GCC 4.3.0 Exposes a Kernel Bug
ohxten sends news from earlier this month that GCC 4.3.0's new behavior of not clearing the direction flag before a string operation on x86 systems poses problems with kernels — such as Linux and BSD — that do not clear the direction flag before a signal handler is called, despite the ABI specification.
"Rule #1: Don't break existing stuff"
GCC is in the business of creating new and better optimizations. It is pretty much impossible to make optimizations without assuming things in the ABI. As more and more stuff from the ABI is assumed in the optimizations, people get away with less violations of the ABI, but without assuming more stuff, faster optimizations wouldn't happen.
Because the newest versions of GCC are necessary to improve the state of the art in C compiler optimizations in the open source world, the appropriate reaction to this is to have the compiler people follow the spec, and assume the spec, and if assuming the spec breaks something, the people affected by the breakage don't upgrade their compilers.
This is why there are still people using GCC versions from the stone age.
Check the BSD mailing lists for yourself, they are affected. I'll give you one example below:
http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/mailarchive/commits/2008-03/msg00072.html
Before flaming people next time, at least try and learn about what you're talking about.
When scanning strings for, say, a null terminator the direction flag determines if the current memory register gets incremented or decremented after each byte check. It could mean strlen returns 0 if your strings are grouped together in a segment of memory, or it just plain return the wrong result. Also memory copy routines could copy the wrong part of memory to the wrong place and overwrite executable code (or just cause a page/segment fault).
from 09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
to 45 2F 6E 40 3C DF 10 71 4E 41 DF AA 25 7D 31 3F
Say our source memory contains:
Let's pretend the hyphen is a null (the string terminator or "stop" in most languages and OS) If I want to perform a strlen on that string at position '8', it should return 15 characters because it found the null at 'N' If the direction flag is wrong, it will not scan 8, 9, A,
And with memory, I want to copy 5 bytes from '8' to position 'P' If that works correctly, we get this in memory:
However, if the direction is wrong, we will get:
See how '8' copied to 'P' as expected, but decrementing we then get '7' to 'O', etc
We now have corrupt memory. If we so a strlen, strcat or other null-expecting function on that string located at '8' we will see garbage where the memory copy wrote the wrong data to the wrong position. For the nitpicks, this example used per-byte, there are 16, 32, 64 bit variants of the functions that would cause similar problems bit in 2, 4, 8 byte chunks.
from 09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
to 45 2F 6E 40 3C DF 10 71 4E 41 DF AA 25 7D 31 3F
You have read incorrectly. The bug occurs when applications compiled with the brand new GCC 4.3 are run on old kernels, regardless of what compiler was used to compile the kernel.
Human/Ranger/Zangband
Before anything is released, people have to LOOK AT THE CODE and make sure that the source gives them a reason to think, it will run correctly when used with interfaces that it is supposed to utilize or provide. There are plenty of things in the kernel that would require massive amount of testing to be verified with any certainty, so people write usable code not because they are testing it until their hardware breaks but because they know what they are doing. Now it's entirely possible that the kernel developers never heard of this obscure nuance of the Intel processor. Then one day, the compiler changed, and with it, the assumptions changed. Mature code that has been declared good years ago seemingly breaks. Now it's easy to blame the code, but really this is a deletion of a feature from the compiler. Nevertheless, it exposes the fact that ultimately, no matter what tools we use and no matter how well we think our code through, you can only consider the code good once it runs and appears to do what it's supposed to. What the hell are you talking about?
Code generated by a C compiler remains consistent regardless of the version, unless you mix binaries built with different versions of GCC. When code that kernel uses to pass control to applications' signal handlers does not keep the direction flag as it is supposed to according to ABI, then userspace code -- ANY CODE THAT CONTAINS SIGNAL HANDLERS -- compiled by a new compiler will not work correctly. In other words, kernel provides an interface that is incompatible with binaries made by a new GCC, and since the standard is on the side of the new GCC behavior, it's kernel that has to be changed. That's all. Nothing else is involved -- some code compiled with a new compiler will not work on an old kernel. Code compiled with an old compiler remains usable with a new kernel, no sources except for five lines in the kernel have to be changed. It's not even something that a C programmer has any control over unless he writes pieces of his program in assembly -- and then he should know. I don't even believe, any for a C programmer who knows how to write a signal handler it's possible that he "never heard of this obscure nuance of the Intel processor" -- both are very rarely used directly -- however this is completely irrelevant, the only sources that have to be changed are five lines in the kernel, not in signal handlers.
The only real problem this "exposes" is that for some reason everyone who used x86 SysV ABI for anything that matters (Linux and BSD), decided to change the interface to exclude the requirement to clear the direction flag, even though that "official" standard said otherwise -- however it was known from the very beginning, and this is why older C compiler taken it into account in the first place. It's not a bug or someone's lack of knowledge, it's a violation of a standard, and GCC developers decided to get things back to the letter of a standard because the compiler's optimization benefits from it.
Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
- the rules of the road say that you can assume you'll find your car in drive
- the old version of GCC used to always check anyway and put the car in drive for you; the new version just assumes the car is already in drive, because that's what the rules say.
The problem comes when an affected kernel temporarily hands your car over to a signal handler - let's say "parking valet". The valet now doesn't bother checking the car is in drive when he gets in, because the rules of the road say the kernel should have given him the car in drive. In the past GCC looked over his shoulder to make sure the kernel had really left the car in drive for him. But now no-one bothers checking for him and he might then accidentally crash your car.