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Message-ID: <80d7313a-0f0c-494d-b2ad-2662d1992b2b@suse.com>
Date: Tue, 26 Aug 2025 09:20:41 +0200
From: Petr Pavlu <petr.pavlu@...e.com>
To: Wang Jinchao <wangjinchao600@...il.com>
Cc: Luis Chamberlain <mcgrof@...nel.org>, Daniel Gomez <da.gomez@...nel.org>,
 Sami Tolvanen <samitolvanen@...gle.com>, linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org,
 linux-modules@...r.kernel.org
Subject: Re: [PATCH] module: pr_debug when there is no version info

On 7/22/25 10:25 AM, Petr Pavlu wrote:
> On 7/22/25 5:08 AM, Wang Jinchao wrote:
>> On 7/21/25 22:40, Petr Pavlu wrote:
>>> On 7/21/25 6:52 AM, Wang Jinchao wrote:
>>>> When there is no version information, modprobe and insmod only
>>>> report "invalid format".
>>>> Print the actual cause to make it easier to diagnose the issue.
>>>> This helps developers quickly identify version-related module
>>>> loading failures.
>>>> Signed-off-by: Wang Jinchao <wangjinchao600@...il.com>
>>>> ---
>>>>   kernel/module/version.c | 4 +++-
>>>>   1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-)
>>>>
>>>> diff --git a/kernel/module/version.c b/kernel/module/version.c
>>>> index 2beefeba82d9..bc28c697ff3a 100644
>>>> --- a/kernel/module/version.c
>>>> +++ b/kernel/module/version.c
>>>> @@ -42,8 +42,10 @@ int check_version(const struct load_info *info,
>>>>       }
>>>>         /* No versions at all?  modprobe --force does this. */
>>>> -    if (versindex == 0)
>>>> +    if (versindex == 0) {
>>>> +        pr_debug("No version info for module %s\n", info->name);
>>>>           return try_to_force_load(mod, symname) == 0;
>>>> +    }
>>>>         versions = (void *)sechdrs[versindex].sh_addr;
>>>>       num_versions = sechdrs[versindex].sh_size
>>>
>>> I think it would be better to instead improve the behavior of
>>> try_to_force_load(). The function should print the error reason prior to
>>> returning -ENOEXEC. This would also help its two other callers,
>>> check_modinfo() and check_export_symbol_versions().
>>>
>>> Additionally, I suggest moving the check to ensure version information
>>> is available for imported symbols earlier in the loading process.
>>> A suitable place might be check_modstruct_version(). This way the check
>>> is performed only once per module.
>>>
>>> The following is a prototype patch:
>>>
>>> diff --git a/kernel/module/main.c b/kernel/module/main.c
>>> index c2c08007029d..c1ccd343e8c3 100644
>>> --- a/kernel/module/main.c
>>> +++ b/kernel/module/main.c
>>> @@ -1053,6 +1053,7 @@ int try_to_force_load(struct module *mod, const char *reason)
>>>       add_taint_module(mod, TAINT_FORCED_MODULE, LOCKDEP_NOW_UNRELIABLE);
>>>       return 0;
>>>   #else
>>> +    pr_err("%s: %s\n", mod->name, reason);
>>>       return -ENOEXEC;
>>>   #endif
>>>   }
>>> diff --git a/kernel/module/version.c b/kernel/module/version.c
>>> index 2beefeba82d9..4d9ebf0834de 100644
>>> --- a/kernel/module/version.c
>>> +++ b/kernel/module/version.c
>>> @@ -41,9 +41,9 @@ int check_version(const struct load_info *info,
>>>           return 1;
>>>       }
>>>   -    /* No versions at all?  modprobe --force does this. */
>>> +    /* No versions? Ok, already tainted in check_modstruct_version(). */
>>>       if (versindex == 0)
>>> -        return try_to_force_load(mod, symname) == 0;
>>> +        return 1;
>>>         versions = (void *)sechdrs[versindex].sh_addr;
>>>       num_versions = sechdrs[versindex].sh_size
>>> @@ -90,6 +90,11 @@ int check_modstruct_version(const struct load_info *info,
>>>           have_symbol = find_symbol(&fsa);
>>>       BUG_ON(!have_symbol);
>>>   +    /* No versions at all?  modprobe --force does this. */
>>> +    if (!info->index.vers && !info->index.vers_ext_crc)
>>> +        return try_to_force_load(
>>> +                   mod, "no versions for imported symbols") == 0;
>>> +
>>>       return check_version(info, "module_layout", mod, fsa.crc);
>>>   }
>>>  
>>> As a side note, I'm confused why with CONFIG_MODULE_FORCE_LOAD=y, the
>>> code treats missing modversions for imported symbols as ok, even without
>>> MODULE_INIT_IGNORE_MODVERSIONS. This is at least consistent with the
>>> handling of missing vermagic, but it seems this behavior should be
>>> stricter.
>>>
>> When debugging syzkaller, I noticed that the insmod command always reports errors. However, to get the exact information, I need to trace the kernel, so I casually submitted this patch.
>>
>> Based on your response, I also feel that the meaning of force_load here is somewhat unclear. It would be better to create a mask or a clear list to indicate which fields can be forced and which cannot. Once this is clear, we can create a function named may_force_check().
> 
> I cannot find an explicit reason in the Git history why a missing
> vermagic is treated as if the module was loaded with
> MODULE_INIT_IGNORE_VERMAGIC, and similarly why missing modversions data
> is treated as if the module was loaded with
> MODULE_INIT_IGNORE_MODVERSIONS.
> 
> I would argue that a more sensible behavior would be to consider
> a missing vermagic as an error and allow loading the module only if
> MODULE_INIT_IGNORE_VERMAGIC is explicitly specified. And analogously for
> missing modversions and MODULE_INIT_IGNORE_MODVERSIONS.
> 
> Nonetheless, if I understand correctly, this should be mostly separate
> from your issue.

To answer my own confusion, the thing that I missed is that the
MODULE_INIT_IGNORE_* flags are available only for the finit_module
syscall, not for init_module. In the case of init_module, the force
logic is handled by kmod in userspace by stripping the relevant
modversions and vermagic data. This means that when using init_module,
the module loader cannot distinguish between a module that lacks this
data and one that has it deliberately removed. When finit_module was
introduced in 2012, commit 2f3238aebedb ("module: add flags arg to
sys_finit_module()") added the MODULE_INIT_IGNORE_* flags, and they were
simply implemented to mirror the kmod behavior.

-- Petr

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