xref: /freebsd/share/man/man9/memguard.9 (revision 2e3f49888ec8851bafb22011533217487764fdb0)
1.\" Copyright (c) 2005 Christian Brueffer
2.\" All rights reserved.
3.\"
4.\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
5.\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
6.\" are met:
7.\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
8.\"    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
9.\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
10.\"    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
11.\"    documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
12.\"
13.\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
14.\" ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
15.\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
16.\" ARE DISCLAIMED.  IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
17.\" FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
18.\" DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
19.\" OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
20.\" HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
21.\" LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
22.\" OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
23.\" SUCH DAMAGE.
24.\"
25.Dd March 22, 2017
26.Dt MEMGUARD 9
27.Os
28.Sh NAME
29.Nm MemGuard
30.Nd "memory allocator for debugging purposes"
31.Sh SYNOPSIS
32.Cd "options DEBUG_MEMGUARD"
33.Sh DESCRIPTION
34.Nm
35is a simple and small replacement memory allocator designed
36to help detect tamper-after-free scenarios.
37These problems are more and more common and likely with
38multithreaded kernels where race conditions are more prevalent.
39.Pp
40.Nm
41can take over
42.Fn malloc ,
43.Fn realloc
44and
45.Fn free
46for a single malloc type.
47Alternatively
48.Nm
49can take over
50.Fn uma_zalloc ,
51.Fn uma_zalloc_arg
52and
53.Fn uma_free
54for a single
55.Xr uma 9
56zone.
57Also
58.Nm
59can guard all allocations larger than
60.Dv PAGE_SIZE ,
61and can guard a random fraction of all allocations.
62There is also a knob to prevent allocations smaller than a specified
63size from being guarded, to limit memory waste.
64.Sh EXAMPLES
65To use
66.Nm
67for a memory type, either add an entry to
68.Pa /boot/loader.conf :
69.Bd -literal -offset indent
70vm.memguard.desc=<memory_type>
71.Ed
72.Pp
73Or set the
74.Va vm.memguard.desc
75.Xr sysctl 8
76variable at run-time:
77.Bd -literal -offset indent
78sysctl vm.memguard.desc=<memory_type>
79.Ed
80.Pp
81Where
82.Ar memory_type
83can be either a short description of the memory type to monitor,
84either name of
85.Xr uma 9
86zone.
87Only allocations from that
88.Ar memory_type
89made after
90.Va vm.memguard.desc
91is set will potentially be guarded.
92If
93.Va vm.memguard.desc
94is modified at run-time then only allocations of the new
95.Ar memory_type
96will potentially be guarded once the
97.Xr sysctl 8
98is set.
99Existing guarded allocations will still be properly released by
100either
101.Xr free 9
102or
103.Xr uma_zfree 9 ,
104depending on what kind of allocation was taken over.
105.Pp
106To determine short description of a
107.Xr malloc 9
108type one can either take it from the first column of
109.Xr vmstat 8 Fl m
110output, or to find it in the kernel source.
111It is the second argument to
112.Xr MALLOC_DEFINE 9
113macro.
114To determine name of
115.Xr uma 9
116zone one can either take it from the first column of
117.Xr vmstat 8 Fl z
118output, or to find it in the kernel source.
119It is the first argument to the
120.Xr uma_zcreate 9
121function.
122.Pp
123The
124.Va vm.memguard.divisor
125boot-time tunable is used to scale how much of the system's physical
126memory
127.Nm
128is allowed to consume.
129The default is 10, so up to
130.Va vm_cnt.v_page_count Ns /10
131pages can be used.
132.Nm
133will reserve
134.Va vm_kmem_max
135/
136.Va vm.memguard.divisor
137bytes of virtual address space, limited by twice the physical memory
138size.
139The physical limit is reported as
140.Va vm.memguard.phys_limit
141and the virtual space reserved for
142.Nm
143is reported as
144.Va vm.memguard.mapsize .
145.Pp
146.Nm
147will not do page promotions for any allocation smaller than
148.Va vm.memguard.minsize
149bytes.
150The default is 0, meaning all allocations can potentially be guarded.
151.Nm
152can guard sufficiently large allocations randomly, with average
153frequency of every one in 100000 /
154.Va vm.memguard.frequency
155allocations.
156The default is 0, meaning no allocations are randomly guarded.
157.Pp
158.Nm
159can optionally add unmapped guard pages around each allocation to
160detect overflow and underflow, if
161.Va vm.memguard.options
162has the 1 bit set.
163This option is enabled by default.
164.Nm
165will optionally guard all allocations of
166.Dv PAGE_SIZE
167or larger if
168.Va vm.memguard.options
169has the 2 bit set.
170This option is off by default.
171By default
172.Nm
173does not guard
174.Xr uma 9
175zones that have been initialized with the
176.Dv UMA_ZONE_NOFREE
177flag set, since it can produce false positives on them.
178However, this safety measure can be turned off by setting bit 3
179of the
180.Va vm.memguard.options
181tunable.
182.Sh SEE ALSO
183.Xr sysctl 8 ,
184.Xr vmstat 8 ,
185.Xr contigmalloc 9 ,
186.Xr malloc 9 ,
187.Xr redzone 9 ,
188.Xr uma 9
189.Sh HISTORY
190.Nm
191first appeared in
192.Fx 6.0 .
193.Sh AUTHORS
194.An -nosplit
195.Nm
196was originally written by
197.An Bosko Milekic Aq Mt bmilekic@FreeBSD.org .
198This manual page was originally written by
199.An Christian Brueffer Aq Mt brueffer@FreeBSD.org .
200Additions have been made by
201.An Matthew Fleming Aq Mt mdf@FreeBSD.org
202and
203.An Gleb Smirnoff Aq Mt glebius@FreeBSD.org
204to both the implementation and the documentation.
205