On Sun, Nov 12, 2017 at 10:02:55AM -0800, Frank Rowand wrote: > Hi Michael, > > On 11/12/17 03:49, Michael Ellerman wrote: > > Hi Frank, > > > > Frank Rowand <frowand.l...@gmail.com> writes: > >> Hi Michael, Tobin, > >> > >> On 11/08/17 04:10, Michael Ellerman wrote: > >>> "Tobin C. Harding" <m...@tobin.cc> writes: > >>>> Currently we are leaking addresses from the kernel to user space. This > >>>> script is an attempt to find some of those leakages. Script parses > >>>> `dmesg` output and /proc and /sys files for hex strings that look like > >>>> kernel addresses. > >>>> > >>>> Only works for 64 bit kernels, the reason being that kernel addresses > >>>> on 64 bit kernels have 'ffff' as the leading bit pattern making greping > >>>> possible. > >>> > >>> That doesn't work super well on other architectures :D > >>> > >>> I don't speak perl but presumably you can check the arch somehow and > >>> customise the regex? > >>> > >>> ... > >>>> +# Return _all_ non false positive addresses from $line. > >>>> +sub extract_addresses > >>>> +{ > >>>> + my ($line) = @_; > >>>> + my $address = '\b(0x)?ffff[[:xdigit:]]{12}\b'; > >>> > >>> On 64-bit powerpc (ppc64/ppc64le) we'd want: > >>> > >>> + my $address = '\b(0x)?[89abcdef]00[[:xdigit:]]{13}\b'; > >>> > >>> > >>>> +# Do not parse these files (absolute path). > >>>> +my @skip_parse_files_abs = ('/proc/kmsg', > >>>> + '/proc/kcore', > >>>> + '/proc/fs/ext4/sdb1/mb_groups', > >>>> + '/proc/1/fd/3', > >>>> + '/sys/kernel/debug/tracing/trace_pipe', > >>>> + '/sys/kernel/security/apparmor/revision'); > >>> > >>> Can you add: > >>> > >>> /sys/firmware/devicetree > >>> > >>> and/or /proc/device-tree (which is a symlink to the above). > >> > >> /proc/device-tree is a symlink to /sys/firmware/devicetree/base > > > > Oh yep, forgot about the base part. > > > >> /sys/firmware contains > >> fdt -- the flattened device tree that was passed to the > >> kernel on boot > >> devicetree/base/ -- the data that is currently in the live device tree. > >> This live device tree is represented as directories > >> and files beneath base/ > >> > >> The information in fdt is directly available in the kernel source tree > > > > On ARM that might be true, but not on powerpc.
Looks like we should be considering architecture specific lists for files/directories to skip. thanks, Tobin.