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1 function tracer guts
2 ====================
03688970 3 By Mike Frysinger
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4
5Introduction
6------------
7
8Here we will cover the architecture pieces that the common function tracing
9code relies on for proper functioning. Things are broken down into increasing
10complexity so that you can start simple and at least get basic functionality.
11
12Note that this focuses on architecture implementation details only. If you
13want more explanation of a feature in terms of common code, review the common
14ftrace.txt file.
15
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16Ideally, everyone who wishes to retain performance while supporting tracing in
17their kernel should make it all the way to dynamic ftrace support.
18
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19
20Prerequisites
21-------------
22
23Ftrace relies on these features being implemented:
24 STACKTRACE_SUPPORT - implement save_stack_trace()
25 TRACE_IRQFLAGS_SUPPORT - implement include/asm/irqflags.h
26
27
28HAVE_FUNCTION_TRACER
29--------------------
30
31You will need to implement the mcount and the ftrace_stub functions.
32
33The exact mcount symbol name will depend on your toolchain. Some call it
34"mcount", "_mcount", or even "__mcount". You can probably figure it out by
35running something like:
36 $ echo 'main(){}' | gcc -x c -S -o - - -pg | grep mcount
37 call mcount
38We'll make the assumption below that the symbol is "mcount" just to keep things
39nice and simple in the examples.
40
41Keep in mind that the ABI that is in effect inside of the mcount function is
42*highly* architecture/toolchain specific. We cannot help you in this regard,
43sorry. Dig up some old documentation and/or find someone more familiar than
44you to bang ideas off of. Typically, register usage (argument/scratch/etc...)
45is a major issue at this point, especially in relation to the location of the
46mcount call (before/after function prologue). You might also want to look at
47how glibc has implemented the mcount function for your architecture. It might
48be (semi-)relevant.
49
50The mcount function should check the function pointer ftrace_trace_function
51to see if it is set to ftrace_stub. If it is, there is nothing for you to do,
52so return immediately. If it isn't, then call that function in the same way
53the mcount function normally calls __mcount_internal -- the first argument is
54the "frompc" while the second argument is the "selfpc" (adjusted to remove the
55size of the mcount call that is embedded in the function).
56
57For example, if the function foo() calls bar(), when the bar() function calls
58mcount(), the arguments mcount() will pass to the tracer are:
59 "frompc" - the address bar() will use to return to foo()
7e25f44c 60 "selfpc" - the address bar() (with mcount() size adjustment)
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61
62Also keep in mind that this mcount function will be called *a lot*, so
63optimizing for the default case of no tracer will help the smooth running of
64your system when tracing is disabled. So the start of the mcount function is
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65typically the bare minimum with checking things before returning. That also
66means the code flow should usually be kept linear (i.e. no branching in the nop
67case). This is of course an optimization and not a hard requirement.
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68
69Here is some pseudo code that should help (these functions should actually be
70implemented in assembly):
71
72void ftrace_stub(void)
73{
74 return;
75}
76
77void mcount(void)
78{
79 /* save any bare state needed in order to do initial checking */
80
81 extern void (*ftrace_trace_function)(unsigned long, unsigned long);
82 if (ftrace_trace_function != ftrace_stub)
83 goto do_trace;
84
85 /* restore any bare state */
86
87 return;
88
89do_trace:
90
91 /* save all state needed by the ABI (see paragraph above) */
92
93 unsigned long frompc = ...;
94 unsigned long selfpc = <return address> - MCOUNT_INSN_SIZE;
95 ftrace_trace_function(frompc, selfpc);
96
97 /* restore all state needed by the ABI */
98}
99
100Don't forget to export mcount for modules !
101extern void mcount(void);
102EXPORT_SYMBOL(mcount);
103
104
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105HAVE_FUNCTION_GRAPH_TRACER
106--------------------------
107
108Deep breath ... time to do some real work. Here you will need to update the
109mcount function to check ftrace graph function pointers, as well as implement
110some functions to save (hijack) and restore the return address.
111
112The mcount function should check the function pointers ftrace_graph_return
113(compare to ftrace_stub) and ftrace_graph_entry (compare to
7e25f44c 114ftrace_graph_entry_stub). If either of those is not set to the relevant stub
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115function, call the arch-specific function ftrace_graph_caller which in turn
116calls the arch-specific function prepare_ftrace_return. Neither of these
7e25f44c 117function names is strictly required, but you should use them anyway to stay
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118consistent across the architecture ports -- easier to compare & contrast
119things.
120
121The arguments to prepare_ftrace_return are slightly different than what are
122passed to ftrace_trace_function. The second argument "selfpc" is the same,
123but the first argument should be a pointer to the "frompc". Typically this is
124located on the stack. This allows the function to hijack the return address
125temporarily to have it point to the arch-specific function return_to_handler.
126That function will simply call the common ftrace_return_to_handler function and
7e25f44c 127that will return the original return address with which you can return to the
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128original call site.
129
130Here is the updated mcount pseudo code:
131void mcount(void)
132{
133...
