[PATCHv2 0/3] KASAN: clean stale poison upon cold re-entry to kernel
Mark Rutland
mark.rutland at arm.com
Thu Mar 3 10:17:14 PST 2016
On Thu, Mar 03, 2016 at 06:45:55PM +0100, Alexander Potapenko wrote:
> On Thu, Mar 3, 2016 at 6:40 PM, Mark Rutland <mark.rutland at arm.com> wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > On Thu, Mar 03, 2016 at 06:17:31PM +0100, Alexander Potapenko wrote:
> >> Please replace "ASAN" with "KASAN".
> >>
> >> On Thu, Mar 3, 2016 at 5:54 PM, Mark Rutland <mark.rutland at arm.com> wrote:
> >> > Functions which the compiler has instrumented for ASAN place poison on
> >> > the stack shadow upon entry and remove this poison prior to returning.
[...]
> > For the above, and the rest of the series, ASAN consistently refers to
> > the compiler AddressSanitizer feature, and KASAN consistently refers to
> > the Linux-specific infrastructure. A simple s/[^K]ASAN/KASAN/ would
> > arguably be wrong (e.g. when referring to GCC behaviour above).
> I don't think there's been any convention about the compiler feature
> name, we usually talked about ASan as a userspace tool and KASAN as a
> kernel-space one, although they share the compiler part.
Ah, ok.
In future I'll speak in terms of "AddressSanitizer instrumentation" or
something like that, as that's fairly unambigious.
> > If there is a this needs rework, then I'm happy to s/[^K]ASAN/ASan/ to
> > follow the usual ASan naming convention and avoid confusion. Otherwise,
> > spinning a v3 is simply churn.
> I don't insist on changing this, I should've chimed in before.
> Feel free to retain the above patch description.
No worries, thanks for the info.
Thanks,
Mark.
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