On Mon, Nov 11, 2024 at 04:48:58PM -0800, Sean Christopherson wrote: > On Mon, Nov 11, 2024, Peter Zijlstra wrote: > > Hi! > > > > Implement a means for exports to be available only to an explicit list of named > > modules. By explicitly limiting the usage of certain exports, the abuse > > potential/risk is greatly reduced. > > > > The first three 'patches' clean up the existing export namespace code along the > > same lines of 33def8498fdd ("treewide: Convert macro and uses of __section(foo) > > to __section("foo")") and for the same reason, it is not desired for the > > namespace argument to be a macro expansion itself. > > > > In fact, the second patch is really only a script, because sending the output > > to the list is a giant waste of bandwidth. Whoever eventually commits this to a > > git tree should squash these first three patches. > > > > The remainder of the patches introduce the special "MODULE_<modname-list>" > > namespace, which shall be forbidden from being explicitly imported. A module > > that matches the simple modname-list will get an implicit import. > > > > Lightly tested with something like: > > > > git grep -l EXPORT_SYMBOL arch/x86/kvm/ | while read file; > > do > > sed -i -e 's/EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(\(.[^)]*\))/EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL_FOR(\1, "kvm,kvm-intel,kvm-amd")/g' $file; > > done > > Heh, darn modules. This will compile just fine, but if the module contains a > dash, loading the module will fail because scripts/Makefile.lib replaces the dash > with an underscore the build name. E.g. "kvm-intel" at compile time generates > kvm-intel.ko, but the actual name of the module as seen by the kernel is kvm_intel. I was wondering about that... WTH is kvm doing that? I mean, I suppose you can do: "kvm-intel,kvm_intel" but that's somewhat tedious.