-07-18 at 11:11 +0200, Andi Kleen wrote: > James Bottomley <James.Bottomley@HansenPartnership.com> writes: > > > One of the big nasties of systemtap is the way it tries to embed > > virtually the entirety of the kernel symbol table in the probe modules > > it constructs. This is highly undesirable because it represents a > > subversion of the kernel API to gain access to unexported symbols. At > > least for kprobes, the correct way to do this is to specify the probe > > point by symbol and offset. > > > > This patch converts systemtap to use the correct kprobe > > symbol_name/offset pair to identify the probe location. > > > > This only represents a baby step: after this is done, there are at > > least three other consumers of the systemtap module relocation > > machinery: > > > > 1. unwind information. I think the consumers of this can be > > converted to use the arch specific unwinders that already exist > > within the kernel > > > Right now x86 doesn't really have a good reliable unwinder that > works without frame pointer. I think systemtap > recently switched to Jan Beulich's dwarf2 unwinder. Before > switching to the in kernel unwinder that one would need to be > re-merged again. Those are two separate issues. 1) stap ought to use the kernel's infrastructure and not re-implement its own. 2) if the kernel's infrastructure doesn't meet requirements, improve it. But while the x86 might not be perfect, its fairly ok these days. Its not the utter piece of shite x86_64 had for a long time - today's traces mostly make sense. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 41+ messages in thread
* Re: [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs (part1: use kprobe symbol_name/offset instead of address) 2008-07-18 9:23 ` Peter Zijlstra @ 2008-07-18 10:31 ` Andi Kleen 2008-07-18 10:44 ` Peter Zijlstra 2008-07-18 13:04 ` Frank Ch. Eigler 1 sibling, 1 reply; 41+ messages in thread From: Andi Kleen @ 2008-07-18 10:31 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Peter Zijlstra; +Cc: James Bottomley, linux-kernel, systemtap, jbeulich > 1) stap ought to use the kernel's infrastructure and not re-implement > its own. > > 2) if the kernel's infrastructure doesn't meet requirements, improve > it. No argument on either of those. Right now the kernel infrastructure is only comparable to what systemtap overs at very high overhead costs (see below) > But while the x86 might not be perfect, its fairly ok these days. Its > not the utter piece of shite x86_64 had for a long time Not sure what you're referring to with this. AFAIK the x86-64 unwinder for a normal frame pointer less kernel was not any worse (or better) than a i386 kernel without frame pointers. - today's traces > mostly make sense. If you enable frame pointers? Making your complete kernel slower? Generating much worse code on i386 by wasting >20% of its available registers? Getting pipeline stalls on each function call/exit on many CPUs? Right now unfortunately there are a few rogue CONFIGs who select that so more and more kernels have, but I found that always distateful because enabling frame pointers has such a large impact on all kernel code, especially on the register starved i386. I still think the right solution eventually is to have a dwarf2 unwinder by default for i386/x86-64 and get rid of all these nasty "select FRAME_POINTER"s which have unfortunately sneaked in. -Andi ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 41+ messages in thread
* Re: [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs (part1: use kprobe symbol_name/offset instead of address) 2008-07-18 10:31 ` Andi Kleen @ 2008-07-18 10:44 ` Peter Zijlstra 2008-07-18 10:52 ` Andi Kleen 0 siblings, 1 reply; 41+ messages in thread From: Peter Zijlstra @ 2008-07-18 10:44 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Andi Kleen; +Cc: James Bottomley, linux-kernel, systemtap, jbeulich, arjan On Fri, 2008-07-18 at 12:31 +0200, Andi Kleen wrote: > > But while the x86 might not be perfect, its fairly ok these days. Its > > not the utter piece of shite x86_64 had for a long time > > Not sure what you're referring to with this. AFAIK the x86-64 unwinder > for a normal frame pointer less kernel was not any worse (or better) > than a i386 kernel without frame pointers. I hardly ever compile a kernel without frame pointers, as debugability is top priority for me, so I'm afraid I'm not sure