Summary:
The split in D39461 introduced separate C++ flags, but `cxx_flags` needs `-lrt` as well for the standalone build.
Reviewers: alekseyshl
Reviewed By: alekseyshl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39497
llvm-svn: 317103
Summary:
Initially, Scudo had a monolithic design where both C and C++ functions were
living in the same library. This was not necessarily ideal, and with the work
on -fsanitize=scudo, it became more apparent that this needed to change.
We are splitting the new/delete interceptor in their own C++ library. This
allows more flexibility, notably with regard to std::bad_alloc when the work is
done. This also allows us to not link new & delete when using pure C.
Additionally, we add the UBSan runtimes with Scudo, in order to be able to have
a -fsanitize=scudo,undefined in Clang (see work in D39334).
The changes in this patch:
- split the cxx specific code in the scudo cmake file into a new library;
(remove the spurious foreach loop, that was not necessary)
- add the UBSan runtimes (both C and C++);
- change the test cmake file to allow for specific C & C++ tests;
- make C tests pure C, rename their extension accordingly.
Reviewers: alekseyshl
Reviewed By: alekseyshl
Subscribers: srhines, mgorny, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39461
llvm-svn: 317097
Summary:
The 64-bit primary has had random shuffling of chunks for a while, this
implements it for the 32-bit primary. Scudo is currently the only user of
`kRandomShuffleChunks`.
This change consists of a few modifications:
- move the random shuffling functions out of the 64-bit primary to
`sanitizer_common.h`. Alternatively I could move them to
`sanitizer_allocator.h` as they are only used in the allocator, I don't feel
strongly either way;
- small change in the 64-bit primary to make the `rand_state` initialization
`UNLIKELY`;
- addition of a `rand_state` in the 32-bit primary's `SizeClassInfo` and
shuffling of chunks when populating the free list.
- enabling the `random_shuffle.cpp` test on platforms using the 32-bit primary
for Scudo.
Some comments on why the shuffling is done that way. Initially I just
implemented a `Shuffle` function in the `TransferBatch` which was simpler but I
came to realize this wasn't good enough: for chunks of 10000 bytes for example,
with a `CompactSizeClassMap`, a batch holds only 1 chunk, meaning shuffling the
batch has no effect, while a region is usually 1MB, eg: 104 chunks of that size.
So I decided to "stage" the newly gathered chunks in a temporary array that
would be shuffled prior to placing the chunks in batches.
The result is looping twice through n_chunks even if shuffling is not enabled,
but I didn't notice any significant significant performance impact.
Reviewers: alekseyshl
Reviewed By: alekseyshl
Subscribers: srhines, llvm-commits, kubamracek
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39244
llvm-svn: 316596
Summary:
Up to now, the Scudo cmake target only provided a static library that had to be
linked to an executable to benefit from the hardened allocator.
This introduces a shared library as well, that can be LD_PRELOAD'ed.
Reviewers: alekseyshl
Reviewed By: alekseyshl
Subscribers: srhines, mgorny, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38980
llvm-svn: 316342
Summary:
With the recent move of `android_commands` to `sanitizer_common`, some things
have to be updated with regard to Scudo on Android.
Notably:
- `config.android` is dealt with in the common code
- `config.compile_wrapper` can be prepended to allow for the use of the android
commands
- `SCUDO_OPTIONS` must be passed with the environment when running a test
- `preinit.cpp` fails with some API levels, not sure why, I will have to dig
into this later.
Note that `check-scudo` is not enabled yet in the bots. It's all local testing
for now until everything looks good.
Reviewers: alekseyshl, vitalybuka
Reviewed By: vitalybuka
Subscribers: srhines, kubamracek, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37990
llvm-svn: 313561
Summary:
Mark Android as supported in the cmake configuration for Scudo.
Scudo is not added yet in the Android build bots, but code builds and tests
pass locally. It is for a later CL. I also checked that Scudo builds as part
of the Android toolchain.
A few modifications had to be made:
- Android defaults to `abort_on_error=1`, which doesn't work well with the
current tests. So change the default way to pass `SCUDO_OPTIONS` to the tests
to account for this, setting it to 0 by default;
- Disable the `valloc.cpp` & `random_shuffle.cpp` tests on Android;
- There is a bit of gymnatic to be done with the `SCUDO_TEST_TARGET_ARCH`
string, due to android using the `-android` suffix, and `i686` instead of
`i386`;
- Android doesn't need `-lrt`.
