On Tue, May 04, 2021 at 02:03:14PM -0500, Madhavan T. Venkataraman wrote: > On 5/4/21 11:05 AM, Mark Brown wrote: > >> @@ -118,9 +160,21 @@ int notrace unwind_frame(struct task_struct *tsk, struct stackframe *frame) > >> return -EINVAL; > >> frame->pc = ret_stack->ret; > >> frame->pc = ptrauth_strip_insn_pac(frame->pc); > >> + return 0; > >> } > > Do we not need to look up the range of the restored pc and validate > > what's being pointed to here? It's not immediately obvious why we do > > the lookup before handling the function graph tracer, especially given > > that we never look at the result and there's now a return added skipping > > further reliability checks. At the very least I think this needs some > > additional comments so the code is more obvious. > I want sym_code_ranges[] to contain both unwindable and non-unwindable ranges. > Unwindable ranges will be special ranges such as the return_to_handler() and > kretprobe_trampoline() functions for which the unwinder has (or will have) > special code to unwind. So, the lookup_range() has to happen before the > function graph code. Please look at the last patch in the series for > the fix for the above function graph code. That sounds reasonable but like I say should probably be called out in the code so it's clear to people working with it. > On the question of "should the original return address be checked against > sym_code_ranges[]?" - I assumed that if there is a function graph trace on a > function, it had to be an ftraceable function. It would not be a part > of sym_code_ranges[]. Is that a wrong assumption on my part? I can't think of any cases where it wouldn't be right now, but it seems easier to just do a redundant check than to have the assumption in the code and have to think about if it's missing.