1//===-- safestack.cc ------------------------------------------------------===//
2//
3//                     The LLVM Compiler Infrastructure
4//
5// This file is distributed under the University of Illinois Open Source
6// License. See LICENSE.TXT for details.
7//
8//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
9//
10// This file implements the runtime support for the safe stack protection
11// mechanism. The runtime manages allocation/deallocation of the unsafe stack
12// for the main thread, as well as all pthreads that are created/destroyed
13// during program execution.
14//
15//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
16
17#include <errno.h>
18#include <limits.h>
19#include <pthread.h>
20#include <stddef.h>
21#include <stdint.h>
22#include <unistd.h>
23#include <stdlib.h>
24#include <sys/resource.h>
25#include <sys/types.h>
26#if !defined(__NetBSD__)
27#include <sys/user.h>
28#endif
29
30#include "interception/interception.h"
31#include "sanitizer_common/sanitizer_common.h"
32
33// TODO: The runtime library does not currently protect the safe stack beyond
34// relying on the system-enforced ASLR. The protection of the (safe) stack can
35// be provided by three alternative features:
36//
37// 1) Protection via hardware segmentation on x86-32 and some x86-64
38// architectures: the (safe) stack segment (implicitly accessed via the %ss
39// segment register) can be separated from the data segment (implicitly
40// accessed via the %ds segment register). Dereferencing a pointer to the safe
41// segment would result in a segmentation fault.
42//
43// 2) Protection via software fault isolation: memory writes that are not meant
44// to access the safe stack can be prevented from doing so through runtime
45// instrumentation. One way to do it is to allocate the safe stack(s) in the
46// upper half of the userspace and bitmask the corresponding upper bit of the
47// memory addresses of memory writes that are not meant to access the safe
48// stack.
49//
50// 3) Protection via information hiding on 64 bit architectures: the location
51// of the safe stack(s) can be randomized through secure mechanisms, and the
52// leakage of the stack pointer can be prevented. Currently, libc can leak the
53// stack pointer in several ways (e.g. in longjmp, signal handling, user-level
54// context switching related functions, etc.). These can be fixed in libc and
55// in other low-level libraries, by either eliminating the escaping/dumping of
56// the stack pointer (i.e., %rsp) when that's possible, or by using
57// encryption/PTR_MANGLE (XOR-ing the dumped stack pointer with another secret
58// we control and protect better, as is already done for setjmp in glibc.)
59// Furthermore, a static machine code level verifier can be ran after code
60// generation to make sure that the stack pointer is never written to memory,
61// or if it is, its written on the safe stack.
62//
63// Finally, while the Unsafe Stack pointer is currently stored in a thread
64// local variable, with libc support it could be stored in the TCB (thread
65// control block) as well, eliminating another level of indirection and making
66// such accesses faster. Alternatively, dedicating a separate register for
67// storing it would also be possible.
68
69/// Minimum stack alignment for the unsafe stack.
70const unsigned kStackAlign = 16;
71
72/// Default size of the unsafe stack. This value is only used if the stack
73/// size rlimit is set to infinity.
74const unsigned kDefaultUnsafeStackSize = 0x2800000;
75
76/// Runtime page size obtained through sysconf
77static unsigned pageSize;
78
79// TODO: To make accessing the unsafe stack pointer faster, we plan to
80// eventually store it directly in the thread control block data structure on
81// platforms where this structure is pointed to by %fs or %gs. This is exactly
82// the same mechanism as currently being used by the traditional stack
83// protector pass to store the stack guard (see getStackCookieLocation()
84// function above). Doing so requires changing the tcbhead_t struct in glibc
85// on Linux and tcb struct in libc on FreeBSD.
86//
87// For now, store it in a thread-local variable.
88extern "C" {
89__attribute__((visibility(
90    "default"))) __thread void *__safestack_unsafe_stack_ptr = nullptr;
91}
92
93// Per-thread unsafe stack information. It's not frequently accessed, so there
94// it can be kept out of the tcb in normal thread-local variables.
