diff options
author | Andrey Konovalov | 2021-04-29 23:00:15 -0700 |
---|---|---|
committer | Linus Torvalds | 2021-04-30 11:20:41 -0700 |
commit | 3cbc37dcdca273485f8ef909fab2c41e8fb5d3b9 (patch) | |
tree | cf582900170d300b3c4ed2f4f5e2f5fdfe70a6ae /Documentation | |
parent | 96d7d1415ae8beb3f6ec62107a97ae73db611213 (diff) |
kasan: docs: update overview section
Update the "Overview" section in KASAN documentation:
- Outline main use cases for each mode.
- Mention that HW_TAGS mode need compiler support too.
- Move the part about SLUB/SLAB support from "Usage" to "Overview".
- Punctuation, readability, and other minor clean-ups.
Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/1486fba8514de3d7db2f47df2192db59228b0a7b.1615559068.git.andreyknvl@google.com
Signed-off-by: Andrey Konovalov <andreyknvl@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Marco Elver <elver@google.com>
Cc: Alexander Potapenko <glider@google.com>
Cc: Andrey Ryabinin <aryabinin@virtuozzo.com>
Cc: Dmitry Vyukov <dvyukov@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'Documentation')
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/dev-tools/kasan.rst | 27 |
1 files changed, 19 insertions, 8 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/dev-tools/kasan.rst b/Documentation/dev-tools/kasan.rst index 2e8dfb47eb49..703597a5c770 100644 --- a/Documentation/dev-tools/kasan.rst +++ b/Documentation/dev-tools/kasan.rst @@ -11,17 +11,31 @@ designed to find out-of-bound and use-after-free bugs. KASAN has three modes: 2. software tag-based KASAN (similar to userspace HWASan), 3. hardware tag-based KASAN (based on hardware memory tagging). -Software KASAN modes (1 and 2) use compile-time instrumentation to insert -validity checks before every memory access, and therefore require a compiler +Generic KASAN is mainly used for debugging due to a large memory overhead. +Software tag-based KASAN can be used for dogfood testing as it has a lower +memory overhead that allows using it with real workloads. Hardware tag-based +KASAN comes with low memory and performance overheads and, therefore, can be +used in production. Either as an in-field memory bug detector or as a security +mitigation. + +Software KASAN modes (#1 and #2) use compile-time instrumentation to insert +validity checks before every memory access and, therefore, require a compiler version that supports that. -Generic KASAN is supported in both GCC and Clang. With GCC it requires version +Generic KASAN is supported in GCC and Clang. With GCC, it requires version 8.3.0 or later. Any supported Clang version is compatible, but detection of out-of-bounds accesses for global variables is only supported since Clang 11. -Tag-based KASAN is only supported in Clang. +Software tag-based KASAN mode is only supported in Clang. -Currently generic KASAN is supported for the x86_64, arm, arm64, xtensa, s390 +The hardware KASAN mode (#3) relies on hardware to perform the checks but +still requires a compiler version that supports memory tagging instructions. +This mode is supported in GCC 10+ and Clang 11+. + +Both software KASAN modes work with SLUB and SLAB memory allocators, +while the hardware tag-based KASAN currently only supports SLUB. + +Currently, generic KASAN is supported for the x86_64, arm, arm64, xtensa, s390, and riscv architectures, and tag-based KASAN modes are supported only for arm64. Usage @@ -39,9 +53,6 @@ For software modes, you also need to choose between CONFIG_KASAN_OUTLINE and CONFIG_KASAN_INLINE. Outline and inline are compiler instrumentation types. The former produces smaller binary while the latter is 1.1 - 2 times faster. -Both software KASAN modes work with both SLUB and SLAB memory allocators, -while the hardware tag-based KASAN currently only support SLUB. - For better error reports that include stack traces, enable CONFIG_STACKTRACE. To augment reports with last allocation and freeing stack of the physical page, |