diff mbox series

[v2,01/10] Introduce strub: documentation, and new command-line options

Message ID ory1wcmo6a.fsf_-_@lxoliva.fsfla.org
State New
Headers show
Series Introduce strub: machine-independent stack scrubbing | expand

Commit Message

Alexandre Oliva July 29, 2022, 6:24 a.m. UTC
Ada already has some strub documentation in
gcc/ada/doc/gnat_rm/security_hardening_features.rst.

for  gcc/ChangeLog

	* common.opt (fstrub=*): New options.
	* doc/extend.texi (strub): New type attribute.
	(__builtin_stack_address): New function.
	(Stack Scrubbing): New section.
	* doc/invoke.texi (-fstrub=*): New options.
	(-fdump-ipa-*): New passes.
diff mbox series

Patch

diff --git a/gcc/common.opt b/gcc/common.opt
index e7a51e882bade..2c635806bbf2c 100644
--- a/gcc/common.opt
+++ b/gcc/common.opt
@@ -2780,6 +2780,35 @@  fstrict-overflow
 Common
 Treat signed overflow as undefined.  Negated as -fwrapv -fwrapv-pointer.
 
+fstrub=disable
+Common RejectNegative Var(flag_strub, 0)
+Disable stack scrub entirely, disregarding strub attributes.
+
+fstrub=strict
+Common RejectNegative Var(flag_strub, -4)
+Enable stack scrub as per attributes, with strict call checking.
+
+; If any strub-enabling attribute is seen when the default or strict
+; initializer values are in effect, flag_strub is bumped up by 2.  The
+; scrub mode gate function will then bump these initializer values to
+; 0 if no strub-enabling attribute is seen.  This minimizes the strub
+; overhead.
+fstrub=relaxed
+Common RejectNegative Var(flag_strub, -3) Init(-3)
+Restore default strub mode: as per attributes, with relaxed checking.
+
+fstrub=all
+Common RejectNegative Var(flag_strub, 3)
+Enable stack scrubbing for all viable functions.
+
+fstrub=at-calls
+Common RejectNegative Var(flag_strub, 1)
+Enable at-calls stack scrubbing for all viable functions.
+
+fstrub=internal
+Common RejectNegative Var(flag_strub, 2)
+Enable internal stack scrubbing for all viable functions.
+
 fsync-libcalls
 Common Var(flag_sync_libcalls) Init(1)
 Implement __atomic operations via libcalls to legacy __sync functions.
diff --git a/gcc/doc/extend.texi b/gcc/doc/extend.texi
index 7fe7f8817cdd4..90d38c9f08362 100644
--- a/gcc/doc/extend.texi
+++ b/gcc/doc/extend.texi
@@ -77,6 +77,7 @@  extensions, accepted by GCC in C90 mode and in C++.
 * Function Names::      Printable strings which are the name of the current
                         function.
 * Return Address::      Getting the return or frame address of a function.
+* Stack Scrubbing::     Stack scrubbing internal interfaces.
 * Vector Extensions::   Using vector instructions through built-in functions.
 * Offsetof::            Special syntax for implementing @code{offsetof}.
 * __sync Builtins::     Legacy built-in functions for atomic memory access.
@@ -8890,6 +8891,263 @@  pid_t wait (wait_status_ptr_t p)
 @}
 @end smallexample
 
