I am writing a kernel module that has access to a particular process's memory. I have done an anonymous mapping on some of the user space memory with do_mmap()
:
#define MAP_FLAGS (MAP_PRIVATE | MAP_FIXED | MAP_ANONYMOUS)
prot = PROT_WRITE;
retval = do_mmap(NULL, vaddr, vsize, prot, MAP_FLAGS, 0);
vaddr
and vsize
are set earlier, and the call succeeds. After I write to that memory block from the kernel module (via copy_to_user
), I want to remove the PROT_WRITE
permission on it (like I would with mprotect
in normal user space). I can't seem to find a function that will allow this.
I attempted unmapping the region and remapping it with the correct protections, but that zeroes out the memory block, erasing all the data I just wrote; setting MAP_UNINITIALIZED
might fix that, but, from the man pages:
MAP_UNINITIALIZED (since Linux 2.6.33)
Don't clear anonymous pages. This flag is intended to improve performance on embedded devices. This flag is only honored if the kernel was configured with the CONFIG_MMAP_ALLOW_UNINITIALIZED option. Because of the security implications, that option is normally enabled only on embedded devices (i.e., devices where one has complete control of the contents of user memory).
so, while that might do what I want, it wouldn't be very portable. Is there a standard way to accomplish what I've suggested?