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Diffstat (limited to 'Documentation/core-api/symbol-namespaces.rst')
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/core-api/symbol-namespaces.rst | 63 |
1 files changed, 37 insertions, 26 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/core-api/symbol-namespaces.rst b/Documentation/core-api/symbol-namespaces.rst index 06f766a6aab2..32fc73dc5529 100644 --- a/Documentation/core-api/symbol-namespaces.rst +++ b/Documentation/core-api/symbol-namespaces.rst @@ -6,18 +6,8 @@ The following document describes how to use Symbol Namespaces to structure the export surface of in-kernel symbols exported through the family of EXPORT_SYMBOL() macros. -.. Table of Contents - - === 1 Introduction - === 2 How to define Symbol Namespaces - --- 2.1 Using the EXPORT_SYMBOL macros - --- 2.2 Using the DEFAULT_SYMBOL_NAMESPACE define - === 3 How to use Symbols exported in Namespaces - === 4 Loading Modules that use namespaced Symbols - === 5 Automatically creating MODULE_IMPORT_NS statements - -1. Introduction -=============== +Introduction +============ Symbol Namespaces have been introduced as a means to structure the export surface of the in-kernel API. It allows subsystem maintainers to partition @@ -28,15 +18,18 @@ kernel. As of today, modules that make use of symbols exported into namespaces, are required to import the namespace. Otherwise the kernel will, depending on its configuration, reject loading the module or warn about a missing import. -2. How to define Symbol Namespaces -================================== +Additionally, it is possible to put symbols into a module namespace, strictly +limiting which modules are allowed to use these symbols. + +How to define Symbol Namespaces +=============================== Symbols can be exported into namespace using different methods. All of them are changing the way EXPORT_SYMBOL and friends are instrumented to create ksymtab entries. -2.1 Using the EXPORT_SYMBOL macros -================================== +Using the EXPORT_SYMBOL macros +------------------------------ In addition to the macros EXPORT_SYMBOL() and EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(), that allow exporting of kernel symbols to the kernel symbol table, variants of these are @@ -54,8 +47,8 @@ refer to ``NULL``. There is no default namespace if none is defined. ``modpost`` and kernel/module/main.c make use the namespace at build time or module load time, respectively. -2.2 Using the DEFAULT_SYMBOL_NAMESPACE define -============================================= +Using the DEFAULT_SYMBOL_NAMESPACE define +----------------------------------------- Defining namespaces for all symbols of a subsystem can be very verbose and may become hard to maintain. Therefore a default define (DEFAULT_SYMBOL_NAMESPACE) @@ -83,8 +76,24 @@ unit as preprocessor statement. The above example would then read:: within the corresponding compilation unit before the #include for <linux/export.h>. Typically it's placed before the first #include statement. -3. How to use Symbols exported in Namespaces -============================================ +Using the EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL_FOR_MODULES() macro +----------------------------------------------- + +Symbols exported using this macro are put into a module namespace. This +namespace cannot be imported. + +The macro takes a comma separated list of module names, allowing only those +modules to access this symbol. Simple tail-globs are supported. + +For example:: + + EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL_FOR_MODULES(preempt_notifier_inc, "kvm,kvm-*") + +will limit usage of this symbol to modules whoes name matches the given +patterns. + +How to use Symbols exported in Namespaces +========================================= In order to use symbols that are exported into namespaces, kernel modules need to explicitly import these namespaces. Otherwise the kernel might reject to @@ -106,11 +115,10 @@ inspected with modinfo:: It is advisable to add the MODULE_IMPORT_NS() statement close to other module -metadata definitions like MODULE_AUTHOR() or MODULE_LICENSE(). Refer to section -5. for a way to create missing import statements automatically. +metadata definitions like MODULE_AUTHOR() or MODULE_LICENSE(). -4. Loading Modules that use namespaced Symbols -============================================== +Loading Modules that use namespaced Symbols +=========================================== At module loading time (e.g. ``insmod``), the kernel will check each symbol referenced from the module for its availability and whether the namespace it @@ -121,8 +129,8 @@ allow loading of modules that don't satisfy this precondition, a configuration option is available: Setting MODULE_ALLOW_MISSING_NAMESPACE_IMPORTS=y will enable loading regardless, but will emit a warning. -5. Automatically creating MODULE_IMPORT_NS statements -===================================================== +Automatically creating MODULE_IMPORT_NS statements +================================================== Missing namespaces imports can easily be detected at build time. In fact, modpost will emit a warning if a module uses a symbol from a namespace @@ -154,3 +162,6 @@ in-tree modules:: You can also run nsdeps for external module builds. A typical usage is:: $ make -C <path_to_kernel_src> M=$PWD nsdeps + +Note: it will happily generate an import statement for the module namespace; +which will not work and generates build and runtime failures. |