+@item strub
+@cindex @code{strub} type attribute
+This attribute defines stack-scrubbing properties of functions and
+variables.  Being a type attribute, it attaches to types, even when
+specified in function and variable declarations.  When applied to
+function types, it takes an optional string argument.  When applied to a
+pointer-to-function type, if the optional argument is given, it gets
+propagated to the function type.
+
+@smallexample
+/* A strub variable.  */
+int __attribute__ ((strub)) var;
+/* A strub variable that happens to be a pointer.  */
+__attribute__ ((strub)) int *strub_ptr_to_int;
+/* A pointer type that may point to a strub variable.  */
+typedef int __attribute__ ((strub)) *ptr_to_strub_int_type;
+
+/* A declaration of a strub function.  */
+extern int __attribute__ ((strub)) foo (void);
+/* A pointer to that strub function.  */
+int __attribute__ ((strub ("at-calls"))) (*ptr_to_strub_fn)(void) = foo;
+@end smallexample
+
+A function associated with @code{at-calls} @code{strub} mode
+(@code{strub("at-calls")}, or just @code{strub}) undergoes interface
+changes.  Its callers are adjusted to match the changes, and to scrub
+(overwrite with zeros) the stack space used by the called function after
+it returns.  The interface change makes the function type incompatible
+with an unadorned but otherwise equivalent type, so @emph{every}
+declaration and every type that may be used to call the function must be
+associated with this strub mode.
+
+A function associated with @code{internal} @code{strub} mode
+(@code{strub("internal")}) retains an unmodified, type-compatible
+interface, but it may be turned into a wrapper that calls the wrapped
+body using a custom interface.  The wrapper then scrubs the stack space
+used by the wrapped body.  Though the wrapped body has its stack space
+scrubbed, the wrapper does not, so arguments and return values may
+remain unscrubbed even when such a function is called by another
+function that enables @code{strub}.  This is why, when compiling with
+@option{-fstrub=strict}, a @code{strub} context is not allowed to call
+@code{internal} @code{strub} functions.
+
+@smallexample
+/* A declaration of an internal-strub function.  */
+extern int __attribute__ ((strub ("internal"))) bar (void);
+
+int __attribute__ ((strub))
+baz (void)
+@{
+  /* Ok, foo was declared above as an at-calls strub function.  */
+  foo ();
+  /* Not allowed in strict mode, otherwise allowed.  */
+  bar ();
+@}
+@end smallexample
+
+An automatically-allocated variable associated with the @code{strub}
+attribute causes the (immediately) enclosing function to have
+@code{strub} enabled.
+
+A statically-allocated variable associated with the @code{strub}
+attribute causes functions that @emph{read} it, through its @code{strub}
+data type, to have @code{strub} enabled.  Reading data by dereferencing
+a pointer to a @code{strub} data type has the same effect.  Note: The
+attribute does not carry over from a composite type to the types of its
+components, so the intended effect may not be obtained with non-scalar
+types.
+
+When selecting a @code{strub}-enabled mode for a function that is not
+explicitly associated with one, because of @code{strub} variables or
+data pointers, the function must satisfy @code{internal} mode viability
+requirements (see below), even when @code{at-calls} mode is also viable
+and, being more efficient, ends up selected as an optimization.
+
+@smallexample
+/* zapme is implicitly strub-enabled because of strub variables.
+   Optimization may change its strub mode, but not the requirements.  */
+static int
+zapme (int i)
+@{
+  /* A local strub variable enables strub.  */
+  int __attribute__ ((strub)) lvar;
+  /* Reading strub data through a pointer-to-strub enables strub.  */
+  lvar = * (ptr_to_strub_int_type) &i;
+  /* Writing to a global strub variable does not enable strub.  */
+  var = lvar;
+  /* Reading from a global strub variable enables strub.  */
+  return var;
+@}
+@end smallexample
+
+A @code{strub} context is the body (as opposed to the interface) of a
+function that has @code{strub} enabled, be it explicitly, by
+@code{at-calls} or @code{internal} mode, or implicitly, due to
+@code{strub} variables or command-line options.
+
+A function of a type associated with the @code{disabled} @code{strub}
+mode (@code{strub("disabled")} will not have its own stack space
+scrubbed.  Such functions @emph{cannot} be called from within
+@code{strub} contexts.
+
+In order to enable a function to be called from within @code{strub}
+contexts without having its stack space scrubbed, associate it with the
+@code{callable} @code{strub} mode (@code{strub("callable")}).
+
+When a function is not assigned a @code{strub} mode, explicitly or
+implicitly, the mode defaults to @code{callable}, except when compiling
+with @option{-fstrub=strict}, that causes @code{strub} mode to default
+to @code{disabled}.
+
+@example
+extern int __attribute__ ((strub ("callable"))) bac (void);
+extern int __attribute__ ((strub ("disabled"))) bad (void);
+ /* Implicitly disabled with -fstrub=strict, otherwise callable.  */
+extern int bah (void);
+
+int __attribute__ ((strub))
+bal (void)
+@{
+  /* Not allowed, bad is not strub-callable.  */
+  bad ();
+  /* Ok, bac is strub-callable.  */
+  bac ();
+  /* Not allowed with -fstrub=strict, otherwise allowed.  */
+  bah ();
+@}
+@end example
+
+Function types marked @code{callable} and @code{disabled} are not
