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author | Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org> | 2020-12-30 11:54:00 +0530 |
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committer | Siddhesh Poyarekar <siddhesh@sourceware.org> | 2020-12-31 16:55:21 +0530 |
commit | c43c5796121bc5bcc0867f02e5536874aa8196c1 (patch) | |
tree | 39306f12f031a62b0fe2ca679e656332e70eb388 /manual/creature.texi | |
parent | 2a08b6e8331a611dc29325bfa6e29fecc9a3a46e (diff) | |
download | glibc-c43c5796121bc5bcc0867f02e5536874aa8196c1.zip glibc-c43c5796121bc5bcc0867f02e5536874aa8196c1.tar.gz glibc-c43c5796121bc5bcc0867f02e5536874aa8196c1.tar.bz2 |
Introduce _FORTIFY_SOURCE=3
Introduce a new _FORTIFY_SOURCE level of 3 to enable additional
fortifications that may have a noticeable performance impact, allowing
more fortification coverage at the cost of some performance.
With llvm 9.0 or later, this will replace the use of
__builtin_object_size with __builtin_dynamic_object_size.
__builtin_dynamic_object_size
-----------------------------
__builtin_dynamic_object_size is an LLVM builtin that is similar to
__builtin_object_size. In addition to what __builtin_object_size
does, i.e. replace the builtin call with a constant object size,
__builtin_dynamic_object_size will replace the call site with an
expression that evaluates to the object size, thus expanding its
applicability. In practice, __builtin_dynamic_object_size evaluates
these expressions through malloc/calloc calls that it can associate
with the object being evaluated.
A simple motivating example is below; -D_FORTIFY_SOURCE=2 would miss
this and emit memcpy, but -D_FORTIFY_SOURCE=3 with the help of
__builtin_dynamic_object_size is able to emit __memcpy_chk with the
allocation size expression passed into the function:
void *copy_obj (const void *src, size_t alloc, size_t copysize)
{
void *obj = malloc (alloc);
memcpy (obj, src, copysize);
return obj;
}
Limitations
-----------
If the object was allocated elsewhere that the compiler cannot see, or
if it was allocated in the function with a function that the compiler
does not recognize as an allocator then __builtin_dynamic_object_size
also returns -1.
Further, the expression used to compute object size may be non-trivial
and may potentially incur a noticeable performance impact. These
fortifications are hence enabled at a new _FORTIFY_SOURCE level to
allow developers to make a choice on the tradeoff according to their
environment.
Diffstat (limited to 'manual/creature.texi')
-rw-r--r-- | manual/creature.texi | 3 |
1 files changed, 2 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/manual/creature.texi b/manual/creature.texi index be50504..31208cc 100644 --- a/manual/creature.texi +++ b/manual/creature.texi @@ -254,7 +254,8 @@ included. @standards{GNU, (none)} If this macro is defined to @math{1}, security hardening is added to various library functions. If defined to @math{2}, even stricter -checks are applied. +checks are applied. If defined to @math{3}, @theglibc{} may also use +checks that may have an additional performance overhead. @end defvr @defvr Macro _REENTRANT |