Skip to main content

Tools for working with symbolic constraints from Kbuild Makefile.

Project description

The Kmax Tool Suite

Tools

The Kmax Tool Suite (kmaxtools) contains a set of tools for performing automated reasoning on Kconfig and Kbuild constraints. It consists of the following tools:

  • klocalizer takes the name of a compilation unit and automatically generates a .config file that, when compiled, will include the given compilation unit. It uses the logical models from kclause and kmax
  • kclause "compiles" Kconfig constraints into logical formulas. kconfig_extractor uses Linux's own Kconfig parser to perform an extraction of the syntax of configuration option names, types, dependencies, etc.
  • kmax collects configuration information from Kbuild Makefiles. It determines, for each compilation unit, a symbolic Boolean expression that represents the conditions under which the file gets compiled and linked into the final program. Its algorithm is described here and the original implementation can be found here.

Contributors

Setup

kmaxtools is currently written for python 2.

There are two ways to install kmaxtools.

  1. The latest release can be installed via pip

    pip install kmaxtools
    

    Upgrade with

    pip install -U kmaxtools
    
  2. Install from the source repository:

    git clone https://github.com/paulgazz/kmax.git
    cd kmax
    sudo python setup.py install
    

    Or use the --prefix argument for different installation directory without sudo.

    Please see [setup.py] for any dependencies if setup.py script does not work. It may be necessary to install these manually via pip, e.g.,

    pip install enum34
    pip install regex
    pip install z3-solver
    pip install dd
    pip install networkx==2.2
    

Quick Start

The fastest way to get started is to use formulas already extracted for your version of Linux, which you can download here: https://kmaxtools.opentheblackbox.net/formulas

cd /path/to/linux/
wget https://kmaxtools.opentheblackbox.net/formulas/kmax-formulas_linux-v5.4.tar.bz2
tar -xvf kmax-formulas_linux-v5.4.tar.bz2

This contains a .kmax directory containing the Kconfig and Kbuild formulas for each architecture. If a version is not available here submit an issue to request the formulas be generated and uplodated or see below for directions on generating these formulas.

Run klocalizer for a given compilation unit, e.g.,

klocalizer drivers/usb/storage/alauda.o

This will search each architecture for constraint satisfiability, stopping once one is found (or no architecture's constraints are satisfiable). klocalizer writes this configuration to .config and prints the architectures, e.g., x86_64, to standard out.

To build the compilation unit using the generated .config, use make.cross. First set any defaults for the .config file:

make.cross ARCH=x86_64 olddefconfig

Then build the compilation unit:

make.cross ARCH=x86_64 drivers/usb/storage/alauda.o

If you cannot get a configuration or it is still not buildable, see the Troubleshooting section.

Use Cases

A compilation unit not built by allyesconfig

While allyesconfig strives to enable all options, some have conflicting dependencies or are mutually exclusive choices. For instance, fs/squashfs/decompressor_multi.o is not compiled when using allyesconfig:

make allyesconfig
make fs/squashfs/decompressor_multi.o

make fails:

make[3]: *** No rule to make target 'fs/squashfs/decompressor_multi.o'.  Stop.

Let us take a look at the unit's Kbuild dependencies:

klocalizer --view fs/squashfs/decompressor_multi.o

The output in part is

fs/squashfs/decompressor_multi.o
[And(CONFIG_SQUASHFS, CONFIG_SQUASHFS_DECOMP_MULTI)]

The unit is not included in allyesconfig because it on both CONFIG_SQUASHFS and CONFIG_SQUASHFS_DECOMP_MULTI. The latter is disabled by default, being mutually exclusive with SQUASHFS_DECOMP_SINGLE which is selected by allyesconfig:

make allyesconfig
egrep "(CONFIG_SQUASHFS|CONFIG_SQUASHFS_DECOMP_SINGLE|CONFIG_SQUASHFS_DECOMP_MULTI)( |=)" .config

grep shows us the relevant settings:

