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author | dgarrett@chromium.org <dgarrett@chromium.org@0039d316-1c4b-4281-b951-d872f2087c98> | 2013-08-28 23:09:07 +0000 |
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committer | dgarrett@chromium.org <dgarrett@chromium.org@0039d316-1c4b-4281-b951-d872f2087c98> | 2013-08-28 23:09:07 +0000 |
commit | fd0a76f109c0fa3f9dd973ee6921957501f317e5 (patch) | |
tree | f3d89cbcac08539def3855726bdedb211c083112 /courgette/description.html | |
parent | 1517a2d2f05d29426704a151b1a94b5f5f854bed (diff) | |
download | chromium_src-fd0a76f109c0fa3f9dd973ee6921957501f317e5.zip chromium_src-fd0a76f109c0fa3f9dd973ee6921957501f317e5.tar.gz chromium_src-fd0a76f109c0fa3f9dd973ee6921957501f317e5.tar.bz2 |
Added documentation for Courgette internals.
It consists of a markdown file, png diagrams, and the generated html output.
BUG=274829
R=benchan@chromium.org, dgarrett@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/23003015
git-svn-id: svn://svn.chromium.org/chrome/trunk/src@220113 0039d316-1c4b-4281-b951-d872f2087c98
Diffstat (limited to 'courgette/description.html')
-rw-r--r-- | courgette/description.html | 147 |
1 files changed, 147 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/courgette/description.html b/courgette/description.html new file mode 100644 index 0000000..8fe4538 --- /dev/null +++ b/courgette/description.html @@ -0,0 +1,147 @@ +<h1>Courgette Internals</h1> + +<h2>Patch Generation</h2> + +<p><img src="generation.png" alt="Patch Generation" title="" /></p> + +<ul> +<li><p>courgette_tool.cc:GenerateEnsemblePatch kicks off the patch +generation by calling ensemble_create.cc:GenerateEnsemblePatch</p></li> +<li><p>The files are read in by in courgette:SourceStream objects</p></li> +<li><p>ensemble_create.cc:GenerateEnsemblePatch uses FindGenerators, which +uses MakeGenerator to create +patch_generator_x86_32.h:PatchGeneratorX86_32 classes.</p></li> +<li><p>PatchGeneratorX86_32's Transform method transforms the input file +using Courgette's core techniques that make the bsdiff delta +smaller. The steps it takes are the following:</p> + +<ul> +<li><p><em>disassemble</em> the old and new binaries into AssemblyProgram +objects,</p></li> +<li><p><em>adjust</em> the new AssemblyProgram object, and</p></li> +<li><p><em>encode</em> the AssemblyProgram object back into raw bytes.</p></li> +</ul></li> +</ul> + +<h3>Disassemble</h3> + +<ul> +<li><p>The input is a pointer to a buffer containing the raw bytes of the +input file.</p></li> +<li><p>Disassembly converts certain machine instructions that reference +addresses to Courgette instructions. It is not actually +disassembly, but this is the term the code-base uses. Specifically, +it detects instructions that use absolute addresses given by the +binary file's relocation table, and relative addresses used in +relative branches.</p></li> +<li><p>Done by disassemble:ParseDetectedExecutable, which selects the +appropriate Disassembler subclass by looking at the binary file's +headers.</p> + +<ul> +<li><p>disassembler_win32_x86.h defines the PE/COFF x86 disassembler</p></li> +<li><p>disassembler_elf_32_x86.h defines the ELF 32-bit x86 disassembler</p></li> +<li><p>disassembler_elf_32_arm.h defines the ELF 32-bit arm disassembler</p></li> +</ul></li> +<li><p>The Disassembler replaces the relocation table with a Courgette +instruction that can regenerate the relocation table.</p></li> +<li><p>The Disassembler builds a list of addresses referenced by the +machine code, numbering each one.</p></li> +<li><p>The Disassembler replaces and address used in machine instructions +with its index number.</p></li> +<li><p>The output is an assembly_program.h:AssemblyProgram class, which +contains a list of instructions, machine or Courgette, and a mapping +of indices to actual addresses.