Contributors: 13
Author Tokens Token Proportion Commits Commit Proportion
Alexander Potapenko 369 72.92% 1 4.76%
Marco Elver 58 11.46% 5 23.81%
Paul E. McKenney 22 4.35% 2 9.52%
Prarit Bhargava 14 2.77% 1 4.76%
Christoph Lameter 10 1.98% 2 9.52%
Linus Torvalds (pre-git) 6 1.19% 3 14.29%
Peng Liu 5 0.99% 1 4.76%
Stephen Boyd 4 0.79% 1 4.76%
Al Viro 4 0.79% 1 4.76%
Peng Zhang 4 0.79% 1 4.76%
Matthew Wilcox 4 0.79% 1 4.76%
Andrew Morton 4 0.79% 1 4.76%
Andrey Ryabinin 2 0.40% 1 4.76%
Total 506 21


/* SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 */
/*
 * Kernel Electric-Fence (KFENCE). Public interface for allocator and fault
 * handler integration. For more info see Documentation/dev-tools/kfence.rst.
 *
 * Copyright (C) 2020, Google LLC.
 */

#ifndef _LINUX_KFENCE_H
#define _LINUX_KFENCE_H

#include <linux/mm.h>
#include <linux/types.h>

#ifdef CONFIG_KFENCE

#include <linux/atomic.h>
#include <linux/static_key.h>

extern unsigned long kfence_sample_interval;

/*
 * We allocate an even number of pages, as it simplifies calculations to map
 * address to metadata indices; effectively, the very first page serves as an
 * extended guard page, but otherwise has no special purpose.
 */
#define KFENCE_POOL_SIZE ((CONFIG_KFENCE_NUM_OBJECTS + 1) * 2 * PAGE_SIZE)
extern char *__kfence_pool;

DECLARE_STATIC_KEY_FALSE(kfence_allocation_key);
extern atomic_t kfence_allocation_gate;

/**
 * is_kfence_address() - check if an address belongs to KFENCE pool
 * @addr: address to check
 *
 * Return: true or false depending on whether the address is within the KFENCE
 * object range.
 *
 * KFENCE objects live in a separate page range and are not to be intermixed
 * with regular heap objects (e.g. KFENCE objects must never be added to the
 * allocator freelists). Failing to do so may and will result in heap
 * corruptions, therefore is_kfence_address() must be used to check whether
 * an object requires specific handling.
 *
 * Note: This function may be used in fast-paths, and is performance critical.
 * Future changes should take this into account; for instance, we want to avoid
 * introducing another load and therefore need to keep KFENCE_POOL_SIZE a
 * constant (until immediate patching support is added to the kernel).
 */
static __always_inline bool is_kfence_address(const void *addr)
{
	/*
	 * The __kfence_pool != NULL check is required to deal with the case
	 * where __kfence_pool == NULL && addr < KFENCE_POOL_SIZE. Keep it in
	 * the slow-path after the range-check!
	 */
	return unlikely((unsigned long)((char *)addr - __kfence_pool) < KFENCE_POOL_SIZE && __kfence_pool);
}

/**
 * kfence_alloc_pool_and_metadata() - allocate the KFENCE pool and KFENCE
 * metadata via memblock
 */
void __init kfence_alloc_pool_and_metadata(void);

/**
 * kfence_init() - perform KFENCE initialization at boot time
 *
 * Requires that kfence_alloc_pool_and_metadata() was called before. This sets
 * up the allocation gate timer, and requires that workqueues are available.
 */
void __init kfence_init(void);

/**
 * kfence_shutdown_cache() - handle shutdown_cache() for KFENCE objects
 * @s: cache being shut down
 *
 * Before shutting down a cache, one must ensure there are no remaining objects
 * allocated from it. Because KFENCE objects are not referenced from the cache
 * directly, we need to check them here.
 *
 * Note that shutdown_cache() is internal to SL*B, and kmem_cache_destroy() does
 * not return if allocated objects still exist: it prints an error message and
 * simply aborts destruction of a cache, leaking memory.
 *
 * If the only such objects are KFENCE objects, we will not leak the entire
 * cache, but instead try to provide more useful debug info by making allocated
 * objects "zombie allocations". Objects may then still be used or freed (which
 * is handled gracefully), but usage will result in showing KFENCE error reports
 * which include stack traces to the user of the object, the original allocation
 * site, and caller to shutdown_cache().
 */
void kfence_shutdown_cache(struct kmem_cache *s);

/*
 * Allocate a KFENCE object. Allocators must not call this function directly,
 * use kfence_alloc() instead.
 */
void *__kfence_alloc(struct kmem_cache *s, size_t size, gfp_t flags);

