| ================================================== |
| ``-fbounds-safety``: Enforcing bounds safety for C |
| ================================================== |
| |
| .. contents:: |
| :local: |
| |
| Overview |
| ======== |
| |
| **NOTE:** This is a design document and the feature is not available for users yet. |
| Please see :doc:`BoundsSafetyImplPlans` for more details. |
| |
| ``-fbounds-safety`` is a C extension to enforce bounds safety to prevent |
| out-of-bounds (OOB) memory accesses, which remain a major source of security |
| vulnerabilities in C. ``-fbounds-safety`` aims to eliminate this class of bugs |
| by turning OOB accesses into deterministic traps. |
| |
| The ``-fbounds-safety`` extension offers bounds annotations that programmers can |
| use to attach bounds to pointers. For example, programmers can add the |
| ``__counted_by(N)`` annotation to parameter ``ptr``, indicating that the pointer |
| has ``N`` valid elements: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| void foo(int *__counted_by(N) ptr, size_t N); |
| |
| Using this bounds information, the compiler inserts bounds checks on every |
| pointer dereference, ensuring that the program does not access memory outside |
| the specified bounds. The compiler requires programmers to provide enough bounds |
| information so that the accesses can be checked at either run time or compile |
| time — and it rejects code if it cannot. |
| |
| The most important contribution of ``-fbounds-safety`` is how it reduces the |
| programmer's annotation burden by reconciling bounds annotations at ABI |
| boundaries with the use of implicit wide pointers (a.k.a. "fat" pointers) that |
| carry bounds information on local variables without the need for annotations. We |
| designed this model so that it preserves ABI compatibility with C while |
| minimizing adoption effort. |
| |
| The ``-fbounds-safety`` extension has been adopted on millions of lines of |
| production C code and proven to work in a consumer operating system setting. The |
| extension was designed to enable incremental adoption — a key requirement in |
| real-world settings where modifying an entire project and its dependencies all |
| at once is often not possible. It also addresses multiple of other practical |
| challenges that have made existing approaches to safer C dialects difficult to |
| adopt, offering these properties that make it widely adoptable in practice: |
| |
| * It is designed to preserve the Application Binary Interface (ABI). |
| * It interoperates well with plain C code. |
| * It can be adopted partially and incrementally while still providing safety |
| benefits. |
| * It is a conforming extension to C. |
| * Consequently, source code that adopts the extension can continue to be |
| compiled by toolchains that do not support the extension (CAVEAT: this still |
| requires inclusion of a header file macro-defining bounds annotations to |
| empty). |
| * It has a relatively low adoption cost. |
| |
| This document discusses the key designs of ``-fbounds-safety``. The document is |
| subject to be actively updated with a more detailed specification. |
| |
| Programming Model |
| ================= |
| |
| Overview |
| -------- |
| |
| ``-fbounds-safety`` ensures that pointers are not used to access memory beyond |
| their bounds by performing bounds checking. If a bounds check fails, the program |
| will deterministically trap before out-of-bounds memory is accessed. |
| |
| In our model, every pointer has an explicit or implicit bounds attribute that |
| determines its bounds and ensures guaranteed bounds checking. Consider the |
| example below where the ``__counted_by(count)`` annotation indicates that |
| parameter ``p`` points to a buffer of integers containing ``count`` elements. An |
| off-by-one error is present in the loop condition, leading to ``p[i]`` being |
| out-of-bounds access during the loop's final iteration. The compiler inserts a |
| bounds check before ``p`` is dereferenced to ensure that the access remains |
| within the specified bounds. |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| void fill_array_with_indices(int *__counted_by(count) p, unsigned count) { |
| // off-by-one error (i < count) |
| for (unsigned i = 0; i <= count; ++i) { |
| // bounds check inserted: |
| // if (i >= count) trap(); |
| p[i] = i; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| A bounds annotation defines an invariant for the pointer type, and the model |
| ensures that this invariant remains true. In the example below, pointer ``p`` |
| annotated with ``__counted_by(count)`` must always point to a memory buffer |
| containing at least ``count`` elements of the pointee type. Changing the value |
| of ``count``, like in the example below, may violate this invariant and permit |
| out-of-bounds access to the pointer. To avoid this, the compiler employs |
| compile-time restrictions and emits run-time checks as necessary to ensure the |
| new count value doesn't exceed the actual length of the buffer. Section |
| `Maintaining correctness of bounds annotations`_ provides more details about |
| this programming model. |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| int g; |
| |
| void foo(int *__counted_by(count) p, size_t count) { |
| count++; // may violate the invariant of __counted_by |
| count--; // may violate the invariant of __counted_by if count was 0. |
| count = g; // may violate the invariant of __counted_by |
| // depending on the value of `g`. |
| } |
| |
| The requirement to annotate all pointers with explicit bounds information could |
| present a significant adoption burden. To tackle this issue, the model |
| incorporates the concept of a "wide pointer" (a.k.a. fat pointer) – a larger |
| pointer that carries bounds information alongside the pointer value. Utilizing |
| wide pointers can potentially reduce the adoption burden, as it contains bounds |
| information internally and eliminates the need for explicit bounds annotations. |
| However, wide pointers differ from standard C pointers in their data layout, |
| which may result in incompatibilities with the application binary interface |
| (ABI). Breaking the ABI complicates interoperability with external code that has |
| not adopted the same programming model. |
| |
| ``-fbounds-safety`` harmonizes the wide pointer and the bounds annotation |
| approaches to reduce the adoption burden while maintaining the ABI. In this |
