1.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
2.. Copyright (C) 2022, Google LLC.
3
4===============================
5Kernel Memory Sanitizer (KMSAN)
6===============================
7
8KMSAN is a dynamic error detector aimed at finding uses of uninitialized
9values. It is based on compiler instrumentation, and is quite similar to the
10userspace `MemorySanitizer tool`_.
11
12An important note is that KMSAN is not intended for production use, because it
13drastically increases kernel memory footprint and slows the whole system down.
14
15Usage
16=====
17
18Building the kernel
19-------------------
20
21In order to build a kernel with KMSAN you will need a fresh Clang (14.0.6+).
22Please refer to `LLVM documentation`_ for the instructions on how to build Clang.
23
24Now configure and build the kernel with CONFIG_KMSAN enabled.
25
26Example report
27--------------
28
29Here is an example of a KMSAN report::
30
31  =====================================================
32  BUG: KMSAN: uninit-value in test_uninit_kmsan_check_memory+0x1be/0x380 [kmsan_test]
33   test_uninit_kmsan_check_memory+0x1be/0x380 mm/kmsan/kmsan_test.c:273
34   kunit_run_case_internal lib/kunit/test.c:333
35   kunit_try_run_case+0x206/0x420 lib/kunit/test.c:374
36   kunit_generic_run_threadfn_adapter+0x6d/0xc0 lib/kunit/try-catch.c:28
37   kthread+0x721/0x850 kernel/kthread.c:327
38   ret_from_fork+0x1f/0x30 ??:?
39
40  Uninit was stored to memory at:
41   do_uninit_local_array+0xfa/0x110 mm/kmsan/kmsan_test.c:260
42   test_uninit_kmsan_check_memory+0x1a2/0x380 mm/kmsan/kmsan_test.c:271
43   kunit_run_case_internal lib/kunit/test.c:333
44   kunit_try_run_case+0x206/0x420 lib/kunit/test.c:374
45   kunit_generic_run_threadfn_adapter+0x6d/0xc0 lib/kunit/try-catch.c:28
46   kthread+0x721/0x850 kernel/kthread.c:327
47   ret_from_fork+0x1f/0x30 ??:?
48
49  Local variable uninit created at:
50   do_uninit_local_array+0x4a/0x110 mm/kmsan/kmsan_test.c:256
51   test_uninit_kmsan_check_memory+0x1a2/0x380 mm/kmsan/kmsan_test.c:271
52
53  Bytes 4-7 of 8 are uninitialized
54  Memory access of size 8 starts at ffff888083fe3da0
55
56  CPU: 0 PID: 6731 Comm: kunit_try_catch Tainted: G    B       E     5.16.0-rc3+ #104
57  Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (i440FX + PIIX, 1996), BIOS 1.14.0-2 04/01/2014
58  =====================================================
59
60The report says that the local variable ``uninit`` was created uninitialized in
61``do_uninit_local_array()``. The third stack trace corresponds to the place
62where this variable was created.
63
64The first stack trace shows where the uninit value was used (in
65``test_uninit_kmsan_check_memory()``). The tool shows the bytes which were left
66uninitialized in the local variable, as well as the stack where the value was
67copied to another memory location before use.
68
69A use of uninitialized value ``v`` is reported by KMSAN in the following cases:
70
71 - in a condition, e.g. ``if (v) { ... }``;
72 - in an indexing or pointer dereferencing, e.g. ``array[v]`` or ``*v``;
73 - when it is copied to userspace or hardware, e.g. ``copy_to_user(..., &v, ...)``;
74 - when it is passed as an argument to a function, and
75   ``CONFIG_KMSAN_CHECK_PARAM_RETVAL`` is enabled (see below).
76
77The mentioned cases (apart from copying data to userspace or hardware, which is
78a security issue) are considered undefined behavior from the C11 Standard point
79of view.
80
81Disabling the instrumentation
82-----------------------------
83
84A function can be marked with ``__no_kmsan_checks``. Doing so makes KMSAN
85ignore uninitialized values in that function and mark its output as initialized.
86As a result, the user will not get KMSAN reports related to that function.
87
88Another function attribute supported by KMSAN is ``__no_sanitize_memory``.
