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leaking_addresses: Provide mechanism to scan binary files
Introduce --kallsyms argument for scanning binary files for known symbol addresses. This would have found the exposure in /sys/kernel/notes: $ scripts/leaking_addresses.pl --kallsyms=<(sudo cat /proc/kallsyms) /sys/kernel/notes: hypercall_page @ 156 /sys/kernel/notes: xen_hypercall_set_trap_table @ 156 /sys/kernel/notes: startup_xen @ 132 Acked-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org> Reviewed-by: Tycho Andersen <tandersen@netflix.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/20240222220053.1475824-4-keescook@chromium.org Signed-off-by: Kees Cook <keescook@chromium.org>
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@ -52,10 +52,13 @@ my $input_raw = ""; # Read raw results from file instead of scanning.
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my $suppress_dmesg = 0; # Don't show dmesg in output.
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my $squash_by_path = 0; # Summary report grouped by absolute path.
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my $squash_by_filename = 0; # Summary report grouped by filename.
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my $kallsyms_file = ""; # Kernel symbols file.
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my $kernel_config_file = ""; # Kernel configuration file.
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my $opt_32bit = 0; # Scan 32-bit kernel.
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my $page_offset_32bit = 0; # Page offset for 32-bit kernel.
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my @kallsyms = ();
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# Skip these absolute paths.
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my @skip_abs = (
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'/proc/kmsg',
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@ -96,6 +99,8 @@ Options:
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--squash-by-path Show one result per unique path.
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--squash-by-filename Show one result per unique filename.
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--kernel-config-file=<file> Kernel configuration file (e.g /boot/config)
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--kallsyms=<file> Read kernel symbol addresses from file (for
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scanning binary files).
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--32-bit Scan 32-bit kernel.
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--page-offset-32-bit=o Page offset (for 32-bit kernel 0xABCD1234).
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-d, --debug Display debugging output.
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@ -116,6 +121,7 @@ GetOptions(
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'squash-by-path' => \$squash_by_path,
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'squash-by-filename' => \$squash_by_filename,
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'raw' => \$raw,
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'kallsyms=s' => \$kallsyms_file,
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'kernel-config-file=s' => \$kernel_config_file,
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'32-bit' => \$opt_32bit,
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'page-offset-32-bit=o' => \$page_offset_32bit,
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@ -156,6 +162,25 @@ if ($output_raw) {
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select $fh;
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}
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if ($kallsyms_file) {
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open my $fh, '<', $kallsyms_file or die "$0: $kallsyms_file: $!\n";
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while (<$fh>) {
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chomp;
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my @entry = split / /, $_;
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my $addr_text = $entry[0];
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if ($addr_text !~ /^0/) {
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# TODO: Why is hex() so impossibly slow?
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my $addr = hex($addr_text);
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my $symbol = $entry[2];
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# Only keep kernel text addresses.
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my $long = pack("J", $addr);
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my $entry = [$long, $symbol];
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push @kallsyms, $entry;
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}
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}
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close $fh;
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}
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parse_dmesg();
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walk(@DIRS);
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@ -447,6 +472,25 @@ sub timed_parse_file
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}
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}
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sub parse_binary
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{
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my ($file) = @_;
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open my $fh, "<:raw", $file or return;
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local $/ = undef;
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my $bytes = <$fh>;
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close $fh;
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foreach my $entry (@kallsyms) {
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my $addr = $entry->[0];
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my $symbol = $entry->[1];
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my $offset = index($bytes, $addr);
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if ($offset != -1) {
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printf("$file: $symbol @ $offset\n");
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}
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}
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}
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sub parse_file
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{
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my ($file) = @_;
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@ -456,6 +500,15 @@ sub parse_file
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}
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if (! -T $file) {
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if ($file =~ m|^/sys/kernel/btf/| or
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$file =~ m|^/sys/devices/pci| or
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$file =~ m|^/sys/firmware/efi/efivars/| or
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$file =~ m|^/proc/bus/pci/|) {
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return;
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}
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if (scalar @kallsyms > 0) {
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parse_binary($file);
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}
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return;
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}
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