how bad it gets without. But it used to be that x86_64 was crap even with frame pointers, and without it it was just random gibberish - Arjan fixed that up somewhere around .25 iirc. > - today's traces > > mostly make sense. > > If you enable frame pointers? Making your complete kernel slower? > Generating much worse code on i386 by wasting >20% of its available > registers? Getting pipeline stalls on each function call/exit on many CPUs? > > Right now unfortunately there are a few rogue CONFIGs who select that > so more and more kernels have, but I found that always distateful because > enabling frame pointers has such a large impact on all kernel code, especially > on the register starved i386. > > I still think the right solution eventually is to have a dwarf2 unwinder > by default for i386/x86-64 and get rid of all these nasty "select > FRAME_POINTER"s which have unfortunately sneaked in. No argument on i386 vs frame pointers, fortunately I hardly ever build a 32bit kernel these days, 32bit hardware is disappearing fast here :-) As to merging the dwarf unwinder, I have no particular objection to getting that merged as I'm rather ignorant on these matters - but from reading emails around the last merge attempt, Linus had some strong opinions on the matter. Have those been resolved since? ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 41+ messages in thread
* Re: [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs (part1: use kprobe symbol_name/offset instead of address) 2008-07-18 10:44 ` Peter Zijlstra @ 2008-07-18 10:52 ` Andi Kleen 0 siblings, 0 replies; 41+ messages in thread From: Andi Kleen @ 2008-07-18 10:52 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Peter Zijlstra; +Cc: James Bottomley, linux-kernel, systemtap, jbeulich, arjan Peter Zijlstra wrote: > On Fri, 2008-07-18 at 12:31 +0200, Andi Kleen wrote: > >>> But while the x86 might not be perfect, its fairly ok these days. Its >>> not the utter piece of shite x86_64 had for a long time >> Not sure what you're referring to with this. AFAIK the x86-64 unwinder >> for a normal frame pointer less kernel was not any worse (or better) >> than a i386 kernel without frame pointers. > > I hardly ever compile a kernel without frame pointers, as debugability > is top priority for me, so I'm afraid I'm not sure how bad it gets > without. > > But it used to be that x86_64 was crap even with frame pointers, and > without it it was just random gibberish - Arjan fixed that up somewhere > around .25 iirc. Well yes it was designed for dwarf2 unwinding and Linus' revert of that wrecked it. Also even the frame pointer walker was in the dwarf2 code, so with that removed it fell back to a somewhat dumb unwinder. AFAIK most of the assembler code still doesn't set up frame pointers, so you'll likely still run into problems. > >> - today's traces >>> mostly make sense. >> If you enable frame pointers? Making your complete kernel slower? >> Generating much worse code on i386 by wasting >20% of its available >> registers? Getting pipeline stalls on each function call/exit on many CPUs? >> >> Right now unfortunately there are a few rogue CONFIGs who select that >> so more and more kernels have, but I found that always distateful because >> enabling frame pointers has such a large impact on all kernel code, especially >> on the register starved i386. >> >> I still think the right solution eventually is to have a dwarf2 unwinder >> by default for i386/x86-64 and get rid of all these nasty "select >> FRAME_POINTER"s which have unfortunately sneaked in. > > No argument on i386 vs frame pointers, fortunately I hardly ever build a > 32bit kernel these days, 32bit hardware is disappearing fast here :-) It hurts even on 64bit, e.g. the pipe line stall issue is there which can be a significant part of a function call cost of a small function of which the kernel has plenty (that was the major reason why the x86-64 ABI discouraged frame pointers BTW and encouraged unwinding). Given several modern cores have special hardware to avoid that, but there's still a lot of the older cores around and even on the modern cores it's not free. Also it's ~10% of the registers there. And it has some other impact. > As to merging the dwarf unwinder, I have no particular objection to > getting that merged as I'm rather ignorant on these matters - but from > reading emails around the last merge attempt, Linus had some strong > opinions on the matter. > > Have those been resolved since? I added some checks back then to satisfy Linus. Also the dwarf2 unwinder is shipping successfully for some time both in systemtap and in opensuse 11.0, [although that one unfortunately fell victim to one of the rogue select FRAME_POINTERs, sigh!] so there shouldn't be much teething problems left. -Andi ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 41+ messages in thread