</p></li> +</ul> + +<h3>Adjust</h3> + +<ul> +<li><p>This step takes the AssemblyProgram for the old file and reassigns +the indices that map to actual addresses. It is performed by +adjustment_method.cc:Adjust().</p></li> +<li><p>The goal is the match the indices from the old program to the new +program as closely as possible.</p></li> +<li><p>When matched correctly, machine instructions that jump to the +function in both the new and old binary will look the same to +bsdiff, even the function is located in a different part of the +binary.</p></li> +</ul> + +<h3>Encode</h3> + +<ul> +<li><p>This step takes an AssemblyProgram object and encodes both the +instructions and the mapping of indices to addresses as byte +vectors. This format can be written to a file directly, and is also +more appropriate for bsdiffing. It is done by +AssemblyProgram.Encode().</p></li> +<li><p>encoded_program.h:EncodedProgram defines the binary format and a +WriteTo method that writes to a file.</p></li> +</ul> + +<h3>bsdiff</h3> + +<ul> +<li>simple_delta.c:GenerateSimpleDelta</li> +</ul> + +<h2>Patch Application</h2> + +<p><img src="application.png" alt="Patch Application" title="" /></p> + +<ul> +<li><p>courgette_tool.cc:ApplyEnsemblePatch kicks off the patch generation +by calling ensemble_apply.cc:ApplyEnsemblePatch</p></li> +<li><p>ensemble_create.cc:ApplyEnsemblePatch, reads and verifies the +patch's header, then calls the overloaded version of +ensemble_create.cc:ApplyEnsemblePatch.</p></li> +<li><p>The patch is read into an ensemble<em>apply.cc:EnsemblePatchApplication +object, which generates a set of patcher</em>x86<em>32.h:PatcherX86</em>32 +objects for the sections in the patch.</p></li> +<li><p>The original file is disassembled and encoded via a call +EnsemblePatchApplication.TransformUp, which in turn call +patcher<em>x86</em>32.h:PatcherX86_32.Transform.</p></li> +<li><p>The transformed file is then bspatched via +EnsemblePatchApplication.SubpatchTransformedElements, which calls +EnsemblePatchApplication.SubpatchStreamSets, which calls +simple_delta.cc:ApplySimpleDelta, Courgette's built-in +implementation of bspatch.</p></li> +<li><p>Finally, EnsemblePatchApplication.TransformDown assembles, i.e., +reverses the encoding and disassembly, on the patched binary data. +This is done by calling PatcherX86<em>32.Reform, which in turn calls +the global function encoded</em>program.cc:Assemble, which calls +EncodedProgram.AssembleTo.</p></li> +</ul> + +<h2>Glossary</h2> + +<p><strong>Adjust</strong>: Reassign address indices in the new program to match more + closely those from the old.</p> + +<p><strong>Assembly program</strong>: The output of <em>disassembly</em>. Contains a list of + <em>Courgette instructions</em> and an index of branch target addresses.</p> + +<p><strong>Assemble</strong>: Convert an <em>assembly program</em> back into an object file + by evaluating the <em>Courgette instructions</em> and leaving the machine + instructions in place.</p> + +<p><strong>Courgette instruction</strong>: Replaces machine instructions in the + program. Courgette instructions replace branches with an index to + the target addresses and replace part of the relocation table.</p> + +<p><strong>Disassembler</strong>: Takes a binary file and produces an <em>assembly + program</em>.</p> + +<p><strong>Encode</strong>: Convert an <em>assembly program</em> into an <em>encoded program</em> by + serializing its data structures into byte vectors more appropriate + for storage in a file.</p> + +<p><strong>Encoded Program</strong>: The output of encoding.</p> + +<p><strong>Ensemble</strong>: A Courgette-style patch containing sections for the list + of branch addresses, the encoded program. It supports patching + multiple object files at once.</p> + +<p><strong>Opcode</strong>: The number corresponding to either a machine or <em>Courgette + instruction</em>.</p> |