On Thu, Jun 04, 2020 at 04:49:54PM +0300, Alexander Popov wrote: > Let's improve the instrumentation to avoid this: > > 1. Make stackleak_track_stack() save all register that it works with. > Use no_caller_saved_registers attribute for that function. This attribute > is available for x86_64 and i386 starting from gcc-7. > > 2. Insert calling stackleak_track_stack() in asm: > asm volatile("call stackleak_track_stack" :: "r" (current_stack_pointer)) > Here we use ASM_CALL_CONSTRAINT trick from arch/x86/include/asm/asm.h. > The input constraint is taken into account during gcc shrink-wrapping > optimization. It is needed to be sure that stackleak_track_stack() call is > inserted after the prologue of the containing function, when the stack > frame is prepared. Very cool; nice work! > +static void add_stack_tracking(gimple_stmt_iterator *gsi) > +{ > + /* > + * The 'no_caller_saved_registers' attribute is used for > + * stackleak_track_stack(). If the compiler supports this attribute for > + * the target arch, we can add calling stackleak_track_stack() in asm. > + * That improves performance: we avoid useless operations with the > + * caller-saved registers in the functions from which we will remove > + * stackleak_track_stack() call during the stackleak_cleanup pass. > + */ > + if (lookup_attribute_spec(get_identifier("no_caller_saved_registers"))) > + add_stack_tracking_gasm(gsi); > + else > + add_stack_tracking_gcall(gsi); > +} The build_for_x86 flag is only ever used as an assert() test against no_caller_saved_registers, but we're able to test for that separately. Why does the architecture need to be tested? (i.e. when this flag becomes supported o other architectures, why must it still be x86-only?) -- Kees Cook