| model, local variables of pointer type are implicitly treated as wide pointers, |
| allowing them to carry bounds information without requiring explicit bounds |
| annotations. Please note that this approach doesn't apply to function parameters |
| which are considered ABI-visible. As local variables are typically hidden from |
| the ABI, this approach has a marginal impact on it. In addition, |
| ``-fbounds-safety`` employs compile-time restrictions to prevent implicit wide |
| pointers from silently breaking the ABI (see `ABI implications of default bounds |
| annotations`_). Pointers associated with any other variables, including function |
| parameters, are treated as single object pointers (i.e., ``__single``), ensuring |
| that they always have the tightest bounds by default and offering a strong |
| bounds safety guarantee. |
| |
| By implementing default bounds annotations based on ABI visibility, a |
| considerable portion of C code can operate without modifications within this |
| programming model, reducing the adoption burden. |
| |
| The rest of the section will discuss individual bounds annotations and the |
| programming model in more detail. |
| |
| Bounds annotations |
| ------------------ |
| |
| Annotation for pointers to a single object |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| The C language allows pointer arithmetic on arbitrary pointers and this has been |
| a source of many bounds safety issues. In practice, many pointers are merely |
| pointing to a single object and incrementing or decrementing such a pointer |
| immediately makes the pointer go out-of-bounds. To prevent this unsafety, |
| ``-fbounds-safety`` provides the annotation ``__single`` that causes pointer |
| arithmetic on annotated pointers to be a compile time error. |
| |
| * ``__single`` : indicates that the pointer is either pointing to a single |
| object or null. Hence, pointers with ``__single`` do not permit pointer |
| arithmetic nor being subscripted with a non-zero index. Dereferencing a |
| ``__single`` pointer is allowed but it requires a null check. Upper and lower |
| bounds checks are not required because the ``__single`` pointer should point |
| to a valid object unless it's null. |
| |
| ``__single`` is the default annotation for ABI-visible pointers. This |
| gives strong security guarantees in that these pointers cannot be incremented or |
| decremented unless they have an explicit, overriding bounds annotation that can |
| be used to verify the safety of the operation. The compiler issues an error when |
| a ``__single`` pointer is utilized for pointer arithmetic or array access, as |
| these operations would immediately cause the pointer to exceed its bounds. |
| Consequently, this prompts programmers to provide sufficient bounds information |
| to pointers. In the following example, the pointer on parameter p is |
| single-by-default, and is employed for array access. As a result, the compiler |
| generates an error suggesting to add ``__counted_by`` to the pointer. |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| void fill_array_with_indices(int *p, unsigned count) { |
| for (unsigned i = 0; i < count; ++i) { |
| p[i] = i; // error |
| } |
| } |
| |
| |
| External bounds annotations |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| "External" bounds annotations provide a way to express a relationship between a |
| pointer variable and another variable (or expression) containing the bounds |
| information of the pointer. In the following example, ``__counted_by(count)`` |
| annotation expresses the bounds of parameter p using another parameter count. |
| This model works naturally with many C interfaces and structs because the bounds |
| of a pointer is often available adjacent to the pointer itself, e.g., at another |
| parameter of the same function prototype, or at another field of the same struct |
| declaration. |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| void fill_array_with_indices(int *__counted_by(count) p, size_t count) { |
| // off-by-one error |
| for (size_t i = 0; i <= count; ++i) |
| p[i] = i; |
| } |
| |
| External bounds annotations include ``__counted_by``, ``__sized_by``, and |
| ``__ended_by``. These annotations do not change the pointer representation, |
| meaning they do not have ABI implications. |
| |
| * ``__counted_by(N)`` : The pointer points to memory that contains ``N`` |
| elements of pointee type. ``N`` is an expression of integer type which can be |
| a simple reference to declaration, a constant including calls to constant |
| functions, or an arithmetic expression that does not have side effect. The |
| ``__counted_by`` annotation cannot apply to pointers to incomplete types or |
| types without size such as ``void *``. Instead, ``__sized_by`` can be used to |
| describe the byte count. |
| * ``__sized_by(N)`` : The pointer points to memory that contains ``N`` bytes. |
| Just like the argument of ``__counted_by``, ``N`` is an expression of integer |
| type which can be a constant, a simple reference to a declaration, or an |
| arithmetic expression that does not have side effects. This is mainly used for |
| pointers to incomplete types or types without size such as ``void *``. |
| * ``__ended_by(P)`` : The pointer has the upper bound of value ``P``, which is |
| one past the last element of the pointer. In other words, this annotation |
| describes a range that starts with the pointer that has this annotation and |
| ends with ``P`` which is the argument of the annotation. ``P`` itself may be |
| annotated with ``__ended_by(Q)``. In this case, the end of the range extends |
| to the pointer ``Q``. This is used for "iterator" support in C where you're |
| iterating from one pointer value to another until a final pointer value is |
| reached (and the final pointer value is not dereferencable). |
| |
| Accessing a pointer outside the specified bounds causes a run-time trap or a |
| compile-time error. Also, the model maintains correctness of bounds annotations |
| when the pointer and/or the related value containing the bounds information are |
| updated or passed as arguments. This is done by compile-time restrictions or |
| run-time checks (see `Maintaining correctness of bounds annotations`_ |
| for more detail). For instance, initializing ``buf`` with ``null`` while |
| assigning non-zero value to ``count``, as shown in the following example, would |
| violate the ``__counted_by`` annotation because a null pointer does not point to |