95static __thread void *unsafe_stack_start = nullptr;
96static __thread size_t unsafe_stack_size = 0;
97static __thread size_t unsafe_stack_guard = 0;
98
99using namespace __sanitizer;
100
101static inline void *unsafe_stack_alloc(size_t size, size_t guard) {
102  CHECK_GE(size + guard, size);
103  void *addr = MmapOrDie(size + guard, "unsafe_stack_alloc");
104  MprotectNoAccess((uptr)addr, (uptr)guard);
105  return (char *)addr + guard;
106}
107
108static inline void unsafe_stack_setup(void *start, size_t size, size_t guard) {
109  CHECK_GE((char *)start + size, (char *)start);
110  CHECK_GE((char *)start + guard, (char *)start);
111  void *stack_ptr = (char *)start + size;
112  CHECK_EQ((((size_t)stack_ptr) & (kStackAlign - 1)), 0);
113
114  __safestack_unsafe_stack_ptr = stack_ptr;
115  unsafe_stack_start = start;
116  unsafe_stack_size = size;
117  unsafe_stack_guard = guard;
118}
119
120/// Thread data for the cleanup handler
121static pthread_key_t thread_cleanup_key;
122
123/// Safe stack per-thread information passed to the thread_start function
124struct tinfo {
125  void *(*start_routine)(void *);
126  void *start_routine_arg;
127
128  void *unsafe_stack_start;
129  size_t unsafe_stack_size;
130  size_t unsafe_stack_guard;
131};
132
133/// Wrap the thread function in order to deallocate the unsafe stack when the
134/// thread terminates by returning from its main function.
135static void *thread_start(void *arg) {
136  struct tinfo *tinfo = (struct tinfo *)arg;
137
138  void *(*start_routine)(void *) = tinfo->start_routine;
139  void *start_routine_arg = tinfo->start_routine_arg;
140
141  // Setup the unsafe stack; this will destroy tinfo content
142  unsafe_stack_setup(tinfo->unsafe_stack_start, tinfo->unsafe_stack_size,
143                     tinfo->unsafe_stack_guard);
144
145  // Make sure out thread-specific destructor will be called
146  pthread_setspecific(thread_cleanup_key, (void *)1);
147
148  return start_routine(start_routine_arg);
149}
150
151/// Linked list used to store exiting threads stack/thread information.
152struct thread_stack_ll {
153  struct thread_stack_ll *next;
154  void *stack_base;
155  size_t size;
156  pid_t pid;
157  tid_t tid;
158};
159
160/// Linked list of unsafe stacks for threads that are exiting. We delay
161/// unmapping them until the thread exits.
162static thread_stack_ll *thread_stacks = nullptr;
163static pthread_mutex_t thread_stacks_mutex = PTHREAD_MUTEX_INITIALIZER;
164
165/// Thread-specific data destructor. We want to free the unsafe stack only after
166/// this thread is terminated. libc can call functions in safestack-instrumented
167/// code (like free) after thread-specific data destructors have run.
168static void thread_cleanup_handler(void *_iter) {
169  CHECK_NE(unsafe_stack_start, nullptr);
170  pthread_setspecific(thread_cleanup_key, NULL);
171
172  pthread_mutex_lock(&thread_stacks_mutex);
173  // Temporary list to hold the previous threads stacks so we don't hold the
174  // thread_stacks_mutex for long.
175  thread_stack_ll *temp_stacks = thread_stacks;
176  thread_stacks = nullptr;
177  pthread_mutex_unlock(&thread_stacks_mutex);
178
179  pid_t pid = getpid();
180  tid_t tid = GetTid();
181
182  // Free stacks for dead threads
183  thread_stack_ll **stackp = &temp_stacks;
184  while (*stackp) {
185    thread_stack_ll *stack = *stackp;
186    int error;
187    if (stack->pid != pid ||
188        (internal_iserror(TgKill(stack->pid, stack->tid, 0), &error) &&
189         error == ESRCH)) {
190      UnmapOrDie(stack->stack_base, stack->size);
191      *stackp = stack->next;
192      free(stack);
193    } else
194      stackp = &stack->next;
195  }
196
197  thread_stack_ll *cur_stack =
198      (thread_stack_ll *)malloc(sizeof(thread_stack_ll));
199  cur_stack->stack_base = (char *)unsafe_stack_start - unsafe_stack_guard;
200  cur_stack->size = unsafe_stack_size + unsafe_stack_guard;
