On 7/30/20 5:04 PM, Steven Rostedt wrote:
> On Thu, 30 Jul 2020 16:29:12 +0200
> peter enderborg <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> +#undef TRACE_SYSTEM
>> +#define TRACE_SYSTEM avc
>> +
>> +#if !defined(_TRACE_AVC_H) || defined(TRACE_HEADER_MULTI_READ)
>> +#define _TRACE_AVC_H
>> +
>> +#include <linux/tracepoint.h>
>> +TRACE_EVENT(avc_data,
>> + TP_PROTO(u32 requested,
>> + u32 denied,
>> + u32 audited,
>> + int result,
>> + const char *msg
>> + ),
>> +
>> + TP_ARGS(requested, denied, audited, result,msg),
>> +
>> + TP_STRUCT__entry(
>> + __field(u32, requested)
>> + __field(u32, denied)
>> + __field(u32, audited)
>> + __field(int, result)
>> + __array(char, msg, 255)
> You want to use __string() here, otherwise you are wasting a lot of
> buffer space.
>
> __string( msg, msg)
It should be a full structure with a lot of sub strings. But that make is even
more relevant.
>
>> + ),
>> +
>> + TP_fast_assign(
>> + __entry->requested = requested;
>> + __entry->denied = denied;
>> + __entry->audited = audited;
>> + __entry->result = result;
>> + memcpy(__entry->msg, msg, 255);
> Not to mention, the above is a bug. As the msg being passed in, is
> highly unlikely to be 255 bytes. You just leaked all that memory after
> the sting to user space.
>
> Where you want here:
>
> __assign_str( msg, msg );
Directly in to the code. Was more in to get in to discussion on how complex we
should have
the trace data. There is a lot of fields. Not all is always present. Is there
any good way
to handle that? Like "something= somethingelse=42" or "something=nil
somthingelse=42"
>
> -- Steve
>
>
>
>> + ),
>> +
>> + TP_printk("requested=0x%x denied=%d audited=%d result=%d
>> msg=%s",
>> + __entry->requested, __entry->denied, __entry->audited,
>> __entry->result, __entry->msg
>> + )