Reviewers: alekseyshl, eugenis
Reviewed By: alekseyshl
Subscribers: srhines, mgorny, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37907
llvm-svn: 313538
Summary:
In a few functions (`scudoMemalign` and the like), we would call
`ScudoAllocator::FailureHandler::OnBadRequest` if the parameters didn't check
out. The issue is that if the allocator had not been initialized (eg: if this
is the first heap related function called), we would use variables like
`allocator_may_return_null` and `exitcode` that still had their default value
(as opposed to the one set by the user or the initialization path).
To solve this, we introduce `handleBadRequest` that will call `initThreadMaybe`,
allowing the options to be correctly initialized.
Unfortunately, the tests were passing because `exitcode` was still 0, so the
results looked like success. Change those tests to do what they were supposed
to.
Reviewers: alekseyshl
Reviewed By: alekseyshl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37853
llvm-svn: 313294
Summary:
Some of glibc's own thread local data is destroyed after a user's thread local
destructors are called, via __libc_thread_freeres. This might involve calling
free, as is the case for strerror_thread_freeres.
If there is no prior heap operation in the thread, this free would end up
initializing some thread specific data that would never be destroyed properly
(as user's pthread destructors have already been called), while still being
deallocated when the TLS goes away. As a result, a program could SEGV, usually
in __sanitizer::AllocatorGlobalStats::Unregister, where one of the doubly linked
list links would refer to a now unmapped memory area.
To prevent this from happening, we will not do a full initialization from the
deallocation path. This means that the fallback cache & quarantine will be used
if no other heap operation has been called, and we effectively prevent the TSD
being initialized and never destroyed. The TSD will be fully initialized for all
other paths.
In the event of a thread doing only frees and nothing else, a TSD would never
be initialized for that thread, but this situation is unlikely and we can live
with that.
Reviewers: alekseyshl
Reviewed By: alekseyshl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37697
llvm-svn: 312939
Remove the explicit i686 target that is completely duplicate to
the i386 target, with the latter being used more commonly.
1. The runtime built for i686 will be identical to the one built for
i386.
2. Supporting both -i386 and -i686 suffixes causes unnecessary confusion
on the clang end which has to expect either of them.
3. The checks are based on wrong assumption that __i686__ is defined for
all newer x86 CPUs. In fact, it is only declared when -march=i686 is
explicitly used. It is not available when a more specific (or newer)
-march is used.
Curious enough, if CFLAGS contain -march=i686, the runtime will be built
both for i386 and i686. For any other value, only i386 variant will be
built.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26764
llvm-svn: 311924
Remove the explicit i686 target that is completely duplicate to
the i386 target, with the latter being used more commonly.
1. The runtime built for i686 will be identical to the one built for
i386.
2. Supporting both -i386 and -i686 suffixes causes unnecessary confusion
on the clang end which has to expect either of them.
3. The checks are based on wrong assumption that __i686__ is defined for
all newer x86 CPUs. In fact, it is only declared when -march=i686 is
explicitly used. It is not available when a more specific (or newer)
-march is used.
Curious enough, if CFLAGS contain -march=i686, the runtime will be built
both for i386 and i686. For any other value, only i386 variant will be
built.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26764
llvm-svn: 311842
Summary:
This patch changes a few (small) things around for compatibility purposes for
the current Android & Fuchsia work:
- `realloc`'ing some memory that was not allocated with `malloc`, `calloc` or
`realloc`, while UB according to http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009695399/functions/realloc.html
is more common that one would think. We now only check this if
`DeallocationTypeMismatch` is set; change the "mismatch" error
messages to be more homogeneous;
- some sketchily written but widely used libraries expect a call to `realloc`
to copy the usable size of the old chunk to the new one instead of the
requested size. We have to begrundingly abide by this de-facto standard.
This doesn't seem to impact security either way, unless someone comes up with
something we didn't think about;
- the CRC32 intrinsics for 64-bit take a 64-bit first argument. This is
misleading as the upper 32 bits end up being ignored. This was also raising
`-Wconversion` errors. Change things to take a `u32` as first argument.
This also means we were (and are) only using 32 bits of the Cookie - not a
big thing, but worth mentioning.
- Includes-wise: prefer `stddef.h` to `cstddef`, move `scudo_flags.h` where it
is actually needed.