CONFIG_SQUASHFS=y
CONFIG_SQUASHFS_DECOMP_SINGLE=y
# CONFIG_SQUASHFS_DECOMP_MULTI is not set

klocalizer can find a configuration that includes the unit:

klocalizer fs/squashfs/decompressor_multi.o
egrep "(CONFIG_SQUASHFS|CONFIG_SQUASHFS_DECOMP_SINGLE|CONFIG_SQUASHFS_DECOMP_MULTI)( |=)" .config

grep shows us what klocalizer set:

CONFIG_SQUASHFS=y
CONFIG_SQUASHFS_DECOMP_MULTI=y
# CONFIG_SQUASHFS_DECOMP_SINGLE is not set

Finally, building the configuration

make olddefconfig
make fs/squashfs/decompressor_multi.o

gives us

  CC      fs/squashfs/decompressor_multi.o

A compilation unit not built by defconfig or allnoconfig

A kernel user or developer may want a smaller kernel that includes a specific compilation unit, rather than having to build allyesconfig. For instance, drivers/infiniband/core/cgroup.o is not built by default:

make defconfig
make drivers/infiniband/core/cgroup.o

The output contains

make[2]: *** No rule to make target 'drivers/infiniband/core/cgroup.o'.  Stop.

klocalizer can look for a configuration containing the compilation unit that closely matches a given configuration without it by successively removing conflicting constraints until the configuration is valid:

make defconfig
klocalizer --approximate .config drivers/infiniband/core/cgroup.o

Now when building the configuration, the compilation unit is included:

make olddefconfig
make drivers/infiniband/core/cgroup.o

The output contains:

  CC      drivers/infiniband/core/cgroup.o

An architecture-specific compilation unit not built by allyesconfig

Sometimes a compilation unit is only available for certain architectures. Compiling drivers/block/ps3disk.o won't compile on an x86 machine.

make allyesconfig
klocalizer drivers/block/ps3disk.o

Its output contains

make[3]: *** No rule to make target 'drivers/block/ps3disk.o'.  Stop.

klocalizer --view drivers/block/ps3disk.o shows us that it depends on CONFIG_PS3_DISK. It turns out that this configuration option in turn depends on, among others options, the powerpc architecture.

klocalizer can try the constraints from each architecture:

klocalizer drivers/block/ps3disk.o

It tells us that powerpc is a satisfying architecture. We can use make.cross to cross-compile for powerpc.

make.cross ARCH=powerpc olddefconfig
make.cross ARCH=powerpc drivers/block/ps3disk.o

Its output contains

  CC      drivers/block/ps3disk.o

We can combine several klocalizer features to build an allnoconfig kernel that adds in the ps3disk.o compilation unit and sets all tristate options to modules.

make.cross ARCH=powerpc allnoconfig
klocalizer -a powerpc --match .config --modules --define CONFIG_MODULES drivers/block/ps3disk.o
make.cross ARCH=powerpc olddefconfig
make.cross ARCH=powerpc drivers/block/ps3disk.o

Its output contains

  CC [M]  drivers/block/ps3disk.o

An Architecture-Specific Compilation Unit

Advanced Usage

By default, klocalizer checks each architecture's Kconfig constraints against the Kbuild constraints for the given compilation unit. The following are examples of how to customize this process.

  • Controlling the search of architectures

    Use -a to only search a specific architecture.

      klocalizer -a x86_64 drivers/usb/storage/alauda.o
    

    Specify multiple -a arguments to search the given architectures in given order.

      klocalizer -a x86_64 -a sparc drivers/watchdog/cpwd.o
    

    Specify -a and -all to search all architectures, trying the ones given in -a first.

      klocalizer -a x86_64 -a arm --all drivers/watchdog/cpwd.o
    
  • Generating an arbitrary configuration for an architecture

    Pass a single architecture name without the compilation unit to generate an arbitrary configuration for that architecture. Passing multiple architectures is not supported.

      klocalizer -a x86_64 drivers/watchdog/cpwd.o
    
  • Finding all architectures in which the compilation can be configured

    klocalizer --report-all

  • Setting additional configuration options

    Multiple --define and --undefine arguments can be used to force configurations on or off when searching for constraints.

      klocalizer --define CONFIG_USB --define CONFIG_FS --undefine CONFIG_SOUND drivers/usb/storage/alauda.o
    