* Re: [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs (part1: use kprobe symbol_name/offset instead of address) 2008-07-18 9:23 ` Peter Zijlstra 2008-07-18 10:31 ` Andi Kleen @ 2008-07-18 13:04 ` Frank Ch. Eigler 2008-07-18 13:09 ` Andi Kleen ` (2 more replies) 1 sibling, 3 replies; 41+ messages in thread From: Frank Ch. Eigler @ 2008-07-18 13:04 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Peter Zijlstra Cc: Andi Kleen, James Bottomley, linux-kernel, systemtap, jbeulich Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org> writes: > [...] >> Right now x86 doesn't really have a good reliable unwinder that >> works without frame pointer. I think systemtap >> recently switched to Jan Beulich's dwarf2 unwinder. Before >> switching to the in kernel unwinder that one would need to be >> re-merged again. > > Those are two separate issues. > > 1) stap ought to use the kernel's infrastructure and not re-implement > its own. > 2) if the kernel's infrastructure doesn't meet requirements, improve > it. They are related to the extent that readers may not realize some implications of systemtap being/becoming a *kernel-resident* but not *kernel-focused* tool. For example, we're about to do unwinding/stack-traces of userspace programs. To what extent do you think the kernel unwinder (should one reappear in git) would welcome patches that provide zero benefit to the kernel, but only enable a peculiar (nonintrusive) sort of unwinding we would need for complex userspace stacks? - FChE ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 41+ messages in thread
* Re: [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs (part1: use kprobe symbol_name/offset instead of address) 2008-07-18 13:04 ` Frank Ch. Eigler @ 2008-07-18 13:09 ` Andi Kleen 2008-07-18 13:10 ` Peter Zijlstra 2008-07-18 13:21 ` James Bottomley 2 siblings, 0 replies; 41+ messages in thread From: Andi Kleen @ 2008-07-18 13:09 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Frank Ch. Eigler Cc: Peter Zijlstra, Andi Kleen, James Bottomley, linux-kernel, systemtap, jbeulich > For example, we're about to do unwinding/stack-traces of userspace > programs. To what extent do you think the kernel unwinder (should one > reappear in git) would welcome patches that provide zero benefit to > the kernel, but only enable a peculiar (nonintrusive) sort of > unwinding we would need for complex userspace stacks? In theory if the tables are right you don't need any special for the kernel dwarf2 unwinder. If the tables are not right fix them. I believe oprofile did this already in some cases (generating user back traces from the kernel) -Andi ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 41+ messages in thread
* Re: [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs (part1: use kprobe symbol_name/offset instead of address) 2008-07-18 13:04 ` Frank Ch. Eigler 2008-07-18 13:09 ` Andi Kleen @ 2008-07-18 13:10 ` Peter Zijlstra 2008-07-18 13:31 ` Frank Ch. Eigler 2008-07-18 13:36 ` Andi Kleen 2008-07-18 13:21 ` James Bottomley 2 siblings, 2 replies; 41+ messages in thread From: Peter Zijlstra @ 2008-07-18 13:10 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Frank Ch. Eigler Cc: Andi Kleen, James Bottomley, linux-kernel, systemtap, jbeulich, arjan, sandmann, Ingo Molnar On Fri, 2008-07-18 at 09:02 -0400, Frank Ch. Eigler wrote: > Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org> writes: > > > [...] > >> Right now x86 doesn't really have a good reliable unwinder that > >> works without frame pointer. I think systemtap > >> recently switched to Jan Beulich's dwarf2 unwinder. Before > >> switching to the in kernel unwinder that one would need to be > >> re-merged again. > > > > Those are two separate issues. > > > > 1) stap ought to use the kernel's infrastructure and not re-implement > > its own. > > 2) if the kernel's infrastructure doesn't meet requirements, improve > > it. > > They are related to the extent that readers may not realize some > implications of systemtap being/becoming a *kernel-resident* but not > *kernel-focused* tool. > > For example, we're about to do unwinding/stack-traces of userspace > programs. To what extent do you think the kernel unwinder (should one > reappear in git) would welcome patches that provide zero benefit to > the kernel, but only enable a peculiar (nonintrusive) sort of > unwinding we would need for complex userspace stacks? I think sysprof (kernel/trace/trace_sysprof.c) already does user-space stack unwinding. So pushing that capability further up the chain when a second user (stap) comes along makes perfect sense. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 41+ messages in thread
* Re: [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs (part1: use kprobe symbol_name/offset instead of address) 2008-07-18 13:10 ` Peter Zijlstra @ 2008-07-18 13:31 ` Frank Ch. Eigler 2008-07-18 13:36 ` Andi Kleen 1 sibling, 0 replies; 41+ messages in thread From: Frank Ch. Eigler @ 2008-07-18 13:31 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Peter Zijlstra Cc: Andi Kleen, James Bottomley, linux-kernel, systemtap, jbeulich, arjan, sandmann, Ingo Molnar Hi - On Fri, Jul 18, 2008 at 03:10:27PM +0200, Peter Zijlstra wrote: > [...] > > For example, we're about to do unwinding/stack-traces of userspace > > programs. To what extent do you think the kernel unwinder (should one > > reappear in git) would welcome patches that provide zero benefit to > > the kernel, but only enable a peculiar (nonintrusive) sort of > > unwinding we would need for complex userspace stacks? > > I think sysprof (kernel/trace/trace_sysprof.c) already does user-space > stack unwinding. So pushing that capability further up the chain when a > second user (stap) comes along makes perfect sense. trace_sysprof relies on dump_stack, which is x86-only and does not do elf/dwarf unwinding proper. (Likewise oprofile, etc.) They can't even start, because they don't have unwind data available - something we plan to make available to the systemtap runtime. - FChE ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 41+ messages in thread
* Re: [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs (part1: use kprobe symbol_name/offset instead of address) 2008-07-18 13:10 ` Peter Zijlstra 2008-07-18 13:31 ` Frank Ch. Eigler @ 2008-07-18 13:36 ` Andi Kleen 1 sibling, 0 replies; 41+ messages in thread From: Andi Kleen @ 2008-07-18 13:36 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Peter Zijlstra Cc: Frank Ch. Eigler, James Bottomley, linux-kernel, systemtap, jbeulich, arjan, sandmann, Ingo Molnar Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org> writes: > > I think sysprof (kernel/trace/trace_sysprof.c) already does user-space > stack unwinding. So pushing that capability further up the chain when a > second user (stap) comes along makes perfect sense. oprofile call trace profiling also does it. -Andi ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 41+ messages in thread
* Re: [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs (part1: use kprobe symbol_name/offset instead of address) 2008-07-18 13:04 ` Frank Ch. Eigler 2008-07-18 13:09 ` Andi Kleen 2008-07-18 13:10 ` Peter Zijlstra @ 2008-07-18 13:21 ` James Bottomley 2008-07-18 13:40 ` Frank Ch. Eigler 2 siblings, 1 reply; 41+ messages in thread From: James Bottomley @ 2008-07-18 13:21 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Frank Ch. Eigler Cc: Peter Zijlstra, Andi Kleen, linux-kernel, systemtap, jbeulich On Fri, 2008-07-18 at 09:02 -0400, Frank Ch. Eigler wrote: > Peter Zijlstra <peterz@infradead.org> writes: > > > [...] > >> Right now x86 doesn't really have a good reliable unwinder that > >> works without frame pointer. I think systemtap > >> recently switched to Jan Beulich's dwarf2 unwinder. Before > >> switching to the in kernel unwinder that one would need to be > >> re-merged again. > > > > Those are two separate issues. > > > > 1) stap ought to use the kernel's infrastructure and not re-implement > > its own. > > 2) if the kernel's infrastructure doesn't meet requirements, improve > > it. > > They are related to the extent that readers may not realize some > implications of systemtap being/becoming a *kernel-resident* but not > *kernel-focused* tool. > > For example, we're about to do unwinding/stack-traces of userspace > programs. To what extent