| any valid memory location. To avoid this, the compiler produces either a |
| compile-time error or run-time trap. |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| void null_with_count_10(int *__counted_by(count) buf, unsigned count) { |
| buf = 0; |
| // This is not allowed as it creates a null pointer with non-zero length |
| count = 10; |
| } |
| |
| However, there are use cases where a pointer is either a null pointer or is |
| pointing to memory of the specified size. To support this idiom, |
| ``-fbounds-safety`` provides ``*_or_null`` variants, |
| ``__counted_by_or_null(N)``, ``__sized_by_or_null(N)``, and |
| ``__ended_by_or_null(P)``. Accessing a pointer with any of these bounds |
| annotations will require an extra null check to avoid a null pointer |
| dereference. |
| |
| Internal bounds annotations |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| A wide pointer (sometimes known as a "fat" pointer) is a pointer that carries |
| additional bounds information internally (as part of its data). The bounds |
| require additional storage space making wide pointers larger than normal |
| pointers, hence the name "wide pointer". The memory layout of a wide pointer is |
| equivalent to a struct with the pointer, upper bound, and (optionally) lower |
| bound as its fields as shown below. |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| struct wide_pointer_datalayout { |
| void* pointer; // Address used for dereferences and pointer arithmetic |
| void* upper_bound; // Points one past the highest address that can be |
| // accessed |
| void* lower_bound; // (Optional) Points to lowest address that can be |
| // accessed |
| }; |
| |
| Even with this representational change, wide pointers act syntactically as |
| normal pointers to allow standard pointer operations, such as pointer |
| dereference (``*p``), array subscript (``p[i]``), member access (``p->``), and |
| pointer arithmetic, with some restrictions on bounds-unsafe uses. |
| |
| ``-fbounds-safety`` has a set of "internal" bounds annotations to turn pointers |
| into wide pointers. These are ``__bidi_indexable`` and ``__indexable``. When a |
| pointer has either of these annotations, the compiler changes the pointer to the |
| corresponding wide pointer. This means these annotations will break the ABI and |
| will not be compatible with plain C, and thus they should generally not be used |
| in ABI surfaces. |
| |
| * ``__bidi_indexable`` : A pointer with this annotation becomes a wide pointer |
| to carry the upper bound and the lower bound, the layout of which is |
| equivalent to ``struct { T *ptr; T *upper_bound; T *lower_bound; };``. As the |
| name indicates, pointers with this annotation are "bidirectionally indexable", |
| meaning that they can be indexed with either a negative or a positive offset |
| and the pointers can be incremented or decremented using pointer arithmetic. A |
| ``__bidi_indexable`` pointer is allowed to hold an out-of-bounds pointer |
| value. While creating an OOB pointer is undefined behavior in C, |
| ``-fbounds-safety`` makes it well-defined behavior. That is, pointer |
| arithmetic overflow with ``__bidi_indexable`` is defined as equivalent of |
| two's complement integer computation, and at the LLVM IR level this means |
| ``getelementptr`` won't get ``inbounds`` keyword. Accessing memory using the |
| OOB pointer is prevented via a run-time bounds check. |
| |
| * ``__indexable`` : A pointer with this annotation becomes a wide pointer |
| carrying the upper bound (but no explicit lower bound), the layout of which is |
| equivalent to ``struct { T *ptr; T *upper_bound; };``. Since ``__indexable`` |
| pointers do not have a separate lower bound, the pointer value itself acts as |
| the lower bound. An ``__indexable`` pointer can only be incremented or indexed |
| in the positive direction. Indexing it in the negative direction will trigger |
| a compile-time error. Otherwise, the compiler inserts a run-time |
| check to ensure pointer arithmetic doesn't make the pointer smaller than the |
| original ``__indexable`` pointer (Note that ``__indexable`` doesn't have a |
| lower bound so the pointer value is effectively the lower bound). As pointer |
| arithmetic overflow will make the pointer smaller than the original pointer, |
| it will cause a trap at runtime. Similar to ``__bidi_indexable``, an |
| ``__indexable`` pointer is allowed to have a pointer value above the upper |
| bound and creating such a pointer is well-defined behavior. Dereferencing such |
| a pointer, however, will cause a run-time trap. |
| |
| * ``__bidi_indexable`` offers the best flexibility out of all the pointer |
| annotations in this model, as ``__bidi_indexable`` pointers can be used for |
| any pointer operation. However, this comes with the largest code size and |
| memory cost out of the available pointer annotations in this model. In some |
| cases, use of the ``__bidi_indexable`` annotation may be duplicating bounds |
| information that exists elsewhere in the program. In such cases, using |
| external bounds annotations may be a better choice. |
| |
| ``__bidi_indexable`` is the default annotation for non-ABI visible pointers, |
| such as local pointer variables — that is, if the programmer does not specify |
| another bounds annotation, a local pointer variable is implicitly |
| ``__bidi_indexable``. Since ``__bidi_indexable`` pointers automatically carry |
| bounds information and have no restrictions on kinds of pointer operations that |
| can be used with these pointers, most code inside a function works as is without |
| modification. In the example below, ``int *buf`` doesn't require manual |
| annotation as it's implicitly ``int *__bidi_indexable buf``, carrying the bounds |
| information passed from the return value of malloc, which is necessary to insert |
| bounds checking for ``buf[i]``. |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| void *__sized_by(size) malloc(size_t size); |
| |
| int *__counted_by(n) get_array_with_0_to_n_1(size_t n) { |
| int *buf = malloc(sizeof(int) * n); |
| for (size_t i = 0; i < n; ++i) |
| buf[i] = i; |
| return buf; |
| } |
| |
| Annotations for sentinel-delimited arrays |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| A C string is an array of characters. The null terminator — the first null |
| character ('\0') element in the array — marks the end of the string. |
| ``-fbounds-safety`` provides ``__null_terminated`` to annotate C strings and the |