/**
 * kfence_alloc() - allocate a KFENCE object with a low probability
 * @s:     struct kmem_cache with object requirements
 * @size:  exact size of the object to allocate (can be less than @s->size
 *         e.g. for kmalloc caches)
 * @flags: GFP flags
 *
 * Return:
 * * NULL     - must proceed with allocating as usual,
 * * non-NULL - pointer to a KFENCE object.
 *
 * kfence_alloc() should be inserted into the heap allocation fast path,
 * allowing it to transparently return KFENCE-allocated objects with a low
 * probability using a static branch (the probability is controlled by the
 * kfence.sample_interval boot parameter).
 */
static __always_inline void *kfence_alloc(struct kmem_cache *s, size_t size, gfp_t flags)
{
#if defined(CONFIG_KFENCE_STATIC_KEYS) || CONFIG_KFENCE_SAMPLE_INTERVAL == 0
	if (!static_branch_unlikely(&kfence_allocation_key))
		return NULL;
#else
	if (!static_branch_likely(&kfence_allocation_key))
		return NULL;
#endif
	if (likely(atomic_read(&kfence_allocation_gate)))
		return NULL;
	return __kfence_alloc(s, size, flags);
}

/**
 * kfence_ksize() - get actual amount of memory allocated for a KFENCE object
 * @addr: pointer to a heap object
 *
 * Return:
 * * 0     - not a KFENCE object, must call __ksize() instead,
 * * non-0 - this many bytes can be accessed without causing a memory error.
 *
 * kfence_ksize() returns the number of bytes requested for a KFENCE object at
 * allocation time. This number may be less than the object size of the
 * corresponding struct kmem_cache.
 */
size_t kfence_ksize(const void *addr);

/**
 * kfence_object_start() - find the beginning of a KFENCE object
 * @addr: address within a KFENCE-allocated object
 *
 * Return: address of the beginning of the object.
 *
 * SL[AU]B-allocated objects are laid out within a page one by one, so it is
 * easy to calculate the beginning of an object given a pointer inside it and
 * the object size. The same is not true for KFENCE, which places a single
 * object at either end of the page. This helper function is used to find the
 * beginning of a KFENCE-allocated object.
 */
void *kfence_object_start(const void *addr);

/**
 * __kfence_free() - release a KFENCE heap object to KFENCE pool
 * @addr: object to be freed
 *
 * Requires: is_kfence_address(addr)
 *
 * Release a KFENCE object and mark it as freed.
 */
void __kfence_free(void *addr);

/**
 * kfence_free() - try to release an arbitrary heap object to KFENCE pool
 * @addr: object to be freed
 *
 * Return:
 * * false - object doesn't belong to KFENCE pool and was ignored,
 * * true  - object was released to KFENCE pool.
 *
 * Release a KFENCE object and mark it as freed. May be called on any object,
 * even non-KFENCE objects, to simplify integration of the hooks into the
 * allocator's free codepath. The allocator must check the return value to
 * determine if it was a KFENCE object or not.
 */
static __always_inline __must_check bool kfence_free(void *addr)
{
	if (!is_kfence_address(addr))
		return false;
	__kfence_free(addr);
	return true;
}

/**
 * kfence_handle_page_fault() - perform page fault handling for KFENCE pages
 * @addr: faulting address
 * @is_write: is access a write
 * @regs: current struct pt_regs (can be NULL, but shows full stack trace)
 *
 * Return:
 * * false - address outside KFENCE pool,
 * * true  - page fault handled by KFENCE, no additional handling required.
 *
 * A page fault inside KFENCE pool indicates a memory error, such as an
 * out-of-bounds access, a use-after-free or an invalid memory access. In these
 * cases KFENCE prints an error message and marks the offending page as
 * present, so that the kernel can proceed.
 */
bool __must_check kfence_handle_page_fault(unsigned long addr, bool is_write, struct pt_regs *regs);

#ifdef CONFIG_PRINTK
struct kmem_obj_info;
/**
 * __kfence_obj_info() - fill kmem_obj_info struct
 * @kpp: kmem_obj_info to be filled
 * @object: the object
 *
 * Return:
 * * false - not a KFENCE object
 * * true - a KFENCE object, filled @kpp
 *
 * Copies information to @kpp for KFENCE objects.
 */
bool __kfence_obj_info(struct kmem_obj_info *kpp, void *object, struct slab *slab);
#endif

#else /* CONFIG_KFENCE */

#define kfence_sample_interval	(0)

static inline bool is_kfence_address(const void *addr) { return false; }
static inline void kfence_alloc_pool_and_metadata(void) { }
static inline void kfence_init(void) { }
static inline void kfence_shutdown_cache(struct kmem_cache *s) { }
static inline void *kfence_alloc(struct kmem_cache *s, size_t size, gfp_t flags) { return NULL; }
static inline size_t kfence_ksize(const void *addr) { return 0; }
static inline void *kfence_object_start(const void *addr) { return NULL; }
static inline void __kfence_free(void *addr) { }
static inline bool __must_check kfence_free(void *addr) { return false; }
static inline bool __must_check kfence_handle_page_fault(unsigned long addr, bool is_write,
							 struct pt_regs *regs)
{
	return false;
}

#ifdef CONFIG_PRINTK
struct kmem_obj_info;
static inline bool __kfence_obj_info(struct kmem_obj_info *kpp, void *object, struct slab *slab)
{
	return false;
}
#endif

#endif

#endif /* _LINUX_KFENCE_H */