134 if (ftrace_trace_function != ftrace_stub)
135 goto do_trace;
136
137+#ifdef CONFIG_FUNCTION_GRAPH_TRACER
138+ extern void (*ftrace_graph_return)(...);
139+ extern void (*ftrace_graph_entry)(...);
140+ if (ftrace_graph_return != ftrace_stub ||
141+ ftrace_graph_entry != ftrace_graph_entry_stub)
142+ ftrace_graph_caller();
143+#endif
144
145 /* restore any bare state */
146...
147
148Here is the pseudo code for the new ftrace_graph_caller assembly function:
149#ifdef CONFIG_FUNCTION_GRAPH_TRACER
150void ftrace_graph_caller(void)
151{
152 /* save all state needed by the ABI */
153
154 unsigned long *frompc = &...;
155 unsigned long selfpc = <return address> - MCOUNT_INSN_SIZE;
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156 /* passing frame pointer up is optional -- see below */
157 prepare_ftrace_return(frompc, selfpc, frame_pointer);
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158
159 /* restore all state needed by the ABI */
160}
161#endif
162
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163For information on how to implement prepare_ftrace_return(), simply look at the
164x86 version (the frame pointer passing is optional; see the next section for
165more information). The only architecture-specific piece in it is the setup of
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166the fault recovery table (the asm(...) code). The rest should be the same
167across architectures.
168
169Here is the pseudo code for the new return_to_handler assembly function. Note
170that the ABI that applies here is different from what applies to the mcount
171code. Since you are returning from a function (after the epilogue), you might
172be able to skimp on things saved/restored (usually just registers used to pass
173return values).
174
175#ifdef CONFIG_FUNCTION_GRAPH_TRACER
176void return_to_handler(void)
177{
178 /* save all state needed by the ABI (see paragraph above) */
179
180 void (*original_return_point)(void) = ftrace_return_to_handler();
181
182 /* restore all state needed by the ABI */
183
184 /* this is usually either a return or a jump */
185 original_return_point();
186}
187#endif
188
189
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190HAVE_FUNCTION_GRAPH_FP_TEST
191---------------------------
192
193An arch may pass in a unique value (frame pointer) to both the entering and
194exiting of a function. On exit, the value is compared and if it does not
195match, then it will panic the kernel. This is largely a sanity check for bad
196code generation with gcc. If gcc for your port sanely updates the frame
9849ed4d 197pointer under different optimization levels, then ignore this option.
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198
199However, adding support for it isn't terribly difficult. In your assembly code
200that calls prepare_ftrace_return(), pass the frame pointer as the 3rd argument.
201Then in the C version of that function, do what the x86 port does and pass it
202along to ftrace_push_return_trace() instead of a stub value of 0.
203
204Similarly, when you call ftrace_return_to_handler(), pass it the frame pointer.
205
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206HAVE_FUNCTION_GRAPH_RET_ADDR_PTR
207--------------------------------
208
209An arch may pass in a pointer to the return address on the stack. This
210prevents potential stack unwinding issues where the unwinder gets out of
211sync with ret_stack and the wrong addresses are reported by
212ftrace_graph_ret_addr().
213
214Adding support for it is easy: just define the macro in asm/ftrace.h and
215pass the return address pointer as the 'retp' argument to
216ftrace_push_return_trace().
03688970 217
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218HAVE_FTRACE_NMI_ENTER
219---------------------
220
221If you can't trace NMI functions, then skip this option.
222
223<details to be filled>
224
225
459c6d15 226HAVE_SYSCALL_TRACEPOINTS
9849ed4d 227------------------------
555f386c 228
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229You need very few things to get the syscalls tracing in an arch.
230
e7b8e675 231- Support HAVE_ARCH_TRACEHOOK (see arch/Kconfig).
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232- Have a NR_syscalls variable in <asm/unistd.h> that provides the number
233 of syscalls supported by the arch.
e7b8e675 234- Support the TIF_SYSCALL_TRACEPOINT thread flags.
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235- Put the trace_sys_enter() and trace_sys_exit() tracepoints calls from ptrace
236 in the ptrace syscalls tracing path.
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237- If the system call table on this arch is more complicated than a simple array
238 of addresses of the system calls, implement an arch_syscall_addr to return
239 the address of a given system call.
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240- If the symbol names of the system calls do not match the function names on
241 this arch, define ARCH_HAS_SYSCALL_MATCH_SYM_NAME in asm/ftrace.h and
242 implement arch_syscall_match_sym_name with the appropriate logic to return
243 true if the function name corresponds with the symbol name.
459c6d15 244- Tag this arch as HAVE_SYSCALL_TRACEPOINTS.
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245
246
247HAVE_FTRACE_MCOUNT_RECORD
248-------------------------
249
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250See scripts/recordmcount.pl for more info. Just fill in the arch-specific
251details for how to locate the addresses of mcount call sites via objdump.
252This option doesn't make much sense without also implementing dynamic ftrace.
555f386c 253
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254
255HAVE_DYNAMIC_FTRACE
256-------------------
257
258You will first need HAVE_FTRACE_MCOUNT_RECORD and HAVE_FUNCTION_TRACER, so
259scroll your reader back up if you got over eager.
