1 .. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 2 .. Copyright (C) 2023, Google LLC. 3 4 Kernel Address Sanitizer (KASAN) 5 ================================ 6 7 Overview 8 -------- 9 10 Kernel Address Sanitizer (KASAN) is a dynamic memory safety error detector 11 designed to find out-of-bounds and use-after-free bugs. 12 13 KASAN has three modes: 14 15 1. Generic KASAN 16 2. Software Tag-Based KASAN 17 3. Hardware Tag-Based KASAN 18 19 Generic KASAN, enabled with CONFIG_KASAN_GENERIC, is the mode intended for 20 debugging, similar to userspace ASan. This mode is supported on many CPU 21 architectures, but it has significant performance and memory overheads. 22 23 Software Tag-Based KASAN or SW_TAGS KASAN, enabled with CONFIG_KASAN_SW_TAGS, 24 can be used for both debugging and dogfood testing, similar to userspace HWASan. 25 This mode is only supported for arm64, but its moderate memory overhead allows 26 using it for testing on memory-restricted devices with real workloads. 27 28 Hardware Tag-Based KASAN or HW_TAGS KASAN, enabled with CONFIG_KASAN_HW_TAGS, 29 is the mode intended to be used as an in-field memory bug detector or as a 30 security mitigation. This mode only works on arm64 CPUs that support MTE 31 (Memory Tagging Extension), but it has low memory and performance overheads and 32 thus can be used in production. 33 34 For details about the memory and performance impact of each KASAN mode, see the 35 descriptions of the corresponding Kconfig options. 36 37 The Generic and the Software Tag-Based modes are commonly referred to as the 38 software modes. The Software Tag-Based and the Hardware Tag-Based modes are 39 referred to as the tag-based modes. 40 41 Support 42 ------- 43 44 Architectures 45 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 46 47 Generic KASAN is supported on x86_64, arm, arm64, powerpc, riscv, s390, xtensa, 48 and loongarch, and the tag-based KASAN modes are supported only on arm64. 49 50 Compilers 51 ~~~~~~~~~ 52 53 Software KASAN modes use compile-time instrumentation to insert validity checks 54 before every memory access and thus require a compiler version that provides 55 support for that. The Hardware Tag-Based mode relies on hardware to perform 56 these checks but still requires a compiler version that supports the memory 57 tagging instructions. 58 59 Generic KASAN requires GCC version 8.3.0 or later 60 or any Clang version supported by the kernel. 61 62 Software Tag-Based KASAN requires GCC 11+ 63 or any Clang version supported by the kernel. 64 65 Hardware Tag-Based KASAN requires GCC 10+ or Clang 12+. 66 67 Memory types 68 ~~~~~~~~~~~~ 69 70 Generic KASAN supports finding bugs in all of slab, page_alloc, vmap, vmalloc, 71 stack, and global memory. 72 73 Software Tag-Based KASAN supports slab, page_alloc, vmalloc, and stack memory. 74 75 Hardware Tag-Based KASAN supports slab, page_alloc, and non-executable vmalloc 76 memory. 77 78 For slab, both software KASAN modes support SLUB and SLAB allocators, while 79 Hardware Tag-Based KASAN only supports SLUB. 80 81 Usage 82 ----- 83 84 To enable KASAN, configure the kernel with:: 85 86 CONFIG_KASAN=y 87 88 and choose between ``CONFIG_KASAN_GENERIC`` (to enable Generic KASAN), 89 ``CONFIG_KASAN_SW_TAGS`` (to enable Software Tag-Based KASAN), and 90 ``CONFIG_KASAN_HW_TAGS`` (to enable Hardware Tag-Based KASAN). 91 92 For the software modes, also choose between ``CONFIG_KASAN_OUTLINE`` and 93 ``CONFIG_KASAN_INLINE``. Outline and inline are compiler instrumentation types. 94 The former produces a smaller binary while the latter is up to 2 times faster. 95 96 To include alloc and free stack traces of affected slab objects into reports, 97 enable ``CONFIG_STACKTRACE``. To include alloc and free stack traces of affected 98 physical pages, enable ``CONFIG_PAGE_OWNER`` and boot with ``page_owner=on``. 99 100 Boot parameters 101 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 102 103 KASAN is affected by the generic ``panic_on_warn`` command line parameter. 104 When it is enabled, KASAN panics the kernel after printing a bug report. 105 106 By default, KASAN prints a bug report only for the first invalid memory access. 107 With ``kasan_multi_shot``, KASAN prints a report on every invalid access. This 108 effectively disables ``panic_on_warn`` for KASAN reports. 