1 //===-- sanitizer/common_interface_defs.h -----------------------*- C++ -*-===// 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 // Common part of the public sanitizer interface. 11 //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===// 12 13 #ifndef SANITIZER_COMMON_INTERFACE_DEFS_H 14 #define SANITIZER_COMMON_INTERFACE_DEFS_H 15 16 #include <stddef.h> 17 #include <stdint.h> 18 19 // GCC does not understand __has_feature. 20 #if !defined(__has_feature) 21 # define __has_feature(x) 0 22 #endif 23 24 #ifdef __cplusplus 25 extern "C" { 26 #endif 27 // Arguments for __sanitizer_sandbox_on_notify() below. 28 typedef struct { 29 // Enable sandbox support in sanitizer coverage. 30 int coverage_sandboxed; 31 // File descriptor to write coverage data to. If -1 is passed, a file will 32 // be pre-opened by __sanitizer_sandobx_on_notify(). This field has no 33 // effect if coverage_sandboxed == 0. 34 intptr_t coverage_fd; 35 // If non-zero, split the coverage data into well-formed blocks. This is 36 // useful when coverage_fd is a socket descriptor. Each block will contain 37 // a header, allowing data from multiple processes to be sent over the same 38 // socket. 39 unsigned int coverage_max_block_size; 40 } __sanitizer_sandbox_arguments; 41 42 // Tell the tools to write their reports to "path.<pid>" instead of stderr. 43 void __sanitizer_set_report_path(const char *path); 44 45 // Notify the tools that the sandbox is going to be turned on. The reserved 46 // parameter will be used in the future to hold a structure with functions 47 // that the tools may call to bypass the sandbox. 48 void __sanitizer_sandbox_on_notify(__sanitizer_sandbox_arguments *args); 49 50 // This function is called by the tool when it has just finished reporting 51 // an error. 'error_summary' is a one-line string that summarizes 52 // the error message. This function can be overridden by the client. 53 void __sanitizer_report_error_summary(const char *error_summary); 54 55 // Some of the sanitizers (e.g. asan/tsan) may miss bugs that happen 56 // in unaligned loads/stores. In order to find such bugs reliably one needs 57 // to replace plain unaligned loads/stores with these calls. 58 uint16_t __sanitizer_unaligned_load16(const void *p); 59 uint32_t __sanitizer_unaligned_load32(const void *p); 60 uint64_t __sanitizer_unaligned_load64(const void *p); 61 void __sanitizer_unaligned_store16(void *p, uint16_t x); 62 void __sanitizer_unaligned_store32(void *p, uint32_t x); 63 void __sanitizer_unaligned_store64(void *p, uint64_t x); 64 65 // Annotate the current state of a contiguous container, such as 66 // std::vector, std::string or similar. 67 // A contiguous container is a container that keeps all of its elements 68 // in a contiguous region of memory. The container owns the region of memory 69 // [beg, end); the memory [beg, mid) is used to store the current elements 70 // and the memory [mid, end) is reserved for future elements; 71 // beg <= mid <= end. For example, in "std::vector<> v" 72 // beg = &v[0]; 73 // end = beg + v.capacity() * sizeof(v[0]); 74 // mid = beg + v.size() * sizeof(v[0]); 75 // 76 // This annotation tells the Sanitizer tool about the current state of the 77 // container so that the tool can report errors when memory from [mid, end) 78 // is accessed. Insert this annotation into methods like push_back/pop_back. 79 // Supply the old and the new values of mid (old_mid/new_mid). 80 // In the initial state mid == end and so should be the final 81 // state when the container is destroyed or when it reallocates the storage. 82 // 83 // Use with caution and don't use for anything other than vector-like classes. 84 // 85 // For AddressSanitizer, 'beg' should be 8-aligned and 'end' should 86 // be either 8-aligned or it should point to the end of a separate heap-, 87 // stack-, or global- allocated buffer. I.e. the following will not work: 88 // int64_t x[2]; // 16 bytes, 8-aligned. 89 // char *beg = (char *)&x[0]; 90 // char *end = beg + 12; // Not 8 aligned, not the end of the buffer. 91 // This however will work fine: 92 // int32_t x[3]; // 12 bytes, but 8-aligned under AddressSanitizer. 93 // char *beg = (char*)&x[0]; 94 // char *end = beg + 12; // Not 8-aligned, but is the end of the buffer. 95 void __sanitizer_annotate_contiguous_container(const void *beg, 96 const void *end, 97 const void *old_mid, 98 const void *new_mid); 99 // Returns true if the contiguous container [beg, end) is properly poisoned 100 // (e.g. with __sanitizer_annotate_contiguous_container), i.e. if 101 // - [beg, mid) is addressable, 102 // - [mid, end) is unaddressable. 103 // Full verification requires O(end-beg) time; this function tries to avoid 104 // such complexity by touching only parts of the container around beg/mid/end. 105 int __sanitizer_verify_contiguous_container(const void *beg, const void *mid, 106 const void *end); 107 108 // Print the stack trace leading to this call. Useful for debugging user code. 109 void __sanitizer_print_stack_trace(); 110 111 // Sets the callback to be called right before death on error. 112 // Passing 0 will unset the callback. 113 void __sanitizer_set_death_callback(void (*callback)(void)); 114 #ifdef __cplusplus 115 } // extern "C" 116 #endif 117 118 #endif // SANITIZER_COMMON_INTERFACE_DEFS_H 119