- Add tests for the memalign-realloc case, and the realloc-usable-size one.
(Edited typos)
Reviewers: alekseyshl
Reviewed By: alekseyshl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36754
llvm-svn: 311018
Summary:
Previously we were rounding up the size passed to `pvalloc` to the next
multiple of page size no matter what. There is an overflow possibility that
wasn't accounted for. So now, return null in the event of an overflow. The man
page doesn't seem to indicate the errno to set in this particular situation,
but the glibc unit tests go for ENOMEM (https://code.woboq.org/userspace/glibc/malloc/tst-pvalloc.c.html#54)
so we'll do the same.
Update the aligned allocation funtions tests to check for properly aligned
returned pointers, and the `pvalloc` corner cases.
@alekseyshl: do you want me to do the same in the other Sanitizers?
Reviewers: alekseyshl
Reviewed By: alekseyshl
Subscribers: kubamracek, alekseyshl, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35818
llvm-svn: 309033
Summary:
Warm-up the other 2 sizes used by the tests, which should get rid of a failure
on AArch64.
Reviewers: alekseyshl
Reviewed By: alekseyshl
Subscribers: aemerson, rengolin, llvm-commits, kristof.beyls
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35806
llvm-svn: 308907
Summary:
First, some context.
The main feedback we get about the quarantine is that it's too memory hungry.
A single MB of quarantine will have an impact of 3 to 4MB of PSS/RSS, and
things quickly get out of hand in terms of memory usage, and the quarantine
ends up disabled.
The main objective of the quarantine is to protect from use-after-free
exploitation by making it harder for an attacker to reallocate a controlled
chunk in place of the targeted freed chunk. This is achieved by not making it
available to the backend right away for reuse, but holding it a little while.
Historically, what has usually been the target of such attacks was objects,
where vtable pointers or other function pointers could constitute a valuable
targeti to replace. Those are usually on the smaller side. There is barely any
advantage in putting the quarantine several megabytes of RGB data or the like.
Now for the patch.
This patch introduces a new way the Quarantine behaves in Scudo. First of all,
the size of the Quarantine will be defined in KB instead of MB, then we
introduce a new option: the size up to which (lower than or equal to) a chunk
will be quarantined. This way, we only quarantine smaller chunks, and the size
of the quarantine remains manageable. It also prevents someone from triggering
a recycle by allocating something huge. We default to 512 bytes on 32-bit and
2048 bytes on 64-bit platforms.
In details, the patches includes the following:
- introduce `QuarantineSizeKb`, but honor `QuarantineSizeMb` if set to fall
back to the old behavior (meaning no threshold in that case);
`QuarantineSizeMb` is described as deprecated in the options descriptios;
documentation update will follow;
- introduce `QuarantineChunksUpToSize`, the new threshold value;
- update the `quarantine.cpp` test, and other tests using `QuarantineSizeMb`;
- remove `AllocatorOptions::copyTo`, it wasn't used;
- slightly change the logic around `quarantineOrDeallocateChunk` to accomodate
for the new logic; rename a couple of variables there as well;
Rewriting the tests, I found a somewhat annoying bug where non-default aligned
chunks would account for more than needed when placed in the quarantine due to
`<< MinAlignment` instead of `<< MinAlignmentLog`. This is fixed and tested for
now.
Reviewers: alekseyshl, kcc
Reviewed By: alekseyshl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35694
llvm-svn: 308884
Summary:
Set proper errno code on alloction failure and change pvalloc and
posix_memalign implementation to satisfy their man-specified
requirements.
Reviewers: cryptoad
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35429
llvm-svn: 308053
Summary:
We were not following the `man` documented behaviors for invalid arguments to
`memalign` and associated functions. Using `CHECK` for those was a bit extreme,
so we relax the behavior to return null pointers as expected when this happens.
Adapt the associated test.
I am using this change also to change a few more minor performance improvements:
- mark as `UNLIKELY` a bunch of unlikely conditions;
- the current `CHECK` in `__sanitizer::RoundUpTo` is redundant for us in *all*
calls. So I am introducing our own version without said `CHECK`.
- change our combined allocator `GetActuallyAllocatedSize`. We already know if
the pointer is from the Primary or Secondary, so the `PointerIsMine` check is
redundant as well, and costly for the 32-bit Primary. So we get the size by
directly using the available Primary functions.