89Applying this attribute to a function will result in KMSAN not instrumenting
90it, which can be helpful if we do not want the compiler to interfere with some
91low-level code (e.g. that marked with ``noinstr`` which implicitly adds
92``__no_sanitize_memory``).
93
94This however comes at a cost: stack allocations from such functions will have
95incorrect shadow/origin values, likely leading to false positives. Functions
96called from non-instrumented code may also receive incorrect metadata for their
97parameters.
98
99As a rule of thumb, avoid using ``__no_sanitize_memory`` explicitly.
100
101It is also possible to disable KMSAN for a single file (e.g. main.o)::
102
103  KMSAN_SANITIZE_main.o := n
104
105or for the whole directory::
106
107  KMSAN_SANITIZE := n
108
109in the Makefile. Think of this as applying ``__no_sanitize_memory`` to every
110function in the file or directory. Most users won't need KMSAN_SANITIZE, unless
111their code gets broken by KMSAN (e.g. runs at early boot time).
112
113Support
114=======
115
116In order for KMSAN to work the kernel must be built with Clang, which so far is
117the only compiler that has KMSAN support. The kernel instrumentation pass is
118based on the userspace `MemorySanitizer tool`_.
119
120The runtime library only supports x86_64 at the moment.
121
122How KMSAN works
123===============
124
125KMSAN shadow memory
126-------------------
127
128KMSAN associates a metadata byte (also called shadow byte) with every byte of
129kernel memory. A bit in the shadow byte is set iff the corresponding bit of the
130kernel memory byte is uninitialized. Marking the memory uninitialized (i.e.
131setting its shadow bytes to ``0xff``) is called poisoning, marking it
132initialized (setting the shadow bytes to ``0x00``) is called unpoisoning.
133
134When a new variable is allocated on the stack, it is poisoned by default by
135instrumentation code inserted by the compiler (unless it is a stack variable
136that is immediately initialized). Any new heap allocation done without
137``__GFP_ZERO`` is also poisoned.
138
139Compiler instrumentation also tracks the shadow values as they are used along
140the code. When needed, instrumentation code invokes the runtime library in
141``mm/kmsan/`` to persist shadow values.
142
143The shadow value of a basic or compound type is an array of bytes of the same
144length. When a constant value is written into memory, that memory is unpoisoned.
145When a value is read from memory, its shadow memory is also obtained and
146propagated into all the operations which use that value. For every instruction
147that takes one or more values the compiler generates code that calculates the
148shadow of the result depending on those values and their shadows.
149
150Example::
151
152  int a = 0xff;  // i.e. 0x000000ff
153  int b;
154  int c = a | b;
155
156In this case the shadow of ``a`` is ``0``, shadow of ``b`` is ``0xffffffff``,
157shadow of ``c`` is ``0xffffff00``. This means that the upper three bytes of
158``c`` are uninitialized, while the lower byte is initialized.
159
160Origin tracking
161---------------
162
163Every four bytes of kernel memory also have a so-called origin mapped to them.
164This origin describes the point in program execution at which the uninitialized
165value was created. Every origin is associated with either the full allocation
166stack (for heap-allocated memory), or the function containing the uninitialized
167variable (for locals).
168
169When an uninitialized variable is allocated on stack or heap, a new origin
170value is created, and that variable's origin is filled with that value. When a
171value is read from memory, its origin is also read and kept together with the
172shadow. For every instruction that takes one or more values, the origin of the
173result is one of the origins corresponding to any of the uninitialized inputs.
174If a poisoned value is written into memory, its origin is written to the
175corresponding storage as well.
176
177Example 1::
178
179  int a = 42;
180  int b;
181  int c = a + b;
182
183In this case the origin of ``b`` is generated upon function entry, and is
184stored to the origin of ``c`` right before the addition result is written into
185memory.
186
187Several variables may share the same origin address, if they are stored in the
188same four-byte chunk. In this case every write to either variable updates the
189origin for all of them. We have to sacrifice precision in this case, because
190storing origins for individual bits (and even bytes) would be too costly.
191
192Example 2::
193
194  int combine(short a, short b) {
195    union ret_t {
196      int i;
197      short s[2];
198    } ret;
199    ret.s[0] = a;
200    ret.s[1] = b;
201    return ret.i;
202  }
203
204If ``a`` is initialized and ``b`` is not, the shadow of the result would be
2050xffff0000, and the origin of the result would be the origin of ``b``.