109 110 Alternatively, independent of ``panic_on_warn``, the ``kasan.fault=`` boot 111 parameter can be used to control panic and reporting behaviour: 112 113 - ``kasan.fault=report``, ``=panic``, or ``=panic_on_write`` controls whether 114 to only print a KASAN report, panic the kernel, or panic the kernel on 115 invalid writes only (default: ``report``). The panic happens even if 116 ``kasan_multi_shot`` is enabled. Note that when using asynchronous mode of 117 Hardware Tag-Based KASAN, ``kasan.fault=panic_on_write`` always panics on 118 asynchronously checked accesses (including reads). 119 120 Software and Hardware Tag-Based KASAN modes (see the section about various 121 modes below) support altering stack trace collection behavior: 122 123 - ``kasan.stacktrace=off`` or ``=on`` disables or enables alloc and free stack 124 traces collection (default: ``on``). 125 - ``kasan.stack_ring_size=<number of entries>`` specifies the number of entries 126 in the stack ring (default: ``32768``). 127 128 Hardware Tag-Based KASAN mode is intended for use in production as a security 129 mitigation. Therefore, it supports additional boot parameters that allow 130 disabling KASAN altogether or controlling its features: 131 132 - ``kasan=off`` or ``=on`` controls whether KASAN is enabled (default: ``on``). 133 134 - ``kasan.mode=sync``, ``=async`` or ``=asymm`` controls whether KASAN 135 is configured in synchronous, asynchronous or asymmetric mode of 136 execution (default: ``sync``). 137 Synchronous mode: a bad access is detected immediately when a tag 138 check fault occurs. 139 Asynchronous mode: a bad access detection is delayed. When a tag check 140 fault occurs, the information is stored in hardware (in the TFSR_EL1 141 register for arm64). The kernel periodically checks the hardware and 142 only reports tag faults during these checks. 143 Asymmetric mode: a bad access is detected synchronously on reads and 144 asynchronously on writes. 145 146 - ``kasan.vmalloc=off`` or ``=on`` disables or enables tagging of vmalloc 147 allocations (default: ``on``). 148 149 - ``kasan.page_alloc.sample=<sampling interval>`` makes KASAN tag only every 150 Nth page_alloc allocation with the order equal or greater than 151 ``kasan.page_alloc.sample.order``, where N is the value of the ``sample`` 152 parameter (default: ``1``, or tag every such allocation). 153 This parameter is intended to mitigate the performance overhead introduced 154 by KASAN. 155 Note that enabling this parameter makes Hardware Tag-Based KASAN skip checks 156 of allocations chosen by sampling and thus miss bad accesses to these 157 allocations. Use the default value for accurate bug detection. 158 159 - ``kasan.page_alloc.sample.order=<minimum page order>`` specifies the minimum 160 order of allocations that are affected by sampling (default: ``3``). 161 Only applies when ``kasan.page_alloc.sample`` is set to a value greater 162 than ``1``. 163 This parameter is intended to allow sampling only large page_alloc 164 allocations, which is the biggest source of the performance overhead. 165 166 Error reports 167 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 168 169 A typical KASAN report looks like this:: 170 171 ================================================================== 172 BUG: KASAN: slab-out-of-bounds in kmalloc_oob_right+0xa8/0xbc [kasan_test] 173 Write of size 1 at addr ffff8801f44ec37b by task insmod/2760 174 175 CPU: 1 PID: 2760 Comm: insmod Not tainted 4.19.0-rc3+ #698 176 Hardware name: QEMU Standard PC (i440FX + PIIX, 1996), BIOS 1.10.2-1 04/01/2014 177 Call Trace: 178 dump_stack+0x94/0xd8 179 print_address_description+0x73/0x280 180 kasan_report+0x144/0x187 181 __asan_report_store1_noabort+0x17/0x20 182 kmalloc_oob_right+0xa8/0xbc [kasan_test] 183 kmalloc_tests_init+0x16/0x700 [kasan_test] 184 do_one_initcall+0xa5/0x3ae 185 do_init_module+0x1b6/0x547 186 load_module+0x75df/0x8070 187 __do_sys_init_module+0x1c6/0x200 188 __x64_sys_init_module+0x6e/0xb0 189 do_syscall_64+0x9f/0x2c0 190 entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0xa9 191 RIP: 0033:0x7f96443109da 192 RSP: 002b:00007ffcf0b51b08 EFLAGS: 00000202 ORIG_RAX: 00000000000000af 193 RAX: ffffffffffffffda RBX: 000055dc3ee521a0 RCX: 00007f96443109da 194 RDX: 00007f96445cff88 RSI: 0000000000057a50 RDI: 00007f9644992000 195 RBP: 000055dc3ee510b0 R08: 0000000000000003 R09: 0000000000000000 196 R10: 00007f964430cd0a R11: 0000000000000202 R12: 00007f96445cff88 197 R13: 000055dc3ee51090 R14: 0000000000000000 