+mutually compatible types, but the underlying interfaces are compatible,
+so it is safe to convert pointers between them, and to use such pointers
+or alternate declarations to call them.  Interfaces are also
+interchangeable between them and @code{internal} (but not
+@code{at-calls}!), but adding @code{internal} to a pointer type will not
+cause the pointed-to function to perform stack scrubbing.
+
+@example
+void __attribute__ ((strub))
+bap (void)
+@{
+  /* Assign a callable function to pointer-to-disabled.
+     Flagged as not quite compatible with -Wpedantic.  */
+  int __attribute__ ((strub ("disabled"))) (*d_p) (void) = bac;
+  /* Not allowed: calls disabled type in a strub context.  */
+  d_p ();
+
+  /* Assign a disabled function to pointer-to-callable.
+     Flagged as not quite compatible with -Wpedantic.  */
+  int __attribute__ ((strub ("callable"))) (*c_p) (void) = bad;
+  /* Ok, safe.  */
+  c_p ();
+
+  /* Assign an internal function to pointer-to-callable.
+     Flagged as not quite compatible with -Wpedantic.  */
+  c_p = bar;
+  /* Ok, safe.  */
+  c_p ();
+
+  /* Assign an at-calls function to pointer-to-callable.
+     Flaggged as incompatible.  */
+  c_p = bal;
+  /* The call through an interface-incompatible type will not use the
+     modified interface expected by the at-calls function, so it is
+     likely to misbehave at runtime.  */
+  c_p ();
+@}
+@end example
+
+@code{Strub} contexts are never inlined into non-@code{strub} contexts.
+When an @code{internal}-strub function is split up, the wrapper can
+often be inlined, but the wrapped body @emph{never} is.  A function
+marked as @code{always_inline}, even if explicitly assigned
+@code{internal} strub mode, will not undergo wrapping, so its body gets
+inlined as required.
+
+@example
+inline int __attribute__ ((strub ("at-calls")))
+inl_atc (void)
+@{
+  /* This body may get inlined into strub contexts.  */
+@}
+
+inline int __attribute__ ((strub ("internal")))
+inl_int (void)
+@{
+  /* This body NEVER gets inlined, though its wrapper may.  */
+@}
+
+inline int __attribute__ ((strub ("internal"), always_inline))
+inl_int_ali (void)
+@{
+  /* No internal wrapper, so this body ALWAYS gets inlined,
+     but it cannot be called from non-strub contexts.  */
+@}
+
+void __attribute__ ((strub ("disabled")))
+bat (void)
+@{
+  /* Not allowed, cannot inline into a non-strub context.  */
+  inl_int_ali ();
+@}
+@end example
+
+@cindex strub eligibility and viability
+Some @option{-fstrub=*} command line options enable @code{strub} modes
+implicitly where viable.  A @code{strub} mode is only viable for a
+function if the function is eligible for that mode, and if other
+conditions, detailed below, are satisfied.  If it's not eligible for a
+mode, attempts to explicitly associate it with that mode are rejected
+with an error message.  If it is eligible, that mode may be assigned
+explicitly through this attribute, but implicit assignment through
+command-line options may involve additional viability requirements.
+
+A function is ineligible for @code{at-calls} @code{strub} mode if a
+different @code{strub} mode is explicitly requested, if attribute
+@code{noipa} is present, or if it calls @code{__builtin_apply_args}.
+@code{At-calls} @code{strub} mode, if not requested through the function
+type, is only viable for an eligible function if the function is not
+visible to other translation units, if it doesn't have its address
+taken, and if it is never called with a function type overrider.
+
+@smallexample
+/* bar is eligible for at-calls strub mode,
+   but not viable for that mode because it is visible to other units.
+   It is eligible and viable for internal strub mode.  */
+void bav () @{@}
+
+/* setp is eligible for at-calls strub mode,
+   but not viable for that mode because its address is taken.
+   It is eligible and viable for internal strub mode.  */
+void setp (void) @{ static void (*p)(void); = setp; @}
+@end smallexample
+
+A function is ineligible for @code{internal} @code{strub} mode if a
+different @code{strub} mode is explicitly requested, or if attribute
+@code{noipa} is present.  For an @code{always_inline} function, meeting
+these requirements is enough to make it eligible.  Any function that has
+attribute @code{noclone}, that uses such extensions as non-local labels,
+computed gotos, alternate variable argument passing interfaces,
+@code{__builtin_next_arg}, or @code{__builtin_return_address}, or that
+takes too many (about 64Ki) arguments is ineligible, unless it is
+@code{always_inline}.  For @code{internal} @code{strub} mode, all
+eligible functions are viable.
+
+@smallexample
+/* flop is not eligible, thus not viable, for at-calls strub mode.
+   Likewise for internal strub mode.  */
+__attribute__ ((noipa)) void flop (void) @{@}
+
+/* flip is eligible and viable for at-calls strub mode.
+   It would be ineligible for internal strub mode, because of noclone,
+   if it weren't for always_inline.  With always_inline, noclone is not
+   an obstacle, so it is also eligible and viable for internal strub mode.  */
+inline __attribute__ ((noclone, always_inline)) void flip (void) @{@}
+@end smallexample
+
 @item unused
 @cindex @code{unused} type attribute
 When attached to a type (including a @code{union} or a @code{struct}),
@@ -11927,6 +12185,55 @@  option is in effect.  Such calls should only be made in debugging
 situations.
 @end deftypefn
 
