| ================= |
| DataFlowSanitizer |
| ================= |
| |
| .. toctree:: |
| :hidden: |
| |
| DataFlowSanitizerDesign |
| |
| .. contents:: |
| :local: |
| |
| Introduction |
| ============ |
| |
| DataFlowSanitizer is a generalised dynamic data flow analysis. |
| |
| Unlike other Sanitizer tools, this tool is not designed to detect a |
| specific class of bugs on its own. Instead, it provides a generic |
| dynamic data flow analysis framework to be used by clients to help |
| detect application-specific issues within their own code. |
| |
| Usage |
| ===== |
| |
| With no program changes, applying DataFlowSanitizer to a program |
| will not alter its behavior. To use DataFlowSanitizer, the program |
| uses API functions to apply tags to data to cause it to be tracked, and to |
| check the tag of a specific data item. DataFlowSanitizer manages |
| the propagation of tags through the program according to its data flow. |
| |
| The APIs are defined in the header file ``sanitizer/dfsan_interface.h``. |
| For further information about each function, please refer to the header |
| file. |
| |
| ABI List |
| -------- |
| |
| DataFlowSanitizer uses a list of functions known as an ABI list to decide |
| whether a call to a specific function should use the operating system's native |
| ABI or whether it should use a variant of this ABI that also propagates labels |
| through function parameters and return values. The ABI list file also controls |
| how labels are propagated in the former case. DataFlowSanitizer comes with a |
| default ABI list which is intended to eventually cover the glibc library on |
| Linux but it may become necessary for users to extend the ABI list in cases |
| where a particular library or function cannot be instrumented (e.g. because |
| it is implemented in assembly or another language which DataFlowSanitizer does |
| not support) or a function is called from a library or function which cannot |
| be instrumented. |
| |
| DataFlowSanitizer's ABI list file is a :doc:`SanitizerSpecialCaseList`. |
| The pass treats every function in the ``uninstrumented`` category in the |
| ABI list file as conforming to the native ABI. Unless the ABI list contains |
| additional categories for those functions, a call to one of those functions |
| will produce a warning message, as the labelling behavior of the function |
| is unknown. The other supported categories are ``discard``, ``functional`` |
| and ``custom``. |
| |
| * ``discard`` -- To the extent that this function writes to (user-accessible) |
| memory, it also updates labels in shadow memory (this condition is trivially |
| satisfied for functions which do not write to user-accessible memory). Its |
| return value is unlabelled. |
| * ``functional`` -- Like ``discard``, except that the label of its return value |
| is the union of the label of its arguments. |
| * ``custom`` -- Instead of calling the function, a custom wrapper ``__dfsw_F`` |
| is called, where ``F`` is the name of the function. This function may wrap |
| the original function or provide its own implementation. This category is |
| generally used for uninstrumentable functions which write to user-accessible |
| memory or which have more complex label propagation behavior. The signature |
| of ``__dfsw_F`` is based on that of ``F`` with each argument having a |
| label of type ``dfsan_label`` appended to the argument list. If ``F`` |
| is of non-void return type a final argument of type ``dfsan_label *`` |
| is appended to which the custom function can store the label for the |
| return value. For example: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| void f(int x); |
| void __dfsw_f(int x, dfsan_label x_label); |
| |
| void *memcpy(void *dest, const void *src, size_t n); |
| void *__dfsw_memcpy(void *dest, const void *src, size_t n, |
| dfsan_label dest_label, dfsan_label src_label, |
| dfsan_label n_label, dfsan_label *ret_label); |
| |
| If a function defined in the translation unit being compiled belongs to the |
| ``uninstrumented`` category, it will be compiled so as to conform to the |
| native ABI. Its arguments will be assumed to be unlabelled, but it will |
| propagate labels in shadow memory. |
| |
| For example: |
| |
| .. code-block:: none |
| |
| # main is called by the C runtime using the native ABI. |
| fun:main=uninstrumented |
| fun:main=discard |
| |
| # malloc only writes to its internal data structures, not user-accessible memory. |
| fun:malloc=uninstrumented |
| fun:malloc=discard |
| |
| # tolower is a pure function. |
| fun:tolower=uninstrumented |
| fun:tolower=functional |
| |
| # memcpy needs to copy the shadow from the source to the destination region. |
| # This is done in a custom function. |
| fun:memcpy=uninstrumented |
| fun:memcpy=custom |
| |
| Example |
| ======= |
| |
| The following program demonstrates label propagation by checking that |
| the correct labels are propagated. |
| |
| .. code-block:: c++ |
| |
| #include <sanitizer/dfsan_interface.h> |
| #include <assert.h> |
| |
| int main(void) { |
| int i = 1; |
| dfsan_label i_label = dfsan_create_label("i", 0); |
| dfsan_set_label(i_label, &i, sizeof(i)); |
| |
| int j = 2; |
| dfsan_label j_label = dfsan_create_label("j", 0); |
| dfsan_set_label(j_label, &j, sizeof(j)); |
| |
| int k = 3; |
| dfsan_label k_label = dfsan_create_label("k", 0); |
| dfsan_set_label(k_label, &k, sizeof(k)); |
| |
| dfsan_label ij_label = dfsan_get_label(i + j); |
| assert(dfsan_has_label(ij_label, i_label)); |
| assert(dfsan_has_label(ij_label, j_label)); |
| assert(!dfsan_has_label(ij_label, k_label)); |
| |
| dfsan_label ijk_label = dfsan_get_label(i + j + k); |
| assert(dfsan_has_label(ijk_label, i_label)); |
| assert(dfsan_has_label(ijk_label, j_label)); |
| assert(dfsan_has_label(ijk_label, k_label)); |
| |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| Current status |
| ============== |
| |
| DataFlowSanitizer is a work in progress, currently under development for |
| x86\_64 Linux. |
| |
| Design |
| ====== |
| |
| Please refer to the :doc:`design document<DataFlowSanitizerDesign>`. |