260
261Once those are out of the way, you will need to implement:
262 - asm/ftrace.h:
263 - MCOUNT_ADDR
264 - ftrace_call_adjust()
265 - struct dyn_arch_ftrace{}
266 - asm code:
267 - mcount() (new stub)
268 - ftrace_caller()
269 - ftrace_call()
270 - ftrace_stub()
271 - C code:
272 - ftrace_dyn_arch_init()
273 - ftrace_make_nop()
274 - ftrace_make_call()
275 - ftrace_update_ftrace_func()
276
277First you will need to fill out some arch details in your asm/ftrace.h.
278
279Define MCOUNT_ADDR as the address of your mcount symbol similar to:
280 #define MCOUNT_ADDR ((unsigned long)mcount)
281Since no one else will have a decl for that function, you will need to:
282 extern void mcount(void);
283
284You will also need the helper function ftrace_call_adjust(). Most people
285will be able to stub it out like so:
286 static inline unsigned long ftrace_call_adjust(unsigned long addr)
287 {
288 return addr;
289 }
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290<details to be filled>
291
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292Lastly you will need the custom dyn_arch_ftrace structure. If you need
293some extra state when runtime patching arbitrary call sites, this is the
294place. For now though, create an empty struct:
295 struct dyn_arch_ftrace {
296 /* No extra data needed */
297 };
298
299With the header out of the way, we can fill out the assembly code. While we
300did already create a mcount() function earlier, dynamic ftrace only wants a
301stub function. This is because the mcount() will only be used during boot
302and then all references to it will be patched out never to return. Instead,
303the guts of the old mcount() will be used to create a new ftrace_caller()
304function. Because the two are hard to merge, it will most likely be a lot
305easier to have two separate definitions split up by #ifdefs. Same goes for
306the ftrace_stub() as that will now be inlined in ftrace_caller().
307
308Before we get confused anymore, let's check out some pseudo code so you can
309implement your own stuff in assembly:
555f386c 310
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311void mcount(void)
312{
313 return;
314}
315
316void ftrace_caller(void)
317{
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318 /* save all state needed by the ABI (see paragraph above) */
319
320 unsigned long frompc = ...;
321 unsigned long selfpc = <return address> - MCOUNT_INSN_SIZE;
322
323ftrace_call:
324 ftrace_stub(frompc, selfpc);
325
326 /* restore all state needed by the ABI */
327
328ftrace_stub:
329 return;
330}
331
332This might look a little odd at first, but keep in mind that we will be runtime
333patching multiple things. First, only functions that we actually want to trace
334will be patched to call ftrace_caller(). Second, since we only have one tracer
335active at a time, we will patch the ftrace_caller() function itself to call the
336specific tracer in question. That is the point of the ftrace_call label.
337
338With that in mind, let's move on to the C code that will actually be doing the
339runtime patching. You'll need a little knowledge of your arch's opcodes in
340order to make it through the next section.
341
342Every arch has an init callback function. If you need to do something early on
343to initialize some state, this is the time to do that. Otherwise, this simple
344function below should be sufficient for most people:
345
3a36cb11 346int __init ftrace_dyn_arch_init(void)
9849ed4d 347{
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348 return 0;
349}
350
351There are two functions that are used to do runtime patching of arbitrary
352functions. The first is used to turn the mcount call site into a nop (which
353is what helps us retain runtime performance when not tracing). The second is
354used to turn the mcount call site into a call to an arbitrary location (but
355typically that is ftracer_caller()). See the general function definition in
356linux/ftrace.h for the functions:
357 ftrace_make_nop()
358 ftrace_make_call()
359The rec->ip value is the address of the mcount call site that was collected
360by the scripts/recordmcount.pl during build time.
361
362The last function is used to do runtime patching of the active tracer. This
363will be modifying the assembly code at the location of the ftrace_call symbol
364inside of the ftrace_caller() function. So you should have sufficient padding
365at that location to support the new function calls you'll be inserting. Some
366people will be using a "call" type instruction while others will be using a
367"branch" type instruction. Specifically, the function is:
368 ftrace_update_ftrace_func()
369
370
371HAVE_DYNAMIC_FTRACE + HAVE_FUNCTION_GRAPH_TRACER
372------------------------------------------------
373
374The function grapher needs a few tweaks in order to work with dynamic ftrace.
375Basically, you will need to:
376 - update:
377 - ftrace_caller()
378 - ftrace_graph_call()
379 - ftrace_graph_caller()
380 - implement:
381 - ftrace_enable_ftrace_graph_caller()
382 - ftrace_disable_ftrace_graph_caller()
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383
384<details to be filled>
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385Quick notes:
386 - add a nop stub after the ftrace_call location named ftrace_graph_call;
387 stub needs to be large enough to support a call to ftrace_graph_caller()
388 - update ftrace_graph_caller() to work with being called by the new
389 ftrace_caller() since some semantics may have changed
390 - ftrace_enable_ftrace_graph_caller() will runtime patch the
391 ftrace_graph_call location with a call to ftrace_graph_caller()
392 - ftrace_disable_ftrace_graph_caller() will runtime patch the
393 ftrace_graph_call location with nops
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