Finally, change a `int` to `uptr` to avoid a warning/error when compiling on
Android.
Reviewers: alekseyshl
Reviewed By: alekseyshl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34782
llvm-svn: 306698
Summary:
Operator new interceptors behavior is now controlled by their nothrow
property as well as by allocator_may_return_null flag value:
- allocator_may_return_null=* + new() - die on allocation error
- allocator_may_return_null=0 + new(nothrow) - die on allocation error
- allocator_may_return_null=1 + new(nothrow) - return null
Ideally new() should throw std::bad_alloc exception, but that is not
trivial to achieve, hence TODO.
Reviewers: eugenis
Subscribers: kubamracek, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34731
llvm-svn: 306604
Summary:
Apparently "test standalone compiler-rt" still requires -ldl and -lrt for
Scudo even with --gc-sections. I am not entirely sure why, so if anybody has
some input, feel free to chime in.
In the meantime, add again those two to fix the test.
Reviewers: kcc, alekseyshl
Reviewed By: kcc
Subscribers: Hahnfeld, dberris, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29527
llvm-svn: 294199
Summary:
The assumption __sanitizer_get_heap_size() == 0 (introduced in D29341) at the
start of a program appears to be incorrect on some ARM machines
(SizeClassAllocator32).
This should fix the test while I investigate the issue.
Reviewers: kcc, alekseyshl
Reviewed By: alekseyshl
Subscribers: aemerson, rengolin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29516
llvm-svn: 294056
Summary:
The local and global quarantine sizes were not offering a distinction for
32-bit and 64-bit platforms. This is addressed with lower values for 32-bit.
When writing additional tests for the quarantine, it was discovered that when
calling some of the allocator interface function prior to any allocation
operation having occured, the test would crash due to the allocator not being
initialized. This was addressed by making sure the allocator is initialized
for those scenarios.
Relevant tests were added in interface.cpp and quarantine.cpp.
Last change being the removal of the extraneous link dependencies for the
tests thanks to rL293220, anf the addition of the gc-sections linker flag.
Reviewers: kcc, alekseyshl
Reviewed By: alekseyshl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29341
llvm-svn: 294037
Summary:
Adding ARM64 as a supported architecture for Scudo.
The random shuffle is not yet supported for SizeClassAllocator32, which is used
by the AArch64 allocator, so disable the associated test for now.
Reviewers: kcc, alekseyshl, rengolin
Reviewed By: rengolin
Subscribers: aemerson, mgorny, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28960
llvm-svn: 293068
Summary:
In an effort to getting rid of dependencies to external libraries, we are
replacing atomic PackedHeader use of std::atomic with Sanitizer's
atomic_uint64_t, which allows us to avoid -latomic.
Reviewers: kcc, phosek, alekseyshl
Reviewed By: alekseyshl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28864
llvm-svn: 292630
Summary: The macro was introduced with D26929, use it in Scudo as well.
Reviewers: kcc, alekseyshl, kubabrecka
Subscribers: llvm-commits, danalbert, srhines, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28066
llvm-svn: 290439
Summary:
With the previous modifications, the code works on ARM32. The random shuffle
test is unsupported on 32-bit platforms for the moment and being marked as
such. There is no hardware support for the checksum computation yet, this will
come at a later point.
Reviewers: kcc, alekseyshl
Subscribers: llvm-commits, aemerson, rengolin, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27957
llvm-svn: 290201
Summary:
Now that we are not rounding up the sizes passed to the secondary allocator,
the memalign test could run out of aligned addresses to return for larger
alignments. We now reduce the size of the quarantine for that test, and
allocate less chunks for the larger alignments.
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27760
llvm-svn: 289665
Summary:
This update introduces i386 support for the Scudo Hardened Allocator, and
offers software alternatives for functions that used to require hardware
specific instruction sets. This should make porting to new architectures
easier.
Among the changes:
- The chunk header has been changed to accomodate the size limitations
encountered on 32-bit architectures. We now fit everything in 64-bit. This
was achieved by storing the amount of unused bytes in an allocation rather
than the size itself, as one can be deduced from the other with the help
of the GetActuallyAllocatedSize function. As it turns out, this header can
be used for both 64 and 32 bit, and as such we dropped the requirement for
the 128-bit compare and exchange instruction support (cmpxchg16b).