R15: 0000000000000000 198 199 Allocated by task 2760: 200 save_stack+0x43/0xd0 201 kasan_kmalloc+0xa7/0xd0 202 kmem_cache_alloc_trace+0xe1/0x1b0 203 kmalloc_oob_right+0x56/0xbc [kasan_test] 204 kmalloc_tests_init+0x16/0x700 [kasan_test] 205 do_one_initcall+0xa5/0x3ae 206 do_init_module+0x1b6/0x547 207 load_module+0x75df/0x8070 208 __do_sys_init_module+0x1c6/0x200 209 __x64_sys_init_module+0x6e/0xb0 210 do_syscall_64+0x9f/0x2c0 211 entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x44/0xa9 212 213 Freed by task 815: 214 save_stack+0x43/0xd0 215 __kasan_slab_free+0x135/0x190 216 kasan_slab_free+0xe/0x10 217 kfree+0x93/0x1a0 218 umh_complete+0x6a/0xa0 219 call_usermodehelper_exec_async+0x4c3/0x640 220 ret_from_fork+0x35/0x40 221 222 The buggy address belongs to the object at ffff8801f44ec300 223 which belongs to the cache kmalloc-128 of size 128 224 The buggy address is located 123 bytes inside of 225 128-byte region [ffff8801f44ec300, ffff8801f44ec380) 226 The buggy address belongs to the page: 227 page:ffffea0007d13b00 count:1 mapcount:0 mapping:ffff8801f7001640 index:0x0 228 flags: 0x200000000000100(slab) 229 raw: 0200000000000100 ffffea0007d11dc0 0000001a0000001a ffff8801f7001640 230 raw: 0000000000000000 0000000080150015 00000001ffffffff 0000000000000000 231 page dumped because: kasan: bad access detected 232 233 Memory state around the buggy address: 234 ffff8801f44ec200: fc fc fc fc fc fc fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fb fb fb 235 ffff8801f44ec280: fb fb fb fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fc fc fc fc fc fc 236 >ffff8801f44ec300: 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 03 237 ^ 238 ffff8801f44ec380: fc fc fc fc fc fc fc fc fb fb fb fb fb fb fb fb 239 ffff8801f44ec400: fb fb fb fb fb fb fb fb fc fc fc fc fc fc fc fc 240 ================================================================== 241 242 The report header summarizes what kind of bug happened and what kind of access 243 caused it. It is followed by a stack trace of the bad access, a stack trace of 244 where the accessed memory was allocated (in case a slab object was accessed), 245 and a stack trace of where the object was freed (in case of a use-after-free 246 bug report). Next comes a description of the accessed slab object and the 247 information about the accessed memory page. 248 249 In the end, the report shows the memory state around the accessed address. 250 Internally, KASAN tracks memory state separately for each memory granule, which 251 is either 8 or 16 aligned bytes depending on KASAN mode. Each number in the 252 memory state section of the report shows the state of one of the memory 253 granules that surround the accessed address. 254 255 For Generic KASAN, the size of each memory granule is 8. The state of each 256 granule is encoded in one shadow byte. Those 8 bytes can be accessible, 257 partially accessible, freed, or be a part of a redzone. KASAN uses the following 258 encoding for each shadow byte: 00 means that all 8 bytes of the corresponding 259 memory region are accessible; number N (1 <= N <= 7) means that the first N 260 bytes are accessible, and other (8 - N) bytes are not; any negative value 261 indicates that the entire 8-byte word is inaccessible. KASAN uses different 262 negative values to distinguish between different kinds of inaccessible memory 263 like redzones or freed memory (see mm/kasan/kasan.h). 264 265 In the report above, the arrow points to the shadow byte ``03``, which means 266 that the accessed address is partially accessible. 267 268 For tag-based KASAN modes, this last report section shows the memory tags around 269 the accessed address (see the `Implementation details`_ section). 270 271 Note that KASAN bug titles (like ``slab-out-of-bounds`` or ``use-after-free``) 272 are best-effort: KASAN prints the most probable bug type based on the limited 273 information it has. The actual type of the bug might be different. 274 275 Generic KASAN also reports up to two auxiliary call stack traces. These stack 276 traces point to places in code that interacted with the object but that are not 277 directly present in the bad access stack trace. Currently, this includes 278 call_rcu() and workqueue queuing. 