+@deftypefn {Built-in Function} {void *} __builtin_stack_address ()
+This function returns the value of the stack pointer register.
+@end deftypefn
+
+@node Stack Scrubbing
+@section Stack scrubbing internal interfaces
+
+Stack scrubbing involves cooperation between a @code{strub} context,
+i.e., a function whose stack frame is to be zeroed-out, and its callers.
+The caller initializes a stack watermark, the @code{strub} context
+updates the watermark according to its stack use, and the caller zeroes
+it out once it regains control, whether by the callee's returning or by
+an exception.
+
+Each of these steps is performed by a different builtin function call.
+Calls to these builtins are introduced automatically, in response to
+@code{strub} attributes and command-line options; they are not expected
+to be explicitly called by source code.
+
+The functions that implement the builtins are available in libgcc but,
+depending on optimization levels, they are expanded internally, adjusted
+to account for inlining, and sometimes combined/deferred (e.g. passing
+the caller-supplied watermark on to callees, refraining from erasing
+stack areas that the caller will) to enable tail calls and to optimize
+for code size.
+
+@deftypefn {Built-in Function} {void} __builtin___strub_enter (void **@var{wmptr})
+This function initializes a stack @var{watermark} variable with the
+current top of the stack.  A call to this builtin function is introduced
+before entering a @code{strub} context.  It remains as a function call
+if optimization is not enabled.
+@end deftypefn
+
+@deftypefn {Built-in Function} {void} __builtin___strub_update (void **@var{wmptr})
+This function updates a stack @var{watermark} variable with the current
+top of the stack, if it tops the previous watermark.  A call to this
+builtin function is inserted within @code{strub} contexts, whenever
+additional stack space may have been used.  It remains as a function
+call at optimization levels lower than 2.
+@end deftypefn
+
+@deftypefn {Built-in Function} {void} __builtin___strub_leave (void **@var{wmptr})
+This function overwrites the memory area between the current top of the
+stack, and the @var{watermark}ed address.  A call to this builtin
+function is inserted after leaving a @code{strub} context.  It remains
+as a function call at optimization levels lower than 3, and it is guarded by
+a condition at level 2.
+@end deftypefn
+
 @node Vector Extensions
 @section Using Vector Instructions through Built-in Functions
 
