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Re: [Xen-devel] [PATCH v1 01/13] Export hypervisor symbols



On 09/11/2013 10:12 AM, Jan Beulich wrote:

--- a/xen/include/public/platform.h
+++ b/xen/include/public/platform.h
@@ -527,6 +527,26 @@ struct xenpf_core_parking {
   typedef struct xenpf_core_parking xenpf_core_parking_t;
   DEFINE_XEN_GUEST_HANDLE(xenpf_core_parking_t);
+#define XENPF_get_symbols 61
+
+#define XENSYMS_SZ         4096
This doesn't appear to belong into the public interface.
Linux driver needs to know size of the buffer that is passed from
the hypervisir. I suppose I can just use PAGE_SIZE.
Buffer? Passed from the hypervisor?

As it is written now, we pass XENSYMS_SZ worth of (formatted) symbol
information to dom0.

And no, there's no PAGE_SIZE in the public interface as far as I'm
aware.

+struct xenpf_symdata {
+    /*
+     * offset into Xen's symbol data and symbol number from
+     * last call. Used only by Xen.
+     */
+    uint64_t xen_offset;
+    uint64_t xen_symnum;
I wonder whether that's really a suitable mechanism.
Why do you think this is not suitable?

Linux needs to keep track of position in the symbol table while
it is walking over the file, otherwise we will need to keep the state
in hypervisor which is much less desirable.
This could be as simple as a "give me the n-th symbol" interface.
The handler in the hypervisor could cache the last symbol
together with the associated data (with the assumption that there's
only ever going to be one iteration in progress), invalidating the
cache if the coming in index isn't one greater than the last one
processed. All the caching of course is only necessary if otherwise
lookup times aren't acceptable.

That would be just having xen_symnum (and caching xen_offset
in the hypervisor).


+
+   /*
+    * Symbols data, formatted similar to /proc/kallsyms:
+    *   <address> <type> <name>
+    */
+    XEN_GUEST_HANDLE(char) buf;
This is too simplistic: Please use a proper structure here, to allow
switching the internal symbol table representation (which I have on
my todo list) without having to mimic old behavior.
I don't think I know what you are referring to here.
Rather than having a handle to a simply byte array, you ought
to have a handle to a structure containing address, type, and
(pointer to/handle of) name.


Are you suggesting passing symbols one per hypercall? That's over 4000
hypercalls per one file read. How about requesting N next symbols?

-boris

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