279 280 CONFIG_KASAN_EXTRA_INFO 281 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 282 283 Enabling CONFIG_KASAN_EXTRA_INFO allows KASAN to record and report more 284 information. The extra information currently supported is the CPU number and 285 timestamp at allocation and free. More information can help find the cause of 286 the bug and correlate the error with other system events, at the cost of using 287 extra memory to record more information (more cost details in the help text of 288 CONFIG_KASAN_EXTRA_INFO). 289 290 Here is the report with CONFIG_KASAN_EXTRA_INFO enabled (only the 291 different parts are shown):: 292 293 ================================================================== 294 ... 295 Allocated by task 134 on cpu 5 at 229.133855s: 296 ... 297 Freed by task 136 on cpu 3 at 230.199335s: 298 ... 299 ================================================================== 300 301 Implementation details 302 ---------------------- 303 304 Generic KASAN 305 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 306 307 Software KASAN modes use shadow memory to record whether each byte of memory is 308 safe to access and use compile-time instrumentation to insert shadow memory 309 checks before each memory access. 310 311 Generic KASAN dedicates 1/8th of kernel memory to its shadow memory (16TB 312 to cover 128TB on x86_64) and uses direct mapping with a scale and offset to 313 translate a memory address to its corresponding shadow address. 314 315 Here is the function which translates an address to its corresponding shadow 316 address:: 317 318 static inline void *kasan_mem_to_shadow(const void *addr) 319 { 320 return (void *)((unsigned long)addr >> KASAN_SHADOW_SCALE_SHIFT) 321 + KASAN_SHADOW_OFFSET; 322 } 323 324 where ``KASAN_SHADOW_SCALE_SHIFT = 3``. 325 326 Compile-time instrumentation is used to insert memory access checks. Compiler 327 inserts function calls (``__asan_load*(addr)``, ``__asan_store*(addr)``) before 328 each memory access of size 1, 2, 4, 8, or 16. These functions check whether 329 memory accesses are valid or not by checking corresponding shadow memory. 330 331 With inline instrumentation, instead of making function calls, the compiler 332 directly inserts the code to check shadow memory. This option significantly 333 enlarges the kernel, but it gives an x1.1-x2 performance boost over the 334 outline-instrumented kernel. 335 336 Generic KASAN is the only mode that delays the reuse of freed objects via 337 quarantine (see mm/kasan/quarantine.c for implementation). 338 339 Software Tag-Based KASAN 340 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 341 342 Software Tag-Based KASAN uses a software memory tagging approach to checking 343 access validity. It is currently only implemented for the arm64 architecture. 344 345 Software Tag-Based KASAN uses the Top Byte Ignore (TBI) feature of arm64 CPUs 346 to store a pointer tag in the top byte of kernel pointers. It uses shadow memory 347 to store memory tags associated with each 16-byte memory cell (therefore, it 348 dedicates 1/16th of the kernel memory for shadow memory). 349 350 On each memory allocation, Software Tag-Based KASAN generates a random tag, tags 351 the allocated memory with this tag, and embeds the same tag into the returned 352 pointer. 353 354 Software Tag-Based KASAN uses compile-time instrumentation to insert checks 355 before each memory access. These checks make sure that the tag of the memory 356 that is being accessed is equal to the tag of the pointer that is used to access 357 this memory. In case of a tag mismatch, Software Tag-Based KASAN prints a bug 358 report. 359 360 Software Tag-Based KASAN also has two instrumentation modes (outline, which 361 emits callbacks to check memory accesses; and inline, which performs the shadow 362 memory checks inline). With outline instrumentation mode, a bug report is 363 printed from the function that performs the access check. With inline 364 instrumentation, a ``brk`` instruction is emitted by the compiler, and a 365 dedicated ``brk`` handler is used to print bug reports. 366 367 Software Tag-Based KASAN uses 0xFF as a match-all pointer tag (accesses through 368 pointers with the 0xFF pointer tag are not checked). The value 0xFE is currently 369 reserved to tag freed memory regions. 370 371 Hardware Tag-Based KASAN 372 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 373 374 Hardware Tag-Based KASAN is similar to the software mode in concept but uses 375 hardware memory tagging support instead of compiler instrumentation and 376 shadow memory. 