diff --git a/gcc/doc/invoke.texi b/gcc/doc/invoke.texi
index fa23fbeaaaa22..1226efb5e7e3a 100644
--- a/gcc/doc/invoke.texi
+++ b/gcc/doc/invoke.texi
@@ -624,6 +624,8 @@  Objective-C and Objective-C++ Dialects}.
 -fstack-protector-explicit  -fstack-check @gol
 -fstack-limit-register=@var{reg}  -fstack-limit-symbol=@var{sym} @gol
 -fno-stack-limit  -fsplit-stack @gol
+-fstrub=disable -fstrub=strict -fstrub=relaxed @gol
+-fstrub=all -fstrub=at-calls -fstrub=internal @gol
 -fvtable-verify=@r{[}std@r{|}preinit@r{|}none@r{]} @gol
 -fvtv-counts  -fvtv-debug @gol
 -finstrument-functions  -finstrument-functions-once @gol
@@ -16482,6 +16484,56 @@  without @option{-fsplit-stack} always has a large stack.  Support for
 this is implemented in the gold linker in GNU binutils release 2.21
 and later.
 
+@item -fstrub=disable
+@opindex -fstrub=disable
+Disable stack scrubbing entirely, ignoring any @code{strub} attributes.
+See @xref{Common Type Attributes}.
+
+@item -fstrub=strict
+@opindex fstrub=strict
+Functions default to @code{strub} mode @code{disabled}, and apply
+@option{strict}ly the restriction that only functions associated with
+@code{strub}-@code{callable} modes (@code{at-calls}, @code{callable} and
+@code{always_inline} @code{internal}) are @code{callable} by functions
+with @code{strub}-enabled modes (@code{at-calls} and @code{internal}).
+
+@item -fstrub=relaxed
+@opindex fstrub=relaxed
+Restore the default stack scrub (@code{strub}) setting, namely,
+@code{strub} is only enabled as required by @code{strub} attributes
+associated with function and data types.  @code{Relaxed} means that
+strub contexts are only prevented from calling functions explicitly
+associated with @code{strub} mode @code{disabled}.  This option is only
+useful to override other @option{-fstrub=*} options that precede it in
+the command line.
+
+@item -fstrub=at-calls
+@opindex fstrub=at-calls
+Enable @code{at-calls} @code{strub} mode where viable.  The primary use
+of this option is for testing.  It exercises the @code{strub} machinery
+in scenarios strictly local to a translation unit.  This @code{strub}
+mode modifies function interfaces, so any function that is visible to
+other translation units, or that has its address taken, will @emph{not}
+be affected by this option.  Optimization options may also affect
+viability.  See the @code{strub} attribute documentation for details on
+viability and eligibility requirements.
+
+@item -fstrub=internal
+@opindex fstrub=internal
+Enable @code{internal} @code{strub} mode where viable.  The primary use
+of this option is for testing.  This option is intended to exercise
+thoroughly parts of the @code{strub} machinery that implement the less
+efficient, but interface-preserving @code{strub} mode.  Functions that
+would not be affected by this option are quite uncommon.
+
+@item -fstrub=all
+@opindex fstrub=all
+Enable some @code{strub} mode where viable.  When both strub modes are
+viable, @code{at-calls} is preferred.  @option{-fdump-ipa-strubm} adds
+function attributes that tell which mode was selected for each function.
+The primary use of this option is for testing, to exercise thoroughly
+the @code{strub} machinery.
+
 @item -fvtable-verify=@r{[}std@r{|}preinit@r{|}none@r{]}
 @opindex fvtable-verify
 This option is only available when compiling C++ code.
@@ -18379,6 +18431,14 @@  and inlining decisions.
 @item inline
 Dump after function inlining.
 
+@item strubm
+Dump after selecting @code{strub} modes, and recording the selections as
+function attributes.
+
+@item strub
+Dump @code{strub} transformations: interface changes, function wrapping,
+and insertion of builtin calls for stack scrubbing and watermarking.
+
 @end table
 
 Additionally, the options @option{-optimized}, @option{-missed},