/* * vdso2c - A vdso image preparation tool * Copyright (c) 2014 Andy Lutomirski and others * Licensed under the GPL v2 * * vdso2c requires stripped and unstripped input. It would be trivial * to fully strip the input in here, but, for reasons described below, * we need to write a section table. Doing this is more or less * equivalent to dropping all non-allocatable sections, but it's * easier to let objcopy handle that instead of doing it ourselves. * If we ever need to do something fancier than what objcopy provides, * it would be straightforward to add here. * * We're keep a section table for a few reasons: * * The Go runtime had a couple of bugs: it would read the section * table to try to figure out how many dynamic symbols there were (it * shouldn't have looked at the section table at all) and, if there * were no SHT_SYNDYM section table entry, it would use an * uninitialized value for the number of symbols. An empty DYNSYM * table would work, but I see no reason not to write a valid one (and * keep full performance for old Go programs). This hack is only * needed on x86_64. * * The bug was introduced on 2012-08-31 by: * https://code.google.com/p/go/source/detail?r=56ea40aac72b * and was fixed on 2014-06-13 by: * https://code.google.com/p/go/source/detail?r=fc1cd5e12595 * * Binutils has issues debugging the vDSO: it reads the section table to * find SHT_NOTE; it won't look at PT_NOTE for the in-memory vDSO, which * would break build-id if we removed the section table. Binutils * also requires that shstrndx != 0. See: * https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=17064 * * elfutils might not look for PT_NOTE if there is a section table at * all. I don't know whether this matters for any practical purpose. * * For simplicity, rather than hacking up a partial section table, we * just write a mostly complete one. We omit non-dynamic symbols, * though, since they're rather large. * * Once binutils gets fixed, we might be able to drop this for all but * the 64-bit vdso, since build-id only works in kernel RPMs, and * systems that update to new enough kernel RPMs will likely update * binutils in sync. build-id has never worked for home-built kernel * RPMs without manual symlinking, and I suspect that no one ever does * that. */ #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include const char *outfilename; /* Symbols that we need in vdso2c. */ enum { sym_vvar_start, sym_vvar_page, sym_hpet_page, sym_VDSO_FAKE_SECTION_TABLE_START, sym_VDSO_FAKE_SECTION_TABLE_END, }; const int special_pages[] = { sym_vvar_page, sym_hpet_page, }; struct vdso_sym { const char *name; bool export; }; struct vdso_sym required_syms[] = { [sym_vvar_start] = {"vvar_start", true}, [sym_vvar_page] = {"vvar_page", true}, [sym_hpet_page] = {"hpet_page", true}, [sym_VDSO_FAKE_SECTION_TABLE_START] = { "VDSO_FAKE_SECTION_TABLE_START", false }, [sym_VDSO_FAKE_SECTION_TABLE_END] = { "VDSO_FAKE_SECTION_TABLE_END", false }, {"VDSO32_NOTE_MASK", true}, {"VDSO32_SYSENTER_RETURN", true}, {"__kernel_vsyscall", true}, {"__kernel_sigreturn", true}, {"__kernel_rt_sigreturn", true}, }; __attribute__((format(printf, 1, 2))) __attribute__((noreturn)) static void fail(const char *format, ...) { va_list ap; va_start(ap, format); fprintf(stderr, "Error: "); vfprintf(stderr, format, ap); if (outfilename) unlink(outfilename); exit(1); va_end(ap); } /* * Evil macros for little-endian reads and writes */ #define GLE(x, bits, ifnot) \ __builtin_choose_expr( \ (sizeof(*(x)) == bits/8), \ (__typeof__(*(x)))get_unaligned_le##bits(x), ifnot) extern void bad_get_le(void); #define LAST_GLE(x) \ __builtin_choose_expr(sizeof(*(x)) == 1, *(x), bad_get_le()) #define GET_LE(x) \ GLE(x, 64, GLE(x, 32, GLE(x, 16, LAST_GLE(x)))) #define PLE(x, val, bits, ifnot) \ __builtin_choose_expr( \ (sizeof(*(x)) == bits/8), \ put_unaligned_le##bits((val), (x)), ifnot) extern void bad_put_le(void); #define LAST_PLE(x, val) \ __builtin_choose_expr(sizeof(*(x)) == 1, *(x) = (val), bad_put_le()) #define PUT_LE(x, val) \ PLE(x, val, 64, PLE(x, val, 32, PLE(x, val, 16, LAST_PLE(x, val)))) #define NSYMS (sizeof(required_syms) / sizeof(required_syms[0])) #define BITSFUNC3(name, bits, suffix) name##bits##suffix #define BITSFUNC2(name, bits, suffix) BITSFUNC3(name, bits, suffix) #define BITSFUNC(name) BITSFUNC2(name, ELF_BITS, ) #define INT_BITS BITSFUNC2(int, ELF_BITS, _t) #define ELF_BITS_XFORM2(bits, x) Elf##bits##_##x #define ELF_BITS_XFORM(bits, x) ELF_BITS_XFORM2(bits, x) #define ELF(x) ELF_BITS_XFORM(ELF_BITS, x) #define ELF_BITS 64 #include "vdso2c.h" #undef ELF_BITS #define ELF_BITS 32 #include "vdso2c.h" #undef ELF_BITS static void go(void *raw_addr, size_t raw_len, void *stripped_addr, size_t stripped_len, FILE *outfile, const char *name) { Elf64_Ehdr *hdr = (Elf64_Ehdr *)raw_addr; if (hdr->e_ident[EI_CLASS] == ELFCLASS64) { go64(raw_addr, raw_len, stripped_addr, stripped_len, outfile, name); } else if (hdr->e_ident[EI_CLASS] == ELFCLASS32) { go32(raw_addr, raw_len, stripped_addr, stripped_len, outfile, name); } else { fail("unknown ELF class\n"); } } static void map_input(const char *name, void **addr, size_t *len, int prot) { off_t tmp_len; int fd = open(name, O_RDONLY); if (fd == -1) err(1, "%s", name); tmp_len = lseek(fd, 0, SEEK_END); if (tmp_len == (off_t)-1) err(1, "lseek"); *len = (size_t)tmp_len; *addr = mmap(NULL, tmp_len, prot, MAP_PRIVATE, fd, 0); if (*addr == MAP_FAILED) err(1, "mmap"); close(fd); } int main(int argc, char **argv) { size_t raw_len, stripped_len; void *raw_addr, *stripped_addr; FILE *outfile; char *name, *tmp; int namelen; if (argc != 4) { printf("Usage: vdso2c RAW_INPUT STRIPPED_INPUT OUTPUT\n"); return 1; } /* * Figure out the struct name. If we're writing to a .so file, * generate raw output insted. */ name = strdup(argv[3]); namelen = strlen(name); if (namelen >= 3 && !strcmp(name + namelen - 3, ".so")) { name = NULL; } else { tmp = strrchr(name, '/'); if (tmp) name = tmp + 1; tmp = strchr(name, '.'); if (tmp) *tmp = '\0'; for (tmp = name; *tmp; tmp++) if (*tmp == '-') *tmp = '_'; } map_input(argv[1], &raw_addr, &raw_len, PROT_READ); map_input(argv[2], &stripped_addr, &stripped_len, PROT_READ); outfilename = argv[3]; outfile = fopen(outfilename, "w"); if (!outfile) err(1, "%s", argv[2]); go(raw_addr, raw_len, stripped_addr, stripped_len, outfile, name); munmap(raw_addr, raw_len); munmap(stripped_addr, stripped_len); fclose(outfile); return 0; }