| generalized form ``__terminated_by(T)`` to annotate pointers and arrays with an |
| end marked by a sentinel value. The model prevents dereferencing a |
| ``__terminated_by`` pointer beyond its end. Calculating the location of the end |
| (i.e., the address of the sentinel value), requires reading the entire array in |
| memory and would have some performance costs. To avoid an unintended performance |
| hit, the model puts some restrictions on how these pointers can be used. |
| ``__terminated_by`` pointers cannot be indexed and can only be incremented one |
| element at a time. To allow these operations, the pointers must be explicitly |
| converted to ``__indexable`` pointers using the intrinsic function |
| ``__unsafe_terminated_by_to_indexable(P, T)`` (or |
| ``__unsafe_null_terminated_to_indexable(P)``) which converts the |
| ``__terminated_by`` pointer ``P`` to an ``__indexable`` pointer. |
| |
| * ``__null_terminated`` : The pointer or array is terminated by ``NULL`` or |
| ``0``. Modifying the terminator or incrementing the pointer beyond it is |
| prevented at run time. |
| |
| * ``__terminated_by(T)`` : The pointer or array is terminated by ``T`` which is |
| a constant expression. Accessing or incrementing the pointer beyond the |
| terminator is not allowed. This is a generalization of ``__null_terminated`` |
| which is defined as ``__terminated_by(0)``. |
| |
| Annotation for interoperating with bounds-unsafe code |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| A pointer with the ``__unsafe_indexable`` annotation behaves the same as a plain |
| C pointer. That is, the pointer does not have any bounds information and pointer |
| operations are not checked. |
| |
| ``__unsafe_indexable`` can be used to mark pointers from system headers or |
| pointers from code that has not adopted -fbounds safety. This enables |
| interoperation between code using ``-fbounds-safety`` and code that does not. |
| |
| Default pointer types |
| --------------------- |
| |
| ABI visibility and default annotations |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Requiring ``-fbounds-safety`` adopters to add bounds annotations to all pointers |
| in the codebase would be a significant adoption burden. To avoid this and to |
| secure all pointers by default, ``-fbounds-safety`` applies default bounds |
| annotations to pointer types. |
| Default annotations apply to pointer types of declarations |
| |
| ``-fbounds-safety`` applies default bounds annotations to pointer types used in |
| declarations. The default annotations are determined by the ABI visibility of |
| the pointer. A pointer type is ABI-visible if changing its size or |
| representation affects the ABI. For instance, changing the size of a type used |
| in a function parameter will affect the ABI and thus pointers used in function |
| parameters are ABI-visible pointers. On the other hand, changing the types of |
| local variables won't have such ABI implications. Hence, ``-fbounds-safety`` |
| considers the outermost pointer types of local variables as non-ABI visible. The |
| rest of the pointers such as nested pointer types, pointer types of global |
| variables, struct fields, and function prototypes are considered ABI-visible. |
| |
| All ABI-visible pointers are treated as ``__single`` by default unless annotated |
| otherwise. This default both preserves ABI and makes these pointers safe by |
| default. This behavior can be controlled with macros, i.e., |
| ``__ptrcheck_abi_assume_*ATTR*()``, to set the default annotation for |
| ABI-visible pointers to be either ``__single``, ``__bidi_indexable``, |
| ``__indexable``, or ``__unsafe_indexable``. For instance, |
| ``__ptrcheck_abi_assume_unsafe_indexable()`` will make all ABI-visible pointers |
| be ``__unsafe_indexable``. Non-ABI visible pointers — the outermost pointer |
| types of local variables — are ``__bidi_indexable`` by default, so that these |
| pointers have the bounds information necessary to perform bounds checks without |
| the need for a manual annotation. All ``const char`` pointers or any typedefs |
| equivalent to ``const char`` pointers are ``__null_terminated`` by default. This |
| means that ``char8_t`` is ``unsigned char`` so ``const char8_t *`` won't be |
| ``__null_terminated`` by default. Similarly, ``const wchar_t *`` won't be |
| ``__null_terminated`` by default unless the platform defines it as ``typedef |
| char wchar_t``. Please note, however, that the programmers can still explicitly |
| use ``__null_terminated`` in any other pointers, e.g., ``char8_t |
| *__null_terminated``, ``wchar_t *__null_terminated``, ``int |
| *__null_terminated``, etc. if they should be treated as ``__null_terminated``. |
| The same applies to other annotations. |
| In system headers, the default pointer attribute for ABI-visible pointers is set |
| to ``__unsafe_indexable`` by default. |
| |
| The ``__ptrcheck_abi_assume_*ATTR*()`` macros are defined as pragmas in the |
| toolchain header (See `Portability with toolchains that do not support the |
| extension`_ for more details about the toolchain header): |
| |
| .. code-block:: C |
| |
| #define __ptrcheck_abi_assume_single() \ |
| _Pragma("clang abi_ptr_attr set(single)") |
| |
| #define __ptrcheck_abi_assume_indexable() \ |
| _Pragma("clang abi_ptr_attr set(indexable)") |
| |
| #define __ptrcheck_abi_assume_bidi_indexable() \ |
| _Pragma("clang abi_ptr_attr set(bidi_indexable)") |
| |
| #define __ptrcheck_abi_assume_unsafe_indexable() \ |
| _Pragma("clang abi_ptr_attr set(unsafe_indexable)") |
| |
| |
| ABI implications of default bounds annotations |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Although simply modifying types of a local variable doesn't normally impact the |
| ABI, taking the address of such a modified type could create a pointer type that |
| has an ABI mismatch. Looking at the following example, ``int *local`` is |
| implicitly ``int *__bidi_indexable`` and thus the type of ``&local`` is a |
| pointer to ``int *__bidi_indexable``. On the other hand, in ``void foo(int |
| **)``, the parameter type is a pointer to ``int *__single`` (i.e., ``void |
| foo(int *__single *__single)``) (or a pointer to ``int *__unsafe_indexable`` if |
| it's from a system header). The compiler reports an error for casts between |
| pointers whose elements have incompatible pointer attributes. This way, |
| ``-fbounds-safety`` prevents pointers that are implicitly ``__bidi_indexable`` |
