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Home/ Questions/Q 982399
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 16, 20262026-05-16T04:41:24+00:00 2026-05-16T04:41:24+00:00

I’m wondering if there’s a way to write-protect every page in a Linux process’

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I’m wondering if there’s a way to write-protect every page in a Linux
process’ address space (from inside of the process itself, by way of
mprotect()). By “every page”, I really mean every page of the
process’s address space that might be written to by an ordinary
program running in user mode — so, the program text, the constants,
the globals, and the heap — but I would be happy with just constants,
globals, and heap. I don’t want to write-protect the stack — that
seems like a bad idea.

One problem is that I don’t know where to start write-protecting
memory. Looking at /proc/pid/maps, which shows the sections of memory
in use for a given pid, they always seem to start with the address
0x08048000, with the program text. (In Linux, as far as I can tell,
the memory of a process is laid out with the program text at the
bottom, then constants above that, then globals, then the heap, then
an empty space of varying size depending on the size of the heap or
stack, and then the stack growing down from the top of memory at
virtual address 0xffffffff.) There’s a way to tell where the top of
the heap is (by calling sbrk(0), which simply returns a pointer to the
current “break”, i.e., the top of the heap), but not really a way to
tell where the heap begins.

If I try to protect all pages from 0x08048000 up to the break, I
eventually get an mprotect: Cannot allocate memory error. I don’t know why mprotect would be
allocating memory anyway — and Google is not very helpful. Any ideas?

By the way, the reason I want to do this is because I want to create a
list of all pages that are written to during a run of the program, and
the way that I can think of to do this is to write-protect all pages,
let any attempted writes cause a write fault, then implement a write
fault handler that will add the page to the list and then remove the write
protection. I think I know how to implement the handler, if only I could
figure out which pages to protect and how to do it.

Thanks!

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-16T04:41:24+00:00Added an answer on May 16, 2026 at 4:41 am

    You recieve ENOMEM from mprotect() if you try to call it on pages that aren’t mapped.

    Your best bet is to open /proc/self/maps, and read it a line at a time with fgets() to find all the mappings in your process. For each writeable mapping (indicated in the second field) that isn’t the stack (indicated in the last field), call mprotect() with the right base address and length (calculated from the start and end addresses in the first field).

    Note that you’ll need to have your fault handler already set up at this point, because the act of reading the maps file itself will likely cause writes within your address space.

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