| ORC unwinder |
| ============ |
| |
| Overview |
| -------- |
| |
| The kernel CONFIG_UNWINDER_ORC option enables the ORC unwinder, which is |
| similar in concept to a DWARF unwinder. The difference is that the |
| format of the ORC data is much simpler than DWARF, which in turn allows |
| the ORC unwinder to be much simpler and faster. |
| |
| The ORC data consists of unwind tables which are generated by objtool. |
| They contain out-of-band data which is used by the in-kernel ORC |
| unwinder. Objtool generates the ORC data by first doing compile-time |
| stack metadata validation (CONFIG_STACK_VALIDATION). After analyzing |
| all the code paths of a .o file, it determines information about the |
| stack state at each instruction address in the file and outputs that |
| information to the .orc_unwind and .orc_unwind_ip sections. |
| |
| The per-object ORC sections are combined at link time and are sorted and |
| post-processed at boot time. The unwinder uses the resulting data to |
| correlate instruction addresses with their stack states at run time. |
| |
| |
| ORC vs frame pointers |
| --------------------- |
| |
| With frame pointers enabled, GCC adds instrumentation code to every |
| function in the kernel. The kernel's .text size increases by about |
| 3.2%, resulting in a broad kernel-wide slowdown. Measurements by Mel |
| Gorman [1] have shown a slowdown of 5-10% for some workloads. |
| |
| In contrast, the ORC unwinder has no effect on text size or runtime |
| performance, because the debuginfo is out of band. So if you disable |
| frame pointers and enable the ORC unwinder, you get a nice performance |
| improvement across the board, and still have reliable stack traces. |
| |
| Ingo Molnar says: |
| |
| "Note that it's not just a performance improvement, but also an |
| instruction cache locality improvement: 3.2% .text savings almost |
| directly transform into a similarly sized reduction in cache |
| footprint. That can transform to even higher speedups for workloads |
| whose cache locality is borderline." |
| |
| Another benefit of ORC compared to frame pointers is that it can |
| reliably unwind across interrupts and exceptions. Frame pointer based |
| unwinds can sometimes skip the caller of the interrupted function, if it |
| was a leaf function or if the interrupt hit before the frame pointer was |
| saved. |
| |
| The main disadvantage of the ORC unwinder compared to frame pointers is |
| that it needs more memory to store the ORC unwind tables: roughly 2-4MB |
| depending on the kernel config. |
| |
| |
| ORC vs DWARF |
| ------------ |
| |
| ORC debuginfo's advantage over DWARF itself is that it's much simpler. |
| It gets rid of the complex DWARF CFI state machine and also gets rid of |
| the tracking of unnecessary registers. This allows the unwinder to be |
| much simpler, meaning fewer bugs, which is especially important for |
| mission critical oops code. |
| |
| The simpler debuginfo format also enables the unwinder to be much faster |
| than DWARF, which is important for perf and lockdep. In a basic |
| performance test by Jiri Slaby [2], the ORC unwinder was about 20x |
| faster than an out-of-tree DWARF unwinder. (Note: That measurement was |
| taken before some performance tweaks were added, which doubled |
| performance, so the speedup over DWARF may be closer to 40x.) |
| |
| The ORC data format does have a few downsides compared to DWARF. ORC |
| unwind tables take up ~50% more RAM (+1.3MB on an x86 defconfig kernel) |
| than DWARF-based eh_frame tables. |
| |
| Another potential downside is that, as GCC evolves, it's conceivable |
| that the ORC data may end up being *too* simple to describe the state of |
| the stack for certain optimizations. But IMO this is unlikely because |
| GCC saves the frame pointer for any unusual stack adjustments it does, |
| so I suspect we'll really only ever need to keep track of the stack |
| pointer and the frame pointer between call frames. But even if we do |
| end up having to track all the registers DWARF tracks, at least we will |
| still be able to control the format, e.g. no complex state machines. |
| |
| |
| ORC unwind table generation |
| --------------------------- |
| |
| The ORC data is generated by objtool. With the existing compile-time |
| stack metadata validation feature, objtool already follows all code |
