linux-stable/lib/Kconfig.kfence
Marco Elver 737b6a10ac kfence: allow use of a deferrable timer
Allow the use of a deferrable timer, which does not force CPU wake-ups
when the system is idle.  A consequence is that the sample interval
becomes very unpredictable, to the point that it is not guaranteed that
the KFENCE KUnit test still passes.

Nevertheless, on power-constrained systems this may be preferable, so
let's give the user the option should they accept the above trade-off.

Link: https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20220308141415.3168078-1-elver@google.com
Signed-off-by: Marco Elver <elver@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexander Potapenko <glider@google.com>
Cc: Dmitry Vyukov <dvyukov@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@linux-foundation.org>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>
2022-03-22 15:57:11 -07:00

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# SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-only
config HAVE_ARCH_KFENCE
bool
menuconfig KFENCE
bool "KFENCE: low-overhead sampling-based memory safety error detector"
depends on HAVE_ARCH_KFENCE && (SLAB || SLUB)
select STACKTRACE
select IRQ_WORK
help
KFENCE is a low-overhead sampling-based detector of heap out-of-bounds
access, use-after-free, and invalid-free errors. KFENCE is designed
to have negligible cost to permit enabling it in production
environments.
See <file:Documentation/dev-tools/kfence.rst> for more details.
Note that, KFENCE is not a substitute for explicit testing with tools
such as KASAN. KFENCE can detect a subset of bugs that KASAN can
detect, albeit at very different performance profiles. If you can
afford to use KASAN, continue using KASAN, for example in test
environments. If your kernel targets production use, and cannot
enable KASAN due to its cost, consider using KFENCE.
if KFENCE
config KFENCE_SAMPLE_INTERVAL
int "Default sample interval in milliseconds"
default 100
help
The KFENCE sample interval determines the frequency with which heap
allocations will be guarded by KFENCE. May be overridden via boot
parameter "kfence.sample_interval".
Set this to 0 to disable KFENCE by default, in which case only
setting "kfence.sample_interval" to a non-zero value enables KFENCE.
config KFENCE_NUM_OBJECTS
int "Number of guarded objects available"
range 1 65535
default 255
help
The number of guarded objects available. For each KFENCE object, 2
pages are required; with one containing the object and two adjacent
ones used as guard pages.
config KFENCE_DEFERRABLE
bool "Use a deferrable timer to trigger allocations"
help
Use a deferrable timer to trigger allocations. This avoids forcing
CPU wake-ups if the system is idle, at the risk of a less predictable
sample interval.
Warning: The KUnit test suite fails with this option enabled - due to
the unpredictability of the sample interval!
Say N if you are unsure.
config KFENCE_STATIC_KEYS
bool "Use static keys to set up allocations" if EXPERT
depends on JUMP_LABEL
help
Use static keys (static branches) to set up KFENCE allocations. This
option is only recommended when using very large sample intervals, or
performance has carefully been evaluated with this option.
Using static keys comes with trade-offs that need to be carefully
evaluated given target workloads and system architectures. Notably,
enabling and disabling static keys invoke IPI broadcasts, the latency
and impact of which is much harder to predict than a dynamic branch.
Say N if you are unsure.
config KFENCE_STRESS_TEST_FAULTS
int "Stress testing of fault handling and error reporting" if EXPERT
default 0
help
The inverse probability with which to randomly protect KFENCE object
pages, resulting in spurious use-after-frees. The main purpose of
this option is to stress test KFENCE with concurrent error reports
and allocations/frees. A value of 0 disables stress testing logic.
Only for KFENCE testing; set to 0 if you are not a KFENCE developer.
config KFENCE_KUNIT_TEST
tristate "KFENCE integration test suite" if !KUNIT_ALL_TESTS
default KUNIT_ALL_TESTS
depends on TRACEPOINTS && KUNIT
help
Test suite for KFENCE, testing various error detection scenarios with
various allocation types, and checking that reports are correctly
output to console.
Say Y here if you want the test to be built into the kernel and run
during boot; say M if you want the test to build as a module; say N
if you are unsure.
endif # KFENCE