Google Summer of Code 2018
strace was taking part in the GSoC 2018 as a mentor organization.
About strace project.
strace is a diagnostic, debugging and instructional userspace tracer for Linux. It is used to monitor and tamper with interactions between processes and the Linux kernel, which include system calls, signal deliveries, and changes of process state. The operation of strace is made possible by the kernel feature known as ptrace.
strace is one of the longest running open source projects and had been started even before Linux was started.
strace is an important tool for debugging and tracing deployed on all Linux distributions and most Unix distributions with a small community of active contributors.
While strace is a small project, the strace tool is essential for many developers, system administrators and open source projects. Its maintainers and contributors are experienced developers.
The project organization is simple: the community discusses proposed patches and a few core maintainers eventually accept or reject contributions. All contributions are submitted as git patches to the mailing list, which is the single point of communication, in a mode very similar to the ways of the Linux kernel.
strace release cycle is currently synchronized with the release cycle of the Linux kernel.
Note that we are pretty laid back and cool compared to larger and professional projects like the Linux kernel but our standards are high and the people involved in strace are die hard system coders often contributing to or maintaining major C libraries such as Glibc, Glib or Bionic, contributing to the Linux Kernel and other major free and open source projects.
So we expect that you would be making the efforts to learn our mailing list and patch ways and ask good questions and do your home work for a most productive and efficient participation.
What to do as a prospective student
We want engage with students that are interested in system programming and want to help making strace a better tool. We hope to gain you as a new long term contributor and that you will contribute interesting and new features.
You need to grok C and have an interest in system programming and debugging. The codebase is not huge but the domain is not simple and requires a meticulous attention to many details.
All the communication is going through a single mailing list: https://lists.strace.io/mailman/listinfo/strace-devel
Subscribe to the list, introduce yourself and start the discussion!
Please prefix your email subjects with GSOC.
Please be kind enough to follow these simple guidelines when posting to the list: 1. only send text emails. No HTML 2. do not top post 3. use and abuse the mailing list archive to see how proper discussions are handled 4. be patient, a reply may need a week to come by 5. use git tools to create and submit patches to the list 6. apply to your code the same code style and indentation used overall in strace Thank you!
— https://lists.strace.io/pipermail/strace-devel/2016-March/004704.html
Check our list of projects ideas below or submit new ideas to the list for consideration.
It is required that students who want to apply to the strace project for the GSoC 2018 complete a relatively small code-related "microproject" as part of their application. Please refer to our guidelines and suggestions for MicroProjects for more information. Completing a microproject is not only an important way for us to get experience with applicants, but it will also help applicants become familiar with strace's development and submission process.
General proposal requirements
You will need to submit your official proposal via https://summerofcode.withgoogle.com and plain text is the way to go.
Please subscribe to the strace-devel mailing list and post your proposal there too.
We expect your application to be in the range of 1000 words. Anything less than that will probably not contain enough information for us to determine whether you are the right person for the job. Your proposal should contain at least the following information, plus anything you think is relevant:
- Your name
- Title of your proposal
- Abstract of your proposal
- Detailed description of your idea including explanation on why is it innovative and what it will contribute
- Description of previous work, existing solutions (links to prototypes, bibliography are more than welcome)
- Mention the details of your academic studies, any previous work, internships
- Any relevant skills that will help you to achieve the goal (programming languages, frameworks)?
- Any previous open-source projects (or even previous GSoC) you have contributed to?
- Any open-source code of yours that we can check out?
- Do you plan to have any other commitments during SoC that may affect you work? Any vacations/holidays planned? Will you be available full time to work on your project? (Hint: do not bother applying if this is not a serious full time commitment)
Beyond your proposal you need obviously to be familiar with C and Git (or willing to learn these two super quick).
List of project ideas for students
Comprehensive test suite
Suggested by: Eugene Syromyatnikov, Dmitry V. Levin
The test suite we have today is far from covering all branches of all parsers yet. According to Codecov, current test coverage is just over 80%, but it tells very little about the actual coverage of various corner cases (checks for type sizes, signedness, handling of pointers to invalid memory, etc).
The goal of this project is to improve the test suite to a level that makes strace more reliable.
On the one hand, it would be educational for any student who is interested in syscall internals because writing syscall parsers and tests for them is the second best way to find out how syscalls work.
On the other hand, a comprehensive test suite is a prerequisite for any major change in strace source code. This test suite project does not have to be a work from scratch, there are already existing tests (e.g. strace/tests, ltp/testcases/kernel/syscalls, and sandbox/tests) that could be used as a starting point.
Support for alternative tracing backends
Suggested by: Eugene Syromyatnikov
Add support for providing various backends for strace.
There is one backend already in development (gdbserver), but it's still not finished:
There is also an idea that uprobes/kprobes/ftrace/perf can be utilized for tracing syscalls as a more modern way of tracing processes, which makes the possible support for various tracing backend more useful.
seccomp-assisted syscall filtering
Suggested by: Dmitry Levin
SECCOMP_RET_TRACE seccomp API could be used to implement a more efficient syscall filtering. Using this technique, tracees will be stopped on entering filtered syscalls only instead of all syscalls.
There was a (seemingly abandoned) attempt made at some point.
DRM ioctl decoding
Suggested by: Eugene Syromyatnikov
Direct Rendering Manager subsystem has pretty elaborate ioctl interface, and it might be useful to be able to support its decoding.
https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/drivers/gpu/drm/drm_ioctl.c
https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/drivers/gpu/drm/drm_ioc32.c
namespace support
Suggested by: Eugene Syromyatnikov
It could be useful to be able to show PIDs of processes in different PID namespaces when they are shown up in syscall arguments and results. As of now, this is quite complicated by the fact that there's no way to easily derive PID of the target process in the strace's namespace.
LKML thread with a patch that introduces a syscall that helps translating PIDs between PID namespaces
The other thing is the preservation of correctness of various strace features (path filtering, fd decoding, thread enumeration, ...) that rely on /proc when the traced process is in different namespace.
Enhancing test coverage when running test suite under root
Suggested by: Dmitry Levin
Some environments (notably, Travis CI) perform test runs under UID 0 (root), and that gives additional possibilities regarding possible actions. One of them is setting up environment for various test that need proper kernel's response, for example, various device-specific ioctls.
Adding Doxygen documentation of the internall APIs
Suggested by: Elvira Khabirova, Eugene Syromyatnikov
Over the years, strace's internal APIs used for various purposes (like printing various entities) have been grown significantly, to the point it leads to duplication of the code (for example, printing of hexadecimal strings is duplicated now in v4l2.c, btrfs.c and util.c). The other issue with the vast internal API (which is usually the result of long history of handling various issues with various architectures and version of the Linux kernel) is that it's not self-evident how things should be done properly. It's believed that documenting current APIs could lower the learning curve and increase overall quality of the code.
Other ideas
We are also open to any suggestions not listed on this page.
Some existing ideas are present on a [separate page](FeatureRequests). Note, however, that they may be not adequately sized for a GSoC project or require specific qualifications.