    Note that this can prevent finding a valid configuration.

      klocalizer -a x86_64 --undefine CONFIG_USB drivers/usb/storage/alauda.o  # no configuration possible because alauda depends on USB
    
  • Investigating unsatisfied constraints

    Use --show-unsat-core to see what constraints are causing the issue:

      klocalizer --show-unsat-core -a x86_64 --undefine CONFIG_USB drivers/usb/storage/alauda.o  # no configuration possible because alauda depends on USB
    
  • Closely match a given configuration

Klocalizer will attempt to match a given configuration, while still maintaing the configuration options necessary to build the given compilation unit. This works by passing it an existing configuration, e.g., allnoconfig, with the --approximate flag.

make allnoconfig
mv .config allnoconfig
klocalizer --approximate allnoconfig drivers/usb/storage/alauda.o

klocalizer with specific file

  • Viewing the Kbuild constraints

    View the Kbuild constraints for a compilation unit and each of its subdirectories with

      klocalizer --view-kbuild drivers/usb/storage/alauda.o
    
  • Building as modules instead of built-in

    Use the --modules flag to set any tristate options to m instead of y. Be sure to enable the CONFIG_MODULES option as well.

      klocalizer --modules --define CONFIG_MODULES drivers/usb/storage/alauda.o
      make olddefconfig
      make drivers/block/ps3disk.o
    
  • Using new formulas

    Override the default formulas with the following:

      klocalizer --kmax-formula kmax --kclause-formulas kclause drivers/watchdog/cpwd.o
    
  • Generating multiple configurations

      klocalizer -a x86_64 --random-seed 7849 --sample 8 --sample-prefix config
    

Troubleshooting

  • klocalizer requires the formulas from kmax and kclause. Download these first or generate them (see below).

  • Use the CONFIG_ prefix on variables when referring to them in user constraints.

  • Use the .o ending for compilation units (though klocalizer will change it automatically.)

  • The extracted formulas may not be exact. No resulting configuration is a sign that the formulas are overconstrained. A resulting configuration that does not include the desired compilation unit mean the formulas may be underconstrained.

  • Compilation unit not buildable. There are several possible reasons:

    1. The compilation unit has already been compiled. First clean with

       make clean
      
    2. While most compilation units can be built individually with make, some cannot. In these cases, build the parent directory instead, e.g.,

       klocalizer drivers/char/ipmi/ipmi_devintf.o  # finds it buildable in x86_64
       make.cross ARCH=x86_64 olddefconfig
       make.cross ARCH=x86_64 drivers/char/ipmi/
      
    3. Composites do not correspond to source files and are not built directly via make. Instead they are composed of other compilation units. For instance, drivers/block/zram/zram.o is comprised of zcomp.o and zram_drv.o. After finding a satisfying configuration, build the parent directory to see the source files that comprise it built.

       klocalizer --approximate .config drivers/block/zram/zram.o
       make olddefconfig
       make drivers/block/zram/
      
    4. The configuration causes the unit to be built, but it has a compile-time error.

       klocalizer drivers/block/amiflop.o  # finds it buildable in 
       make.cross ARCH=m68k olddefconfig
       make.cross ARCH=m68k drivers/block/amiflop.o  # Makefile sees it, but causes compiler error.
      
    5. Klocalizer's formulas were wrong in some cases

  • If the unit's configuration constraints depend on - CONFIG_BROKEN, then klocalizer, by default, which detect it and stop searching, because the compilation unit may not be (easily) compilable.

      klocalizer drivers/watchdog/pnx833x_wdt.o  # stops after finding a dependency on `CONFIG_BROKEN`
    

    To get a configuration anyway, use --allow-config-broken

      klocalizer --allow-config-broken drivers/watchdog/pnx833x_wdt.o  # finds dependency on mips
      make.cross ARCH=mips olddefconfig
      make.cross ARCH=mips drivers/watchdog/pnx833x_wdt.o  # won't be included in the build, due to CONFIG_BROKEN
    

Generating Formulas for Linux

This requires cloning the kmax repository, since there are helper scripts to generate the formulas for Linux. These commands and scripts are intended to be run from the root of your Linux source tree.