| from silently escaping thereby breaking the ABI. |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| void foo(int **); |
| |
| void bar(void) { |
| int *local = 0; |
| // error: passing 'int *__bidi_indexable*__bidi_indexable' to parameter of |
| // incompatible nested pointer type 'int *__single*__single' |
| foo(&local); |
| } |
| |
| A local variable may still be exposed to the ABI if ``typeof()`` takes the type |
| of local variable to define an interface as shown in the following example. |
| |
| .. code-block:: C |
| |
| // bar.c |
| void bar(int *) { ... } |
| |
| // foo.c |
| void foo(void) { |
| int *p; // implicitly `int *__bidi_indexable p` |
| extern void bar(typeof(p)); // creates an interface of type |
| // `void bar(int *__bidi_indexable)` |
| } |
| |
| Doing this may break the ABI if the parameter is not ``__bidi_indexable`` at the |
| definition of function ``bar()`` which is likely the case because parameters are |
| ``__single`` by default without an explicit annotation. |
| |
| In order to avoid an implicitly wide pointer from silently breaking the ABI, the |
| compiler reports a warning when ``typeof()`` is used on an implicit wide pointer |
| at any ABI visible context (e.g., function prototype, struct definition, etc.). |
| |
| .. _Default pointer types in typeof: |
| |
| Default pointer types in ``typeof()`` |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| When ``typeof()`` takes an expression, it respects the bounds annotation on |
| the expression type, including the bounds annotation is implcit. For example, |
| the global variable ``g`` in the following code is implicitly ``__single`` so |
| ``typeof(g)`` gets ``char *__single``. The similar is true for the parameter |
| ``p``, so ``typeof(p)`` returns ``void *__single``. The local variable ``l`` is |
| implicitly ``__bidi_indexable``, so ``typeof(l)`` becomes |
| ``int *__bidi_indexable``. |
| |
| .. code-block:: C |
| |
| char *g; // typeof(g) == char *__single |
| |
| void foo(void *p) { |
| // typeof(p) == void *__single |
| |
| int *l; // typeof(l) == int *__bidi_indexable |
| } |
| |
| When the type of expression has an "external" bounds annotation, e.g., |
| ``__sized_by``, ``__counted_by``, etc., the compiler may report an error on |
| ``typeof`` if the annotation creates a dependency with another declaration or |
| variable. For example, the compiler reports an error on ``typeof(p1)`` shown in |
| the following code because allowing it can potentially create another type |
| dependent on the parameter ``size`` in a different context (Please note that an |
| external bounds annotation on a parameter may only refer to another parameter of |
| the same function). On the other hand, ``typeof(p2)`` works resulting in ``int |
| *__counted_by(10)``, since it doesn't depend on any other declaration. |
| |
| .. TODO: add a section describing constraints on external bounds annotations |
| |
| .. code-block:: C |
| |
| void foo(int *__counted_by(size) p1, size_t size) { |
| // typeof(p1) == int *__counted_by(size) |
| // -> a compiler error as it tries to create another type |
| // dependent on `size`. |
| |
| int *__counted_by(10) p2; // typeof(p2) == int *__counted_by(10) |
| // -> no error |
| |
| } |
| |
| When ``typeof()`` takes a type name, the compiler doesn't apply an implicit |
| bounds annotation on the named pointer types. For example, ``typeof(int*)`` |
| returns ``int *`` without any bounds annotation. A bounds annotation may be |
| added after the fact depending on the context. In the following example, |
| ``typeof(int *)`` returns ``int *`` so it's equivalent as the local variable is |
| declared as ``int *l``, so it eventually becomes implicitly |
| ``__bidi_indexable``. |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| void foo(void) { |
| typeof(int *) l; // `int *__bidi_indexable` (same as `int *l`) |
| } |
| |
| The programmers can still explicitly add a bounds annotation on the types named |
| inside ``typeof``, e.g., ``typeof(int *__bidi_indexable)``, which evaluates to |
| ``int *__bidi_indexable``. |
| |
| |
| Default pointer types in ``sizeof()`` |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| When ``sizeof()`` takes a type name, the compiler doesn't apply an implicit |
| bounds annotation on the named pointer types. This means if a bounds annotation |
| is not specified, the evaluated pointer type is treated identically to a plain C |
| pointer type. Therefore, ``sizeof(int*)`` remains the same with or without |
| ``-fbounds-safety``. That said, programmers can explicitly add attribute to the |
| types, e.g., ``sizeof(int *__bidi_indexable)``, in which case the sizeof |
| evaluates to the size of type ``int *__bidi_indexable`` (the value equivalent to |
| ``3 * sizeof(int*)``). |
| |
| When ``sizeof()`` takes an expression, i.e., ``sizeof(expr``, it behaves as |
| ``sizeof(typeof(expr))``, except that ``sizeof(expr)`` does not report an error |
| with ``expr`` that has a type with an external bounds annotation dependent on |
| another declaration, whereas ``typeof()`` on the same expression would be an |
| error as described in :ref:`Default pointer types in typeof`. |
| The following example describes this behavior. |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| void foo(int *__counted_by(size) p, size_t size) { |
| // sizeof(p) == sizeof(int *__counted_by(size)) == sizeof(int *) |
| // typeof(p): error |
| }; |
| |
| Default pointer types in ``alignof()`` |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| ``alignof()`` only takes a type name as the argument and it doesn't take an |
| expression. Similar to ``sizeof()`` and ``typeof``, the compiler doesn't apply |
| an implicit bounds annotation on the pointer types named inside ``alignof()``. |
| Therefore, ``alignof(T *)`` remains the same with or without |
| ``-fbounds-safety``, evaluating into the alignment of the raw pointer ``T *``. |
| The programmers can explicitly add a bounds annotation to the types, e.g., |
| ``alignof(int *__bidi_indexable)``, which returns the alignment of ``int |
| *__bidi_indexable``. A bounds annotation including an internal bounds annotation |
| (i.e., ``__indexable`` and ``__bidi_indexable``) doesn't affect the alignment of |
| the original pointer. Therefore, ``alignof(int *__bidi_indexable)`` is equal to |
| ``alignof(int *)``. |
| |
| |
| Default pointer types used in C-style casts |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| A pointer type used in a C-style cast (e.g., ``(int *)src``) inherits the same |
