On Wed, Apr 17, 2019 at 05:16:18PM +0200, Jessica Yu wrote: > +++ Steven Rostedt [10/04/19 20:44 -0400]: > >On Wed, 10 Apr 2019 16:29:02 -0400 > >Joel Fernandes <joel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > >>The srcu structure pointer array is modified at module load time because the > >>array is fixed up by the module loader at load-time with the final locations > >>of the tracepoints right? Basically relocation fixups. At compile time, I > >>believe it is not know what the values in the ptr array are. I believe same > >>is true for the tracepoint ptrs array. > >> > >>Also it needs to be in a separate __tracepoint_ptrs so that this code works: > >> > >> > >>#ifdef CONFIG_TRACEPOINTS > >> mod->tracepoints_ptrs = section_objs(info, "__tracepoints_ptrs", > >> sizeof(*mod->tracepoints_ptrs), > >> &mod->num_tracepoints); > >>#endif > >> > >>Did I miss some point? Thanks, > > > >But there's a lot of others too. Hmm, does this mean that the RO data > >sections that are in modules are not set to RO? > > > >There's a bunch of separate sections that are RO. Just look in > >include/asm-generic/vmlinux.lds.h under the RO_DATA_SECTION() macro. > > > >A lot of the sections saved in module.c:find_module_sections() are in > >that RO_DATA when compiled as a builtin. Are they not RO when loaded via > >a module? > > Unlike the kernel, the module loader does not rely on a linker script > to determine which sections get what protections. On module load, all > sections in a module are looped through and those sections without the > SHF_WRITE flag will be set to RO. For example, when there is a section > filled with structs declared as const or if the section was explicitly > given only the SHF_ALLOC attribute, those will be read-only. As long > as the sections were given the correct section attributes for > read-only, it'll have read-only protection. I see this is already the > case for __param and __ksymtab*/__kcrctab* sections, but I agree that > a full audit would be useful to be consistent with builtin RO > protections. Thank you very much for the explanation! Thanx, Paul