do you think the kernel unwinder (should one > reappear in git) would welcome patches that provide zero benefit to > the kernel, but only enable a peculiar (nonintrusive) sort of > unwinding we would need for complex userspace stacks? I'm not entirely convinced systemtap wants full stack unwinding in the kernel. What the kernel wants is the call trace, which it can do with kallsyms. However, systemtap in userspace sees all the relevant dwarf information as well ... it could do a much better job of unwinding: give file and line and arguments for function calls, for instance. All it really needs is to have the relevant pieces of the stack relayed back. James ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 41+ messages in thread
* Re: [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs (part1: use kprobe symbol_name/offset instead of address) 2008-07-18 13:21 ` James Bottomley @ 2008-07-18 13:40 ` Frank Ch. Eigler 0 siblings, 0 replies; 41+ messages in thread From: Frank Ch. Eigler @ 2008-07-18 13:40 UTC (permalink / raw) To: James Bottomley Cc: Peter Zijlstra, Andi Kleen, linux-kernel, systemtap, jbeulich Hi - On Fri, Jul 18, 2008 at 08:21:24AM -0500, James Bottomley wrote: > [...] I'm not entirely convinced systemtap wants full stack > unwinding in the kernel. Sure we "want" it if we can get it. It enables richer data gathering. It lets scripts act on the contents of the call stack ("is this probe being run due to a callback from this or that shared library?"). > [...] However, systemtap in userspace sees all the relevant dwarf > information as well ... it could do a much better job of unwinding: > give file and line and arguments for function calls, for instance. > All it really needs is to have the relevant pieces of the stack > relayed back. The relevant bits of stack for a userspace program could include several megabytes per thread; without unwind info we can't be sure which parts are which. (A full gdb symbolic backtrace takes seconds to compute - something we can't possibly afford in situ.) - FChE ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 41+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2008-07-23 22:14 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 41+ messages (download: mbox.gz / follow: Atom feed) -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2008-07-15 18:33 [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs (part1: use kprobe symbol_name/offset instead of address) James Bottomley 2008-07-16 22:42 ` Masami Hiramatsu 2008-07-16 23:03 ` James Bottomley 2008-07-17 0:07 ` Masami Hiramatsu 2008-07-17 1:50 ` James Bottomley 2008-07-17 14:18 ` James Bottomley 2008-07-17 16:59 ` James Bottomley 2008-07-17 21:38 ` Masami Hiramatsu 2008-07-17 22:03 ` James Bottomley 2008-07-21 14:21 ` James Bottomley [not found] ` <1216313914.5515.25.camel__21144.9282979176$1216314027$gmane$org@localhost.localdomain> 2008-07-17 18:32 ` Frank Ch. Eigler 2008-07-17 20:13 ` James Bottomley 2008-07-17 20:28 ` Frank Ch. Eigler 2008-07-17 21:06 ` James Bottomley 2008-07-17 21:35 ` Frank Ch. Eigler 2008-07-17 22:05 ` Masami Hiramatsu 2008-07-22 18:00 ` Rik van Riel 2008-07-22 18:12 ` Frank Ch. Eigler 2008-07-22 18:31 ` Peter Zijlstra [not found] ` <1216751477.7257.115.camel__19834.5970632092$1216751567$gmane$org@twins> 2008-07-22 18:50 ` Frank Ch. Eigler 2008-07-23 15:06 ` systemtap & backward compatibility, was Re: [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs Frank Ch. Eigler 2008-07-23 15:29 ` Arjan van de Ven 2008-07-23 15:33 ` Peter Zijlstra 2008-07-23 20:26 ` Masami Hiramatsu [not found] ` <20080723082856.334f9c17__2909.60763018138$1216827051$gmane$org@infradead.org> 2008-07-23 16:43 ` Frank Ch. Eigler 2008-07-23 16:54 ` Adrian Bunk 2008-07-23 17:43 ` Frank Ch. Eigler 2008-07-23 18:41 ` Adrian Bunk 2008-07-23 22:14 ` Masami Hiramatsu 2008-07-18 9:11 ` [RFC] systemtap: begin the process of using proper kernel APIs (part1: use kprobe symbol_name/offset instead of address) Andi Kleen 2008-07-18 9:23 ` Peter Zijlstra 2008-07-18 10:31 ` Andi Kleen 2008-07-18 10:44 ` Peter Zijlstra 2008-07-18 10:52 ` Andi Kleen 2008-07-18 13:04 ` Frank Ch. Eigler 2008-07-18 13:09 ` Andi Kleen 2008-07-18 13:10 ` Peter Zijlstra 2008-07-18 13:31 ` Frank Ch. Eigler 2008-07-18 13:36 ` Andi Kleen 2008-07-18 13:21 ` James Bottomley 2008-07-18 13:40 ` Frank Ch. Eigler
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