| pointer attribute in the type of src. For instance, if the type of src is ``T |
| *__single`` (with ``T`` being an arbitrary C type), ``(int *)src`` will be ``int |
| *__single``. The reasoning behind this behavior is so that a C-style cast |
| doesn't introduce any unexpected side effects caused by an implicit cast of |
| bounds attribute. |
| |
| Pointer casts can have explicit bounds annotations. For instance, ``(int |
| *__bidi_indexable)src`` casts to ``int *__bidi_indexable`` as long as src has a |
| bounds annotation that can implicitly convert to ``__bidi_indexable``. If |
| ``src`` has type ``int *__single``, it can implicitly convert to ``int |
| *__bidi_indexable`` which then will have the upper bound pointing to one past |
| the first element. However, if src has type ``int *__unsafe_indexable``, the |
| explicit cast ``(int *__bidi_indexable)src`` will cause an error because |
| ``__unsafe_indexable`` cannot cast to ``__bidi_indexable`` as |
| ``__unsafe_indexable`` doesn't have bounds information. `Cast rules`_ describes |
| in more detail what kinds of casts are allowed between pointers with different |
| bounds annotations. |
| |
| Default pointer types in typedef |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| Pointer types in ``typedef``\s do not have implicit default bounds annotations. |
| Instead, the bounds annotation is determined when the ``typedef`` is used. The |
| following example shows that no pointer annotation is specified in the ``typedef |
| pint_t`` while each instance of ``typedef``'ed pointer gets its bounds |
| annotation based on the context in which the type is used. |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| typedef int * pint_t; // int * |
| |
| pint_t glob; // int *__single glob; |
| |
| void foo(void) { |
| pint_t local; // int *__bidi_indexable local; |
| } |
| |
| Pointer types in a ``typedef`` can still have explicit annotations, e.g., |
| ``typedef int *__single``, in which case the bounds annotation ``__single`` will |
| apply to every use of the ``typedef``. |
| |
| Array to pointer promotion to secure arrays (including VLAs) |
| ------------------------------------------------------------ |
| |
| Arrays on function prototypes |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| In C, arrays on function prototypes are promoted (or "decayed") to a pointer to |
| its first element (e.g., ``&arr[0]``). In ``-fbounds-safety``, arrays are also |
| decayed to pointers, but with the addition of an implicit bounds annotation, |
| which includes variable-length arrays (VLAs). As shown in the following example, |
| arrays on function prototypes are decalyed to corresponding ``__counted_by`` |
| pointers. |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| // Function prototype: void foo(int n, int *__counted_by(n) arr); |
| void foo(int n, int arr[n]); |
| |
| // Function prototype: void bar(int *__counted_by(10) arr); |
| void bar(int arr[10]); |
| |
| This means the array parameters are treated as `__counted_by` pointers within |
| the function and callers of the function also see them as the corresponding |
| `__counted_by` pointers. |
| |
| Incomplete arrays on function prototypes will cause a compiler error unless it |
| has ``__counted_by`` annotation in its bracket. |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| void f1(int n, int arr[]); // error |
| |
| void f3(int n, int arr[__counted_by(n)]); // ok |
| |
| void f2(int n, int arr[n]); // ok, decays to int *__counted_by(n) |
| |
| void f4(int n, int *__counted_by(n) arr); // ok |
| |
| void f5(int n, int *arr); // ok, but decays to int *__single, |
| // and cannot be used for pointer arithmetic |
| |
| Array references |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| In C, similar to arrays on the function prototypes, a reference to array is |
| automatically promoted (or "decayed") to a pointer to its first element (e.g., |
| ``&arr[0]``). |
| |
| In `-fbounds-safety`, array references are promoted to ``__bidi_indexable`` |
| pointers which contain the upper and lower bounds of the array, with the |
| equivalent of ``&arr[0]`` serving as the lower bound and ``&arr[array_size]`` |
| (or one past the last element) serving as the upper bound. This applies to all |
| types of arrays including constant-length arrays, variable-length arrays (VLAs), |
| and flexible array members annotated with `__counted_by`. |
| |
| In the following example, reference to ``vla`` promotes to ``int |
| *__bidi_indexable``, with ``&vla[n]`` as the upper bound and ``&vla[0]`` as the |
| lower bound. Then, it's copied to ``int *p``, which is implicitly ``int |
| *__bidi_indexable p``. Please note that value of ``n`` used to create the upper |
| bound is ``10``, not ``100``, in this case because ``10`` is the actual length |
| of ``vla``, the value of ``n`` at the time when the array is being allocated. |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| void foo(void) { |
| int n = 10; |
| int vla[n]; |
| n = 100; |
| int *p = vla; // { .ptr: &vla[0], .upper: &vla[10], .lower: &vla[0] } |
| // it's `&vla[10]` because the value of `n` was 10 at the |
| // time when the array is actually allocated. |
| // ... |
| } |
| |
| By promoting array references to ``__bidi_indexable``, all array accesses are |
| bounds checked in ``-fbounds-safety``, just as ``__bidi_indexable`` pointers |
| are. |
| |
| Maintaining correctness of bounds annotations |
| --------------------------------------------- |
| |
| ``-fbounds-safety`` maintains correctness of bounds annotations by performing |
| additional checks when a pointer object and/or its related value containing the |
| bounds information is updated. |
| |
| For example, ``__single`` expresses an invariant that the pointer must either |
| point to a single valid object or be a null pointer. To maintain this invariant, |
| the compiler inserts checks when initializing a ``__single`` pointer, as shown |
| in the following example: |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| void foo(void *__sized_by(size) vp, size_t size) { |
| // Inserted check: |
| // if ((int*)upper_bound(vp) - (int*)vp < sizeof(int) && !!vp) trap(); |
| int *__single ip = (int *)vp; |
| } |
| |
| Additionally, an explicit bounds annotation such as ``int *__counted_by(count) |
| buf`` defines a relationship between two variables, ``buf`` and ``count``: |