206``ret.s[0]`` would have the same origin, but it will never be used, because
207that variable is initialized.
208
209If both function arguments are uninitialized, only the origin of the second
210argument is preserved.
211
212Origin chaining
213~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
214
215To ease debugging, KMSAN creates a new origin for every store of an
216uninitialized value to memory. The new origin references both its creation stack
217and the previous origin the value had. This may cause increased memory
218consumption, so we limit the length of origin chains in the runtime.
219
220Clang instrumentation API
221-------------------------
222
223Clang instrumentation pass inserts calls to functions defined in
224``mm/kmsan/nstrumentation.c`` into the kernel code.
225
226Shadow manipulation
227~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
228
229For every memory access the compiler emits a call to a function that returns a
230pair of pointers to the shadow and origin addresses of the given memory::
231
232  typedef struct {
233    void *shadow, *origin;
234  } shadow_origin_ptr_t
235
236  shadow_origin_ptr_t __msan_metadata_ptr_for_load_{1,2,4,8}(void *addr)
237  shadow_origin_ptr_t __msan_metadata_ptr_for_store_{1,2,4,8}(void *addr)
238  shadow_origin_ptr_t __msan_metadata_ptr_for_load_n(void *addr, uintptr_t size)
239  shadow_origin_ptr_t __msan_metadata_ptr_for_store_n(void *addr, uintptr_t size)
240
241The function name depends on the memory access size.
242
243The compiler makes sure that for every loaded value its shadow and origin
244values are read from memory. When a value is stored to memory, its shadow and
245origin are also stored using the metadata pointers.
246
247Handling locals
248~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
249
250A special function is used to create a new origin value for a local variable and
251set the origin of that variable to that value::
252
253  void __msan_poison_alloca(void *addr, uintptr_t size, char *descr)
254
255Access to per-task data
256~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
257
258At the beginning of every instrumented function KMSAN inserts a call to
259``__msan_get_context_state()``::
260
261  kmsan_context_state *__msan_get_context_state(void)
262
263``kmsan_context_state`` is declared in ``include/linux/kmsan.h``::
264
265  struct kmsan_context_state {
266    char param_tls[KMSAN_PARAM_SIZE];
267    char retval_tls[KMSAN_RETVAL_SIZE];
268    char va_arg_tls[KMSAN_PARAM_SIZE];
269    char va_arg_origin_tls[KMSAN_PARAM_SIZE];
270    u64 va_arg_overflow_size_tls;
271    char param_origin_tls[KMSAN_PARAM_SIZE];
272    depot_stack_handle_t retval_origin_tls;
273  };
274
275This structure is used by KMSAN to pass parameter shadows and origins between
276instrumented functions (unless the parameters are checked immediately by
277``CONFIG_KMSAN_CHECK_PARAM_RETVAL``).
278
279Passing uninitialized values to functions
280~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
281
282Clang's MemorySanitizer instrumentation has an option,
283``-fsanitize-memory-param-retval``, which makes the compiler check function
284parameters passed by value, as well as function return values.
285
286The option is controlled by ``CONFIG_KMSAN_CHECK_PARAM_RETVAL``, which is
287enabled by default to let KMSAN report uninitialized values earlier.
288Please refer to the `LKML discussion`_ for more details.
289
290Because of the way the checks are implemented in LLVM (they are only applied to
291parameters marked as ``noundef``), not all parameters are guaranteed to be
292checked, so we cannot give up the metadata storage in ``kmsan_context_state``.
293
294String functions
295~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
296
297The compiler replaces calls to ``memcpy()``/``memmove()``/``memset()`` with the
298following functions. These functions are also called when data structures are
299initialized or copied, making sure shadow and origin values are copied alongside
300with the data::
301
302  void *__msan_memcpy(void *dst, void *src, uintptr_t n)
303  void *__msan_memmove(void *dst, void *src, uintptr_t n)
304  void *__msan_memset(void *dst, int c, uintptr_t n)
305
306Error reporting
307~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
308
309For each use of a value the compiler emits a shadow check that calls
310``__msan_warning()`` in the case that value is poisoned::
311
312  void __msan_warning(u32 origin)
313
314``__msan_warning()`` causes KMSAN runtime to print an error report.