- Add 32-bit support for the checksum and the PRNG functions: if the SSE 4.2
instruction set is supported, use the 32-bit CRC32 instruction, and in the
XorShift128, use a 32-bit based state instead of 64-bit.
- Add software support for CRC32: if SSE 4.2 is not supported, fallback on a
software implementation.
- Modify tests that were not 32-bit compliant, and expand them to cover more
allocation and alignment sizes. The random shuffle test has been deactivated
for linux-i386 & linux-i686 as the 32-bit sanitizer allocator doesn't
currently randomize chunks.
Reviewers: alekseyshl, kcc
Subscribers: filcab, llvm-commits, tberghammer, danalbert, srhines, mgorny, modocache
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26358
llvm-svn: 288255
Summary:
In order to support 32-bit platforms, we have to make some adjustments in
multiple locations, one of them being the Scudo chunk header. For it to fit on
64 bits (as a reminder, on x64 it's 128 bits), I had to crunch the space taken
by some of the fields. In order to keep the offset field small, the secondary
allocator was changed to accomodate aligned allocations for larger alignments,
hence making the offset constant for chunks serviced by it.
The resulting header candidate has been added, and further modifications to
allow 32-bit support will follow.
Another notable change is the addition of MaybeStartBackgroudThread() to allow
release of the memory to the OS.
Reviewers: kcc
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25688
llvm-svn: 285209
Summary:
s/CHECK_LT/CHECK_LE/ in the secondary allocator, as under certain circumstances
Ptr + Size can be equal to MapEnd. This edge case was not found by the current
tests, so those were extended to be able to catch that.
Reviewers: kcc
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25101
llvm-svn: 282913
Summary:
GetActuallyAllocatedSize() was not accounting for the last page of the mapping
being a guard page, and was returning the wrong number of actually allocated
bytes, which in turn would mess up with the realloc logic. Current tests didn't
find this as the size exercised was only serviced by the Primary.
Correct the issue by subtracting PageSize, and update the realloc test to
exercise paths in both the Primary and the Secondary.
Reviewers: kcc
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24787
llvm-svn: 282030
Summary:
The Sanitizer Secondary Allocator was not entirely ideal was Scudo for several
reasons: decent amount of unneeded code, redundant checks already performed by
the front end, unneeded data structures, difficulty to properly protect the
secondary chunks header.
Given that the second allocator is pretty straight forward, Scudo will use its
own, trimming all the unneeded code off of the Sanitizer one. A significant
difference in terms of security is that now each secondary chunk is preceded
and followed by a guard page, thus mitigating overflows into and from the
chunk.
A test was added as well to illustrate the overflow & underflow situations
into the guard pages.
Reviewers: kcc
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24737
llvm-svn: 281938
Summary:
Currently, the Scudo Hardened Allocator only gets its flags via the SCUDO_OPTIONS environment variable.
With this patch, we offer the opportunity for programs to define their own options via __scudo_default_options() which behaves like __asan_default_options() (weak symbol).
A relevant test has been added as well, and the documentation updated accordingly.
I also used this patch as an opportunity to rename a few variables to comply with the LLVM naming scheme, and replaced a use of Report with dieWithMessage for consistency (and to avoid a callback).
Reviewers: llvm-commits, kcc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23018
llvm-svn: 277536
Summary:
This patch is a refactoring of the way cmake 'targets' are grouped.
It won't affect non-UI cmake-generators.
Clang/LLVM are using a structured way to group targets which ease
navigation through Visual Studio UI. The Compiler-RT projects
differ from the way Clang/LLVM are grouping targets.
This patch doesn't contain behavior changes.
Reviewers: kubabrecka, rnk
Subscribers: wang0109, llvm-commits, kubabrecka, chrisha
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21952
llvm-svn: 275111
Summary:
This is an initial implementation of a Hardened Allocator based on Sanitizer Common's CombinedAllocator.
It aims at mitigating heap based vulnerabilities by adding several features to the base allocator, while staying relatively fast.
The following were implemented:
- additional consistency checks on the allocation function parameters and on the heap chunks;
- use of checksum protected chunk header, to detect corruption;
- randomness to the allocator base;
- delayed freelist (quarantine), to mitigate use after free and overall determinism.
Additional mitigations are in the works.
Reviewers: eugenis, aizatsky, pcc, krasin, vitalybuka, glider, dvyukov, kcc
Subscribers: kubabrecka, filcab, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20084
llvm-svn: 271968