| namely, that ``buf`` has ``count`` number of elements available. This |
| relationship must hold even after any of these related variables are updated. To |
| this end, the model requires that assignments to ``buf`` and ``count`` must be |
| side by side, with no side effects between them. This prevents ``buf`` and |
| ``count`` from temporarily falling out of sync due to updates happening at a |
| distance. |
| |
| The example below shows a function ``alloc_buf`` that initializes a struct that |
| members that use the ``__counted_by`` annotation. The compiler allows these |
| assignments because ``sbuf->buf`` and ``sbuf->count`` are updated side by side |
| without any side effects in between the assignments. |
| |
| Furthermore, the compiler inserts additional run-time checks to ensure the new |
| ``buf`` has at least as many elements as the new ``count`` indicates as shown in |
| the transformed pseudo code of function ``alloc_buf()`` in the example below. |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| typedef struct { |
| int *__counted_by(count) buf; |
| size_t count; |
| } sized_buf_t; |
| |
| void alloc_buf(sized_buf_t *sbuf, sized_t nelems) { |
| sbuf->buf = (int *)malloc(sizeof(int) * nelems); |
| sbuf->count = nelems; |
| } |
| |
| // Transformed pseudo code: |
| void alloc_buf(sized_buf_t *sbuf, sized_t nelems) { |
| // Materialize RHS values: |
| int *tmp_ptr = (int *)malloc(sizeof(int) * nelems); |
| int tmp_count = nelems; |
| // Inserted check: |
| // - checks to ensure that `lower <= tmp_ptr <= upper` |
| // - if (upper(tmp_ptr) - tmp_ptr < tmp_count) trap(); |
| sbuf->buf = tmp_ptr; |
| sbuf->count = tmp_count; |
| } |
| |
| Whether the compiler can optimize such run-time checks depends on how the upper |
| bound of the pointer is derived. If the source pointer has ``__sized_by``, |
| ``__counted_by``, or a variant of such, the compiler assumes that the upper |
| bound calculation doesn't overflow, e.g., ``ptr + size`` (where the type of |
| ``ptr`` is ``void *__sized_by(size)``), because when the ``__sized_by`` pointer |
| is initialized, ``-fbounds-safety`` inserts run-time checks to ensure that ``ptr |
| + size`` doesn't overflow and that ``size >= 0``. |
| |
| Assuming the upper bound calculation doesn't overflow, the compiler can simplify |
| the trap condition ``upper(tmp_ptr) - tmp_ptr < tmp_count`` to ``size < |
| tmp_count`` so if both ``size`` and ``tmp_count`` values are known at compile |
| time such that ``0 <= tmp_count <= size``, the optimizer can remove the check. |
| |
| ``ptr + size`` may still overflow if the ``__sized_by`` pointer is created from |
| code that doesn't enable ``-fbounds-safety``, which is undefined behavior. |
| |
| In the previous code example with the transformed ``alloc_buf()``, the upper |
| bound of ``tmp_ptr`` is derived from ``void *__sized_by_or_null(size)``, which |
| is the return type of ``malloc()``. Hence, the pointer arithmetic doesn't |
| overflow or ``tmp_ptr`` is null. Therefore, if ``nelems`` was given as a |
| compile-time constant, the compiler could remove the checks. |
| |
| Cast rules |
| ---------- |
| |
| ``-fbounds-safety`` does not enforce overall type safety and bounds invariants |
| can still be violated by incorrect casts in some cases. That said, |
| ``-fbounds-safety`` prevents type conversions that change bounds attributes in a |
| way to violate the bounds invariant of the destination's pointer annotation. |
| Type conversions that change bounds attributes may be allowed if it does not |
| violate the invariant of the destination or that can be verified at run time. |
| Here are some of the important cast rules. |
| |
| Two pointers that have different bounds annotations on their nested pointer |
| types are incompatible and cannot implicitly cast to each other. For example, |
| ``T *__single *__single`` cannot be converted to ``T *__bidi_indexable |
| *__single``. Such a conversion between incompatible nested bounds annotations |
| can be allowed using an explicit cast (e.g., C-style cast). Hereafter, the rules |
| only apply to the top pointer types. ``__unsafe_indexable`` cannot be converted |
| to any other safe pointer types (``__single``, ``__bidi_indexable``, |
| ``__counted_by``, etc) using a cast. The extension provides builtins to force |
| this conversion, ``__unsafe_forge_bidi_indexable(type, pointer, char_count)`` to |
| convert pointer to a ``__bidi_indexable`` pointer of type with ``char_count`` |
| bytes available and ``__unsafe_forge_single(type, pointer)`` to convert pointer |
| to a single pointer of type type. The following examples show the usage of these |
| functions. Function ``example_forge_bidi()`` gets an external buffer from an |
| unsafe library by calling ``get_buf()`` which returns ``void |
| *__unsafe_indexable.`` Under the type rules, this cannot be directly assigned to |
| ``void *buf`` (implicitly ``void *__bidi_indexable``). Thus, |
| ``__unsafe_forge_bidi_indexable`` is used to manually create a |
| ``__bidi_indexable`` from the unsafe buffer. |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| // unsafe_library.h |
| void *__unsafe_indexable get_buf(void); |
| size_t get_buf_size(void); |
| |
| // my_source1.c (enables -fbounds-safety) |
| #include "unsafe_library.h" |
| void example_forge_bidi(void) { |
| void *buf = |
| __unsafe_forge_bidi_indexable(void *, get_buf(), get_buf_size()); |
| // ... |
| } |
| |
| // my_source2.c (enables -fbounds-safety) |
| #include <stdio.h> |
| void example_forge_single(void) { |
| FILE *fp = __unsafe_forge_single(FILE *, fopen("mypath", "rb")); |
| // ... |
| } |
| |
| * Function ``example_forge_single`` takes a file handle by calling fopen defined |
| in system header ``stdio.h``. Assuming ``stdio.h`` did not adopt |
| ``-fbounds-safety``, the return type of ``fopen`` would implicitly be ``FILE |
| *__unsafe_indexable`` and thus it cannot be directly assigned to ``FILE *fp`` |
| in the bounds-safe source. To allow this operation, ``__unsafe_forge_single`` |
| is used to create a ``__single`` from the return value of ``fopen``. |
| |
| * Similar to ``__unsafe_indexable``, any non-pointer type (including ``int``, |
| ``intptr_t``, ``uintptr_t``, etc.) cannot be converted to any safe pointer |
| type because these don't have bounds information. ``__unsafe_forge_single`` or |
| ``__unsafe_forge_bidi_indexable`` must be used to force the conversion. |
| |
| * Any safe pointer types can cast to ``__unsafe_indexable`` because it doesn't |
