Reverie is a user space system-call interception framework for Linux. It can be used to intercept, modify, or elide a syscall before the kernel executes it. In essence, Reverie sits at the boundary between user space and kernel space.
Some potential use cases include:
- Observability tools, like
strace
. - Failure injection to test error handling logic.
- Manipulating scheduling decisions to expose concurrency bugs.
See the reverie-examples
directory for examples of
tools that can be built with this library.
- Ergonomic syscall handling. It is easy to modify syscall arguments or return values, inject multiple syscalls, or suppress the syscall entirely.
- Async-await usage allows blocking syscalls to be handled without blocking other guest threads.
- Can intercept CPUID and RDTSC instructions.
- Typed syscalls. Every syscall has a wrapper to make it easier to access pointer values. This also enables strace-like pretty-printing for free.
- Avoid intercepting syscalls we don't care about. For example, if we only care
about
sys_open
, we can avoid paying the cost of intercepting other syscalls. - Can act as a GDB server. This allows connection via the GDB client where you can step through the process that is being traced by Reverie.
Clients of the Reverie library write tools. A tool runs a shell command creating a guest process tree, comprised of multiple guest threads and processes, in an instrumented manner. Each Reverie tool is written as a set of callbacks (i.e. handlers), which are invoked each time a guest thread encounters a trappable event such as a system call or inbound signal. The tool can stipulate exactly which events streams it subscribes to. The tool itself is stateful, maintaining state between consecutive invocations.
Reverie needs the following system-level dependencies:
sudo apt install pkg-config libunwind-devel
(These are required to get backtraces from the guest process.)
To test, run:
cargo test -- --test-threads=1
To run the strace
example:
cd reverie-examples
cargo run --bin strace -- ls
Currently, there is only the reverie-ptrace
backend which uses ptrace
to
intercept syscalls. Copy one of the example tools to a new Rust project (e.g.
cargo init
). You’ll see that it depends both on the general reverie
crate
for the API and on the specific backend implementation crate,
reverie_ptrace
.
Since ptrace
adds significant overhead when the guest has a syscall-heavy
workload, Reverie will add similarly-significant overhead. The slowdown depends
on how many syscalls are being performed and are intercepted by the tool.
The primary way you can improve performance with the current implementation is
to implement the subscriptions
callback, specifying a minimal set of syscalls
that are actually required by your tool.
When implementing a Reverie tool, there are three main components of the tool to consider:
- The process-level state,
- the thread-level state, and
- the global state (which is shared among all processes and threads in the traced process tree).
This separation of process-, thread-, and global-state is meant to provide an abstraction that allows future Reverie backends to be used without requiring the tool to be rewritten.
Whenever a new process is spawned (i.e., when fork
or clone
is called by the
guest), a new instance of the process state struct is created and managed by the
Reverie backend.
When a syscall is intercepted, it is always associated with the thread that called it.
The global state is accessed via RPC messages. Since a future Reverie backend may use in-guest syscall interception, the syscall handler code may not be running in the same address space. Thus, all shared state is communicated via RPC messages. (There is, however, currently only a single ptrace-based backend where all tracer code is in the same address space.)
Reverie currently only supports the following platforms and architectures:
Platform | Architecture | Notes |
---|---|---|
Linux | x86-64 | Full support |
Linux | aarch64 | Missing timers & cpuid/rdtsc interception |
Other platforms and architectures are currently unplanned.
- Add a more performant backend. The rough goal is to have handlers executing in the guest with close to regular functional call overhead. Global state and its methods will still be centralized, but the RPC/IPC mechanism between guest & the centralized tool process will become much more efficient.
Contributions are welcome! Please see the CONTRIBUTING.md file for guidance.
Reverie is BSD 2-Clause licensed as found in the LICENSE file.