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- ===============
- ShadowCallStack
- ===============
- .. contents::
- :local:
- Introduction
- ============
- ShadowCallStack is an instrumentation pass, currently only implemented for
- aarch64, that protects programs against return address overwrites
- (e.g. stack buffer overflows.) It works by saving a function's return address
- to a separately allocated 'shadow call stack' in the function prolog in
- non-leaf functions and loading the return address from the shadow call stack
- in the function epilog. The return address is also stored on the regular stack
- for compatibility with unwinders, but is otherwise unused.
- The aarch64 implementation is considered production ready, and
- an `implementation of the runtime`_ has been added to Android's libc
- (bionic). An x86_64 implementation was evaluated using Chromium and was found
- to have critical performance and security deficiencies--it was removed in
- LLVM 9.0. Details on the x86_64 implementation can be found in the
- `Clang 7.0.1 documentation`_.
- .. _`implementation of the runtime`: https://android.googlesource.com/platform/bionic/+/808d176e7e0dd727c7f929622ec017f6e065c582/libc/bionic/pthread_create.cpp#128
- .. _`Clang 7.0.1 documentation`: https://releases.llvm.org/7.0.1/tools/clang/docs/ShadowCallStack.html
- Comparison
- ----------
- To optimize for memory consumption and cache locality, the shadow call
- stack stores only an array of return addresses. This is in contrast to other
- schemes, like :doc:`SafeStack`, that mirror the entire stack and trade-off
- consuming more memory for shorter function prologs and epilogs with fewer
- memory accesses.
- `Return Flow Guard`_ is a pure software implementation of shadow call stacks
- on x86_64. Like the previous implementation of ShadowCallStack on x86_64, it is
- inherently racy due to the architecture's use of the stack for calls and
- returns.
- Intel `Control-flow Enforcement Technology`_ (CET) is a proposed hardware
- extension that would add native support to use a shadow stack to store/check
- return addresses at call/return time. Being a hardware implementation, it
- would not suffer from race conditions and would not incur the overhead of
- function instrumentation, but it does require operating system support.
- .. _`Return Flow Guard`: https://xlab.tencent.com/en/2016/11/02/return-flow-guard/
- .. _`Control-flow Enforcement Technology`: https://software.intel.com/sites/default/files/managed/4d/2a/control-flow-enforcement-technology-preview.pdf
- Compatibility
- -------------
- A runtime is not provided in compiler-rt so one must be provided by the
- compiled application or the operating system. Integrating the runtime into
- the operating system should be preferred since otherwise all thread creation
- and destruction would need to be intercepted by the application.
- The instrumentation makes use of the platform register ``x18``. On some
- platforms, ``x18`` is reserved, and on others, it is designated as a scratch
- register. This generally means that any code that may run on the same thread
- as code compiled with ShadowCallStack must either target one of the platforms
- whose ABI reserves ``x18`` (currently Android, Darwin, Fuchsia and Windows)
- or be compiled with the flag ``-ffixed-x18``. If absolutely necessary, code
- compiled without ``-ffixed-x18`` may be run on the same thread as code that
- uses ShadowCallStack by saving the register value temporarily on the stack
- (`example in Android`_) but this should be done with care since it risks
- leaking the shadow call stack address.
- .. _`example in Android`: https://android-review.googlesource.com/c/platform/frameworks/base/+/803717
- Because of the use of register ``x18``, the ShadowCallStack feature is
- incompatible with any other feature that may use ``x18``. However, there
- is no inherent reason why ShadowCallStack needs to use register ``x18``
- specifically; in principle, a platform could choose to reserve and use another
- register for ShadowCallStack, but this would be incompatible with the AAPCS64.
- Special unwind information is required on functions that are compiled
- with ShadowCallStack and that may be unwound, i.e. functions compiled with
- ``-fexceptions`` (which is the default in C++). Some unwinders (such as the
- libgcc 4.9 unwinder) do not understand this unwind info and will segfault
- when encountering it. LLVM libunwind processes this unwind info correctly,
- however. This means that if exceptions are used together with ShadowCallStack,
- the program must use a compatible unwinder.
- Security
- ========
- ShadowCallStack is intended to be a stronger alternative to
- ``-fstack-protector``. It protects from non-linear overflows and arbitrary
- memory writes to the return address slot.