| have any invariant to maintain. |
| |
| * ``__single`` casts to ``__bidi_indexable`` if the pointee type has a known |
| size. After the conversion, the resulting ``__bidi_indexable`` has the size of |
| a single object of the pointee type of ``__single``. ``__single`` cannot cast |
| to ``__bidi_indexable`` if the pointee type is incomplete or sizeless. For |
| example, ``void *__single`` cannot convert to ``void *__bidi_indexable`` |
| because void is an incomplete type and thus the compiler cannot correctly |
| determine the upper bound of a single void pointer. |
| |
| * Similarly, ``__single`` can cast to ``__indexable`` if the pointee type has a |
| known size. The resulting ``__indexable`` has the size of a single object of |
| the pointee type. |
| |
| * ``__single`` casts to ``__counted_by(E)`` only if ``E`` is 0 or 1. |
| |
| * ``__single`` can cast to ``__single`` including when they have different |
| pointee types as long as it is allowed in the underlying C standard. |
| ``-fbounds-safety`` doesn't guarantee type safety. |
| |
| * ``__bidi_indexable`` and ``__indexable`` can cast to ``__single``. The |
| compiler may insert run-time checks to ensure the pointer has at least a |
| single element or is a null pointer. |
| |
| * ``__bidi_indexable`` casts to ``__indexable`` if the pointer does not have an |
| underflow. The compiler may insert run-time checks to ensure the pointer is |
| not below the lower bound. |
| |
| * ``__indexable`` casts to ``__bidi_indexable``. The resulting |
| ``__bidi_indexable`` gets the lower bound same as the pointer value. |
| |
| * A type conversion may involve both a bitcast and a bounds annotation cast. For |
| example, casting from ``int *__bidi_indexable`` to ``char *__single`` involve |
| a bitcast (``int *`` to ``char *``) and a bounds annotation cast |
| (``__bidi_indexable`` to ``__single``). In this case, the compiler performs |
| the bitcast and then converts the bounds annotation. This means, ``int |
| *__bidi_indexable`` will be converted to ``char *__bidi_indexable`` and then |
| to ``char *__single``. |
| |
| * ``__terminated_by(T)`` cannot cast to any safe pointer type without the same |
| ``__terminated_by(T)`` attribute. To perform the cast, programmers can use an |
| intrinsic function such as ``__unsafe_terminated_by_to_indexable(P)`` to force |
| the conversion. |
| |
| * ``__terminated_by(T)`` can cast to ``__unsafe_indexable``. |
| |
| * Any type without ``__terminated_by(T)`` cannot cast to ``__terminated_by(T)`` |
| without explicitly using an intrinsic function to allow it. |
| |
| + ``__unsafe_terminated_by_from_indexable(T, PTR [, PTR_TO_TERM])`` casts any |
| safe pointer PTR to a ``__terminated_by(T)`` pointer. ``PTR_TO_TERM`` is an |
| optional argument where the programmer can provide the exact location of the |
| terminator. With this argument, the function can skip reading the entire |
| array in order to locate the end of the pointer (or the upper bound). |
| Providing an incorrect ``PTR_TO_TERM`` causes a run-time trap. |
| |
| + ``__unsafe_forge_terminated_by(T, P, E)`` creates ``T __terminated_by(E)`` |
| pointer given any pointer ``P``. Tmust be a pointer type. |
| |
| Portability with toolchains that do not support the extension |
| ------------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| The language model is designed so that it doesn't alter the semantics of the |
| original C program, other than introducing deterministic traps where otherwise |
| the behavior is undefined and/or unsafe. Clang provides a toolchain header |
| (``ptrcheck.h``) that macro-defines the annotations as type attributes when |
| ``-fbounds-safety`` is enabled and defines them to empty when the extension is |
| disabled. Thus, the code adopting ``-fbounds-safety`` can compile with |
| toolchains that do not support this extension, by including the header or adding |
| macros to define the annotations to empty. For example, the toolchain not |
| supporting this extension may not have a header defining ``__counted_by``, so |
| the code using ``__counted_by`` must define it as nothing or include a header |
| that has the define. |
| |
| .. code-block:: c |
| |
| #if defined(__has_feature) && __has_feature(bounds_safety) |
| #define __counted_by(T) __attribute__((__counted_by__(T))) |
| // ... other bounds annotations |
| #else #define __counted_by(T) // defined as nothing |
| // ... other bounds annotations |
| #endif |
| |
| // expands to `void foo(int * ptr, size_t count);` |
| // when extension is not enabled or not available |
| void foo(int *__counted_by(count) ptr, size_t count); |
| |
| Other potential applications of bounds annotations |
| ================================================== |
| |
| The bounds annotations provided by the ``-fbounds-safety`` programming model |
| have potential use cases beyond the language extension itself. For example, |
| static and dynamic analysis tools could use the bounds information to improve |
| diagnostics for out-of-bounds accesses, even if ``-fbounds-safety`` is not used. |
| The bounds annotations could be used to improve C interoperability with |
| bounds-safe languages, providing a better mapping to bounds-safe types in the |
| safe language interface. The bounds annotations can also serve as documentation |
| specifying the relationship between declarations. |
| |
| Limitations |
| =========== |
| |
| ``-fbounds-safety`` aims to bring the bounds safety guarantee to the C language, |
| and it does not guarantee other types of memory safety properties. Consequently, |
| it may not prevent some of the secondary bounds safety violations caused by |
| other types of safety violations such as type confusion. For instance, |
| ``-fbounds-safety`` does not perform type-safety checks on conversions between |
| `__single`` pointers of different pointee types (e.g., ``char *__single`` → |
| ``void *__single`` → ``int *__single``) beyond what the foundation languages |
| (C/C++) already offer. |
| |
| ``-fbounds-safety`` heavily relies on run-time checks to keep the bounds safety |
| and the soundness of the type system. This may incur significant code size |
| overhead in unoptimized builds and leaving some of the adoption mistakes to be |
| caught only at run time. This is not a fundamental limitation, however, because |
| incrementally adding necessary static analysis will allow us to catch issues |
| early on and remove unnecessary bounds checks in unoptimized builds. |