To get the formulas for compilation units defined in the Kbuild files, we first need a list of all the top-level source directories for each architecture. The script uses a hacky Makefile to do this. Then calls kmaxall with all of the top-level directories. This is a memory intensive operation. The next script calls kclause on each of the architectures, as named in the arch/ directory.

cd /path/to/linux
mkdir -p .kmax/
/usr/bin/time bash /path/to/kmax/scripts/kmaxlinux.sh
/usr/bin/time bash /path/to/kmax/scripts/kclauselinux.sh
bash /path/to/kmax/scripts/packageformulaslinux.sh

Kmax

Simple example

This will run Kmax on the example from the paper on Kmax.

kmax tests/paper_example

This will output the list of configuration conditions for each compilation unit file in the example Kbuild file. By default, Kmax to treat configuration options as Boolean options (as opposed to Kconfig tristate options). Pass -T for experimental support for tristate.

unit_pc tests/kbuild/fork.o 1
unit_pc tests/kbuild/probe_32.o (CONFIG_A && CONFIG_B)
unit_pc tests/kbuild/probe_64.o ((! CONFIG_A) && CONFIG_B)

The unit_pc lines have the format of compilation unit name followed by the Boolean expression, in C-style syntax. The Boolean expression describes the constraints that must be satisfied for the compilation unit to be included. Use -z to emit the z3 formulas in smtlib2 format.

Example on Linux

There is a script that will run Kmax on all Kbuild Makefiles from a project, e.g., the Linux kernel source code.

First get the Linux source and prepare its build system.

wget https://cdn.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/v5.x/linux-5.3.11.tar.xz
tar -xvf linux-5.3.11.tar.xz
cd linux-5.3.11
make defconfig # any config will work here.  it's just to setup the build system.

To try Kmax on a particular Kbuild Makefile, use the kbuildplus.py tool:

kmax ipc/

This will run Kmax on a single Kbuild Makefile, and show the symbolic configurations for each compilation unit and subdirectory. Kmax can also recursively analyze Kbuild Makefiles by following subdirectories, use the kmaxdriver.py which uses kbuildplus.py to process each Kbuild Makefile and recursively process those in subdirectories. -g means collect the symbolic constraints.

kmaxall -g net/

Kmax includes a Makefile hack to get all the top-level Linux directories. Combined with kmaxall this command will collect the symbolic constraints for the whole (x86) source, saving them into unit_pc. Be sure to change /path/to/kmax to your kmax installation to get the Makefile shunt.

kmaxall -g $(make CC=cc ARCH=x86 -f /path/to/kmax/scripts/makefile_override alldirs) | tee kmax

Kclause

Example

Kclause extracts a logical model from Kconfig. It works in two stages:

  1. The kconfig_extractor tool uses the Kconfig parser shipped with Linux to extract configuration variables dependencies to an intermediate language.

  2. The kclause tool takes this intermediate language and generates a z3 formula.

First compile kconfig_extractor

make -C kconfig_extractor

Then, from the root of a Linux source tree, run the following:

/path/to/kmax/kconfig_extractor/kconfig_extractor --extract -e ARCH=x86_64 -e SRCARCH=x86 -e KERNELVERSION=kcu -e srctree=./ -e CC=cc Kconfig > kconfig_extract
kclause --remove-orphaned-nonvisible < kconfig_extract > kclause

Building kconfig_extract

make -C /path/to/kmax/kconfig_extractor/

Other uses

Get a list of all visible configs

# all the configs that have a prompt condition
grep "^prompt " kconfig.kclause | cut -f2 -d\  | sort | uniq | tee visible.txt

# all the configs
grep "^config " kconfig.kclause | cut -f2 -d\  | sort | uniq | tee configs.txt

# the visibles should be a subset of the configs
diff configs.txt visible.txt  | grep ">"

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

kmaxtools-2.0rc31.tar.gz (203.5 kB view hashes)

Uploaded Source

Supported by

AWS AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Datadog Monitoring Fastly Fastly CDN Google Google Download Analytics Microsoft Microsoft PSF Sponsor Pingdom Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Sentry Error logging StatusPage StatusPage Status page