| paths, and so it already has all the information it needs to be able to |
| generate ORC data from scratch. So it's an easy step to go from stack |
| validation to ORC data generation. |
| |
| It should be possible to instead generate the ORC data with a simple |
| tool which converts DWARF to ORC data. However, such a solution would |
| be incomplete due to the kernel's extensive use of asm, inline asm, and |
| special sections like exception tables. |
| |
| That could be rectified by manually annotating those special code paths |
| using GNU assembler .cfi annotations in .S files, and homegrown |
| annotations for inline asm in .c files. But asm annotations were tried |
| in the past and were found to be unmaintainable. They were often |
| incorrect/incomplete and made the code harder to read and keep updated. |
| And based on looking at glibc code, annotating inline asm in .c files |
| might be even worse. |
| |
| Objtool still needs a few annotations, but only in code which does |
| unusual things to the stack like entry code. And even then, far fewer |
| annotations are needed than what DWARF would need, so they're much more |
| maintainable than DWARF CFI annotations. |
| |
| So the advantages of using objtool to generate ORC data are that it |
| gives more accurate debuginfo, with very few annotations. It also |
| insulates the kernel from toolchain bugs which can be very painful to |
| deal with in the kernel since we often have to workaround issues in |
| older versions of the toolchain for years. |
| |
| The downside is that the unwinder now becomes dependent on objtool's |
| ability to reverse engineer GCC code flow. If GCC optimizations become |
| too complicated for objtool to follow, the ORC data generation might |
| stop working or become incomplete. (It's worth noting that livepatch |
| already has such a dependency on objtool's ability to follow GCC code |
| flow.) |
| |
| If newer versions of GCC come up with some optimizations which break |
| objtool, we may need to revisit the current implementation. Some |
| possible solutions would be asking GCC to make the optimizations more |
| palatable, or having objtool use DWARF as an additional input, or |
| creating a GCC plugin to assist objtool with its analysis. But for now, |
| objtool follows GCC code quite well. |
| |
| |
| Unwinder implementation details |
| ------------------------------- |
| |
| Objtool generates the ORC data by integrating with the compile-time |
| stack metadata validation feature, which is described in detail in |
| tools/objtool/Documentation/stack-validation.txt. After analyzing all |
| the code paths of a .o file, it creates an array of orc_entry structs, |
| and a parallel array of instruction addresses associated with those |
| structs, and writes them to the .orc_unwind and .orc_unwind_ip sections |
| respectively. |
| |
| The ORC data is split into the two arrays for performance reasons, to |
| make the searchable part of the data (.orc_unwind_ip) more compact. The |
| arrays are sorted in parallel at boot time. |
| |
| Performance is further improved by the use of a fast lookup table which |
| is created at runtime. The fast lookup table associates a given address |
| with a range of indices for the .orc_unwind table, so that only a small |
| subset of the table needs to be searched. |
| |
| |
| Etymology |
| --------- |
| |
| Orcs, fearsome creatures of medieval folklore, are the Dwarves' natural |
| enemies. Similarly, the ORC unwinder was created in opposition to the |
| complexity and slowness of DWARF. |
| |
| "Although Orcs rarely consider multiple solutions to a problem, they do |
| excel at getting things done because they are creatures of action, not |
| thought." [3] Similarly, unlike the esoteric DWARF unwinder, the |
| veracious ORC unwinder wastes no time or siloconic effort decoding |
| variable-length zero-extended unsigned-integer byte-coded |
| state-machine-based debug information entries. |
| |
| Similar to how Orcs frequently unravel the well-intentioned plans of |
| their adversaries, the ORC unwinder frequently unravels stacks with |
| brutal, unyielding efficiency. |
| |
| ORC stands for Oops Rewind Capability. |
| |
| |
| [1] https://lkml.kernel.org/r/20170602104048.jkkzssljsompjdwy@suse.de |
| [2] https://lkml.kernel.org/r/d2ca5435-6386-29b8-db87-7f227c2b713a@suse.cz |
| [3] http://dustin.wikidot.com/half-orcs-and-orcs |