- The instrumentation makes use of the ``x18`` register to reference the shadow
- call stack, meaning that references to the shadow call stack do not have
- to be stored in memory. This makes it possible to implement a runtime that
- avoids exposing the address of the shadow call stack to attackers that can
- read arbitrary memory. However, attackers could still try to exploit side
- channels exposed by the operating system `[1]`_ `[2]`_ or processor `[3]`_
- to discover the address of the shadow call stack.
- .. _`[1]`: https://eyalitkin.wordpress.com/2017/09/01/cartography-lighting-up-the-shadows/
- .. _`[2]`: https://www.blackhat.com/docs/eu-16/materials/eu-16-Goktas-Bypassing-Clangs-SafeStack.pdf
- .. _`[3]`: https://www.vusec.net/projects/anc/
- Unless care is taken when allocating the shadow call stack, it may be
- possible for an attacker to guess its address using the addresses of
- other allocations. Therefore, the address should be chosen to make this
- difficult. One way to do this is to allocate a large guard region without
- read/write permissions, randomly select a small region within it to be
- used as the address of the shadow call stack and mark only that region as
- read/write. This also mitigates somewhat against processor side channels.
- The intent is that the Android runtime `will do this`_, but the platform will
- first need to be `changed`_ to avoid using ``setrlimit(RLIMIT_AS)`` to limit
- memory allocations in certain processes, as this also limits the number of
- guard regions that can be allocated.
- .. _`will do this`: https://android-review.googlesource.com/c/platform/bionic/+/891622
- .. _`changed`: https://android-review.googlesource.com/c/platform/frameworks/av/+/837745
- The runtime will need the address of the shadow call stack in order to
- deallocate it when destroying the thread. If the entire program is compiled
- with ``-ffixed-x18``, this is trivial: the address can be derived from the
- value stored in ``x18`` (e.g. by masking out the lower bits). If a guard
- region is used, the address of the start of the guard region could then be
- stored at the start of the shadow call stack itself. But if it is possible
- for code compiled without ``-ffixed-x18`` to run on a thread managed by the
- runtime, which is the case on Android for example, the address must be stored
- somewhere else instead. On Android we store the address of the start of the
- guard region in TLS and deallocate the entire guard region including the
- shadow call stack at thread exit. This is considered acceptable given that
- the address of the start of the guard region is already somewhat guessable.
- One way in which the address of the shadow call stack could leak is in the
- ``jmp_buf`` data structure used by ``setjmp`` and ``longjmp``. The Android
- runtime `avoids this`_ by only storing the low bits of ``x18`` in the
- ``jmp_buf``, which requires the address of the shadow call stack to be
- aligned to its size.
- .. _`avoids this`: https://android.googlesource.com/platform/bionic/+/808d176e7e0dd727c7f929622ec017f6e065c582/libc/arch-arm64/bionic/setjmp.S#49
- The architecture's call and return instructions (``bl`` and ``ret``) operate on
- a register rather than the stack, which means that leaf functions are generally
- protected from return address overwrites even without ShadowCallStack.
- Usage
- =====
- To enable ShadowCallStack, just pass the ``-fsanitize=shadow-call-stack``
- flag to both compile and link command lines. On aarch64, you also need to pass
- ``-ffixed-x18`` unless your target already reserves ``x18``.
- Low-level API
- -------------
- ``__has_feature(shadow_call_stack)``
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- In some cases one may need to execute different code depending on whether
- ShadowCallStack is enabled. The macro ``__has_feature(shadow_call_stack)`` can
- be used for this purpose.
- .. code-block:: c
- #if defined(__has_feature)
- # if __has_feature(shadow_call_stack)
- // code that builds only under ShadowCallStack
- # endif
- #endif
- ``__attribute__((no_sanitize("shadow-call-stack")))``
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- Use ``__attribute__((no_sanitize("shadow-call-stack")))`` on a function
- declaration to specify that the shadow call stack instrumentation should not be
- applied to that function, even if enabled globally.
- Example
- =======
- The following example code:
- .. code-block:: c++
- int foo() {
- return bar() + 1;
- }
- Generates the following aarch64 assembly when compiled with ``-O2``:
- .. code-block:: none
- stp x29, x30, [sp, #-16]!
- mov x29, sp
- bl bar
- add w0, w0, #1
- ldp x29, x30, [sp], #16
- ret
- Adding ``-fsanitize=shadow-call-stack`` would output the following assembly:
- .. code-block:: none
- str x30, [x18], #8
- stp x29, x30, [sp, #-16]!
- mov x29, sp
- bl bar
- add w0, w0, #1
- ldp x29, x30, [sp], #16
- ldr x30, [x18, #-8]!
- ret
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