377 378 Hardware Tag-Based KASAN is currently only implemented for arm64 architecture 379 and based on both arm64 Memory Tagging Extension (MTE) introduced in ARMv8.5 380 Instruction Set Architecture and Top Byte Ignore (TBI). 381 382 Special arm64 instructions are used to assign memory tags for each allocation. 383 Same tags are assigned to pointers to those allocations. On every memory 384 access, hardware makes sure that the tag of the memory that is being accessed is 385 equal to the tag of the pointer that is used to access this memory. In case of a 386 tag mismatch, a fault is generated, and a report is printed. 387 388 Hardware Tag-Based KASAN uses 0xFF as a match-all pointer tag (accesses through 389 pointers with the 0xFF pointer tag are not checked). The value 0xFE is currently 390 reserved to tag freed memory regions. 391 392 If the hardware does not support MTE (pre ARMv8.5), Hardware Tag-Based KASAN 393 will not be enabled. In this case, all KASAN boot parameters are ignored. 394 395 Note that enabling CONFIG_KASAN_HW_TAGS always results in in-kernel TBI being 396 enabled. Even when ``kasan.mode=off`` is provided or when the hardware does not 397 support MTE (but supports TBI). 398 399 Hardware Tag-Based KASAN only reports the first found bug. After that, MTE tag 400 checking gets disabled. 401 402 Shadow memory 403 ------------- 404 405 The contents of this section are only applicable to software KASAN modes. 406 407 The kernel maps memory in several different parts of the address space. 408 The range of kernel virtual addresses is large: there is not enough real 409 memory to support a real shadow region for every address that could be 410 accessed by the kernel. Therefore, KASAN only maps real shadow for certain 411 parts of the address space. 412 413 Default behaviour 414 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 415 416 By default, architectures only map real memory over the shadow region 417 for the linear mapping (and potentially other small areas). For all 418 other areas - such as vmalloc and vmemmap space - a single read-only 419 page is mapped over the shadow area. This read-only shadow page 420 declares all memory accesses as permitted. 421 422 This presents a problem for modules: they do not live in the linear 423 mapping but in a dedicated module space. By hooking into the module 424 allocator, KASAN temporarily maps real shadow memory to cover them. 425 This allows detection of invalid accesses to module globals, for example. 426 427 This also creates an incompatibility with ``VMAP_STACK``: if the stack 428 lives in vmalloc space, it will be shadowed by the read-only page, and 429 the kernel will fault when trying to set up the shadow data for stack 430 variables. 431 432 CONFIG_KASAN_VMALLOC 433 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 434 435 With ``CONFIG_KASAN_VMALLOC``, KASAN can cover vmalloc space at the 436 cost of greater memory usage. Currently, this is supported on x86, 437 arm64, riscv, s390, and powerpc. 438 439 This works by hooking into vmalloc and vmap and dynamically 440 allocating real shadow memory to back the mappings. 441 442 Most mappings in vmalloc space are small, requiring less than a full 443 page of shadow space. Allocating a full shadow page per mapping would 444 therefore be wasteful. Furthermore, to ensure that different mappings 445 use different shadow pages, mappings would have to be aligned to 446 ``KASAN_GRANULE_SIZE * PAGE_SIZE``. 447 448 Instead, KASAN shares backing space across multiple mappings. It allocates 449 a backing page when a mapping in vmalloc space uses a particular page 450 of the shadow region. This page can be shared by other vmalloc 451 mappings later on. 452 453 KASAN hooks into the vmap infrastructure to lazily clean up unused shadow 454 memory. 455 456 To avoid the difficulties around swapping mappings around, KASAN expects 457 that the part of the shadow region that covers the vmalloc space will 458 not be covered by the early shadow page but will be left unmapped. 459 This will require changes in arch-specific code. 460 461 This allows ``VMAP_STACK`` support on x86 and can simplify support of 462 architectures that do not have a fixed module region. 463 464 For developers 465 -------------- 466 467 Ignoring accesses 468 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 469 470 Software KASAN modes use compiler instrumentation to insert validity checks. 