315
316Inline assembly instrumentation
317~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
318
319KMSAN instruments every inline assembly output with a call to::
320
321  void __msan_instrument_asm_store(void *addr, uintptr_t size)
322
323, which unpoisons the memory region.
324
325This approach may mask certain errors, but it also helps to avoid a lot of
326false positives in bitwise operations, atomics etc.
327
328Sometimes the pointers passed into inline assembly do not point to valid memory.
329In such cases they are ignored at runtime.
330
331
332Runtime library
333---------------
334
335The code is located in ``mm/kmsan/``.
336
337Per-task KMSAN state
338~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
339
340Every task_struct has an associated KMSAN task state that holds the KMSAN
341context (see above) and a per-task flag disallowing KMSAN reports::
342
343  struct kmsan_context {
344    ...
345    bool allow_reporting;
346    struct kmsan_context_state cstate;
347    ...
348  }
349
350  struct task_struct {
351    ...
352    struct kmsan_context kmsan;
353    ...
354  }
355
356KMSAN contexts
357~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
358
359When running in a kernel task context, KMSAN uses ``current->kmsan.cstate`` to
360hold the metadata for function parameters and return values.
361
362But in the case the kernel is running in the interrupt, softirq or NMI context,
363where ``current`` is unavailable, KMSAN switches to per-cpu interrupt state::
364
365  DEFINE_PER_CPU(struct kmsan_ctx, kmsan_percpu_ctx);
366
367Metadata allocation
368~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
369
370There are several places in the kernel for which the metadata is stored.
371
3721. Each ``struct page`` instance contains two pointers to its shadow and
373origin pages::
374
375  struct page {
376    ...
377    struct page *shadow, *origin;
378    ...
379  };
380
381At boot-time, the kernel allocates shadow and origin pages for every available
382kernel page. This is done quite late, when the kernel address space is already
383fragmented, so normal data pages may arbitrarily interleave with the metadata
384pages.
385
386This means that in general for two contiguous memory pages their shadow/origin
387pages may not be contiguous. Consequently, if a memory access crosses the
388boundary of a memory block, accesses to shadow/origin memory may potentially
389corrupt other pages or read incorrect values from them.
390
391In practice, contiguous memory pages returned by the same ``alloc_pages()``
392call will have contiguous metadata, whereas if these pages belong to two
393different allocations their metadata pages can be fragmented.
394
395For the kernel data (``.data``, ``.bss`` etc.) and percpu memory regions
396there also are no guarantees on metadata contiguity.
397
398In the case ``__msan_metadata_ptr_for_XXX_YYY()`` hits the border between two
399pages with non-contiguous metadata, it returns pointers to fake shadow/origin regions::
400
401  char dummy_load_page[PAGE_SIZE] __attribute__((aligned(PAGE_SIZE)));
402  char dummy_store_page[PAGE_SIZE] __attribute__((aligned(PAGE_SIZE)));
403
404``dummy_load_page`` is zero-initialized, so reads from it always yield zeroes.
405All stores to ``dummy_store_page`` are ignored.
406
4072. For vmalloc memory and modules, there is a direct mapping between the memory
408range, its shadow and origin. KMSAN reduces the vmalloc area by 3/4, making only
409the first quarter available to ``vmalloc()``. The second quarter of the vmalloc
410area contains shadow memory for the first quarter, the third one holds the
411origins. A small part of the fourth quarter contains shadow and origins for the
412kernel modules. Please refer to ``arch/x86/include/asm/pgtable_64_types.h`` for
413more details.
414
415When an array of pages is mapped into a contiguous virtual memory space, their
416shadow and origin pages are similarly mapped into contiguous regions.
417
418References
419==========
420
421E. Stepanov, K. Serebryany. `MemorySanitizer: fast detector of uninitialized
422memory use in C++
423<https://static.googleusercontent.com/media/research.google.com/en//pubs/archive/43308.pdf>`_.
424In Proceedings of CGO 2015.
425
426.. _MemorySanitizer tool: https://clang.llvm.org/docs/MemorySanitizer.html
427.. _LLVM documentation: https://llvm.org/docs/GettingStarted.html
428.. _LKML discussion: https://lore.kernel.org/all/20220614144853.3693273-1-glider@google.com/
429