201  cur_stack->pid = pid;
202  cur_stack->tid = tid;
203
204  pthread_mutex_lock(&thread_stacks_mutex);
205  // Merge thread_stacks with the current thread's stack and any remaining
206  // temp_stacks
207  *stackp = thread_stacks;
208  cur_stack->next = temp_stacks;
209  thread_stacks = cur_stack;
210  pthread_mutex_unlock(&thread_stacks_mutex);
211
212  unsafe_stack_start = nullptr;
213}
214
215static void EnsureInterceptorsInitialized();
216
217/// Intercept thread creation operation to allocate and setup the unsafe stack
218INTERCEPTOR(int, pthread_create, pthread_t *thread,
219            const pthread_attr_t *attr,
220            void *(*start_routine)(void*), void *arg) {
221  EnsureInterceptorsInitialized();
222  size_t size = 0;
223  size_t guard = 0;
224
225  if (attr) {
226    pthread_attr_getstacksize(attr, &size);
227    pthread_attr_getguardsize(attr, &guard);
228  } else {
229    // get pthread default stack size
230    pthread_attr_t tmpattr;
231    pthread_attr_init(&tmpattr);
232    pthread_attr_getstacksize(&tmpattr, &size);
233    pthread_attr_getguardsize(&tmpattr, &guard);
234    pthread_attr_destroy(&tmpattr);
235  }
236
237  CHECK_NE(size, 0);
238  CHECK_EQ((size & (kStackAlign - 1)), 0);
239  CHECK_EQ((guard & (pageSize - 1)), 0);
240
241  void *addr = unsafe_stack_alloc(size, guard);
242  struct tinfo *tinfo =
243      (struct tinfo *)(((char *)addr) + size - sizeof(struct tinfo));
244  tinfo->start_routine = start_routine;
245  tinfo->start_routine_arg = arg;
246  tinfo->unsafe_stack_start = addr;
247  tinfo->unsafe_stack_size = size;
248  tinfo->unsafe_stack_guard = guard;
249
250  return REAL(pthread_create)(thread, attr, thread_start, tinfo);
251}
252
253static BlockingMutex interceptor_init_lock(LINKER_INITIALIZED);
254static bool interceptors_inited = false;
255
256static void EnsureInterceptorsInitialized() {
257  BlockingMutexLock lock(&interceptor_init_lock);
258  if (interceptors_inited) return;
259
260  // Initialize pthread interceptors for thread allocation
261  INTERCEPT_FUNCTION(pthread_create);
262
263  interceptors_inited = true;
264}
265
266extern "C" __attribute__((visibility("default")))
267#if !SANITIZER_CAN_USE_PREINIT_ARRAY
268// On ELF platforms, the constructor is invoked using .preinit_array (see below)
269__attribute__((constructor(0)))
270#endif
271void __safestack_init() {
272  // Determine the stack size for the main thread.
273  size_t size = kDefaultUnsafeStackSize;
274  size_t guard = 4096;
275
276  struct rlimit limit;
277  if (getrlimit(RLIMIT_STACK, &limit) == 0 && limit.rlim_cur != RLIM_INFINITY)
278    size = limit.rlim_cur;
279
280  // Allocate unsafe stack for main thread
281  void *addr = unsafe_stack_alloc(size, guard);
282
283  unsafe_stack_setup(addr, size, guard);
284  pageSize = sysconf(_SC_PAGESIZE);
285
286  // Setup the cleanup handler
287  pthread_key_create(&thread_cleanup_key, thread_cleanup_handler);
288}
289
290#if SANITIZER_CAN_USE_PREINIT_ARRAY
291// On ELF platforms, run safestack initialization before any other constructors.
292// On other platforms we use the constructor attribute to arrange to run our
293// initialization early.
294extern "C" {
295__attribute__((section(".preinit_array"),
296               used)) void (*__safestack_preinit)(void) = __safestack_init;
297}
298#endif
299
300extern "C"
301    __attribute__((visibility("default"))) void *__get_unsafe_stack_bottom() {
302  return unsafe_stack_start;
303}
304
305extern "C"
306    __attribute__((visibility("default"))) void *__get_unsafe_stack_top() {
307  return (char*)unsafe_stack_start + unsafe_stack_size;
308}
309
310extern "C"
311    __attribute__((visibility("default"))) void *__get_unsafe_stack_start() {
312  return unsafe_stack_start;
313}
314
315extern "C"
316    __attribute__((visibility("default"))) void *__get_unsafe_stack_ptr() {
317  return __safestack_unsafe_stack_ptr;
318}
319