471 Such instrumentation might be incompatible with some parts of the kernel, and 472 therefore needs to be disabled. 473 474 Other parts of the kernel might access metadata for allocated objects. 475 Normally, KASAN detects and reports such accesses, but in some cases (e.g., 476 in memory allocators), these accesses are valid. 477 478 For software KASAN modes, to disable instrumentation for a specific file or 479 directory, add a ``KASAN_SANITIZE`` annotation to the respective kernel 480 Makefile: 481 482 - For a single file (e.g., main.o):: 483 484 KASAN_SANITIZE_main.o := n 485 486 - For all files in one directory:: 487 488 KASAN_SANITIZE := n 489 490 For software KASAN modes, to disable instrumentation on a per-function basis, 491 use the KASAN-specific ``__no_sanitize_address`` function attribute or the 492 generic ``noinstr`` one. 493 494 Note that disabling compiler instrumentation (either on a per-file or a 495 per-function basis) makes KASAN ignore the accesses that happen directly in 496 that code for software KASAN modes. It does not help when the accesses happen 497 indirectly (through calls to instrumented functions) or with Hardware 498 Tag-Based KASAN, which does not use compiler instrumentation. 499 500 For software KASAN modes, to disable KASAN reports in a part of the kernel code 501 for the current task, annotate this part of the code with a 502 ``kasan_disable_current()``/``kasan_enable_current()`` section. This also 503 disables the reports for indirect accesses that happen through function calls. 504 505 For tag-based KASAN modes, to disable access checking, use 506 ``kasan_reset_tag()`` or ``page_kasan_tag_reset()``. Note that temporarily 507 disabling access checking via ``page_kasan_tag_reset()`` requires saving and 508 restoring the per-page KASAN tag via ``page_kasan_tag``/``page_kasan_tag_set``. 509 510 Tests 511 ~~~~~ 512 513 There are KASAN tests that allow verifying that KASAN works and can detect 514 certain types of memory corruptions. The tests consist of two parts: 515 516 1. Tests that are integrated with the KUnit Test Framework. Enabled with 517 ``CONFIG_KASAN_KUNIT_TEST``. These tests can be run and partially verified 518 automatically in a few different ways; see the instructions below. 519 520 2. Tests that are currently incompatible with KUnit. Enabled with 521 ``CONFIG_KASAN_MODULE_TEST`` and can only be run as a module. These tests can 522 only be verified manually by loading the kernel module and inspecting the 523 kernel log for KASAN reports. 524 525 Each KUnit-compatible KASAN test prints one of multiple KASAN reports if an 526 error is detected. Then the test prints its number and status. 527 528 When a test passes:: 529 530 ok 28 - kmalloc_double_kzfree 531 532 When a test fails due to a failed ``kmalloc``:: 533 534 # kmalloc_large_oob_right: ASSERTION FAILED at mm/kasan/kasan_test.c:245 535 Expected ptr is not null, but is 536 not ok 5 - kmalloc_large_oob_right 537 538 When a test fails due to a missing KASAN report:: 539 540 # kmalloc_double_kzfree: EXPECTATION FAILED at mm/kasan/kasan_test.c:709 541 KASAN failure expected in "kfree_sensitive(ptr)", but none occurred 542 not ok 28 - kmalloc_double_kzfree 543 544 545 At the end the cumulative status of all KASAN tests is printed. On success:: 546 547 ok 1 - kasan 548 549 Or, if one of the tests failed:: 550 551 not ok 1 - kasan 552 553 There are a few ways to run KUnit-compatible KASAN tests. 554 555 1. Loadable module 556 557 With ``CONFIG_KUNIT`` enabled, KASAN-KUnit tests can be built as a loadable 558 module and run by loading ``kasan_test.ko`` with ``insmod`` or ``modprobe``. 559 560 2. Built-In 561 562 With ``CONFIG_KUNIT`` built-in, KASAN-KUnit tests can be built-in as well. 563 In this case, the tests will run at boot as a late-init call. 564 565 3. Using kunit_tool 566 567 With ``CONFIG_KUNIT`` and ``CONFIG_KASAN_KUNIT_TEST`` built-in, it is also 568 possible to use ``kunit_tool`` to see the results of KUnit tests in a more 569 readable way. This will not print the KASAN reports of the tests that passed. 570 See `KUnit documentation <https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/dev-tools/kunit/index.html>`_ 571 for more up-to-date information on ``kunit_tool``. 572 573 .. _KUnit: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/dev-tools/kunit/index.html
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