On 11/18/21 16:27, Eric Blake wrote:
On Thu, Nov 18, 2021 at 01:39:39PM +0100, Laszlo Ersek wrote:
> (... long email)
And quite insightful. I'm trimming to portions where I'm replying...
>
> - signed integers are a huge complication, while at the same time, their
> use (or usefulness) is extremely limited for dealing with memory
> allocations, sizes, indexing, file offsets, and so on.
Actually, the emacs project has been moving towards explicitly using
signed types for memory sizes. Why? Because compilers have modes
where they can diagnose signed overflows, but the C standard requires
unsigned types to perform module 2^N arithmetic without warning. So
using a signed type (gnulib calls it idx_t) that is otherwise the same
width as size_t makes it possible for the compiler to help diagnose
non-portable code.
But yse, writing code that avoids overflow using signed types is a
much trickier proposition.
>
> I wouldn't try to do this in a type-transparent manner. I'd first revert
> commit b31859402d14 ("common/include/checked-overflow.h: Simplify",
> 2021-11-11), and then add separate functions for uint64_t and size_t.
Writing functions would allow a and b to undergo integer promotions,
but the return type pointer forces an explicit choice of the result
type. Unless we tell the compiler to warn on narrowing of integers to
a function call, there is a risk that on 32-bit machines, someone
passing a 64-bit off_t value to a 32-bit size_t overflow checker will
undergo inadvertent overflow prior to the function getting a chance to
perform its checks.
One of the benefits of the gcc/clang builtin is that they are
type-agnostic, even if I want to perform off_t*int and store the
result in size_t, the builtin will correctly tell me if the
infinite-precision result would overflow the destination, without me
having to figure out whether promotion or implicit narrowing affected
things. Using a function loses some of that benefit when compared to
a fully-generic macro. However, writing a fully-generic macro that
correctly handles mismatched operand types is indeed harder.
>
> If we don't want to be 100% standard C, just make it work for gcc-4.2,
> then a type-generic(-ish) solution could exist using "typeof" and
> (perhaps) statement expressions. (Both are GCC extensions that exist in
> 4.2:
> - <
https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc-4.2.4/gcc/Statement-Exprs.html>
> - <
https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc-4.2.4/gcc/Typeof.html>.)
Indeed, that's also an intermediate option - we require gcc (even on
RHEL 7) for our automatic cleanup usage, so relying on the features
present in the oldest supported gcc is acceptable, rather than having
to strive for strict C compliance.
>
> To go into some details:
>
>
> (1) The idea is that we want the following C expression to evaluate to
> true, without OP overflowing first:
>
> a OP b <= max
>
> where "a", "b", "max" are all of the same unsigned
integer type, and OP
> is either "+" or "*".
Your analysis proceeds with all of "a", "b", and "max" of
the same
unsigned types. I understand why you skipped signed types (the
analysis is harder); but it it worth supporting cases where "a" and
"b" are possibly different widths? The gnulib file intprops.h does
this, but of course, due to the incompatible licensing, me repeating
how it does it here is not in our best interest (however, I will point
out that it results in a MUCH larger preprocessor expansion than your
simpler solution that enforces same size inputs).
I imagine we could take each input (i.e., "a", "b") as uintmax_t,
perform the addition / multiplication in uintmax_t (with the safeguards
I proposed earlier adapted to UINTMAX_MAX), and then explicitly compare
the result against the maximum of the desired result type, such as
UINT64_MAX, SIZE_MAX, and so on.
I didn't think of this because I'm acutely aware of types, promotions
etc when I write C code, so "these two types must be the same" is not
something I'd be bothered by.
> (9) And so the C-language functions are just:
>
> bool
> add_size_t_overflow (size_t a, size_t b, size_t *result)
> {
> if (a <= SIZE_MAX - b) {
> *result = a + b;
> return false;
> }
> return true;
The compiler builtins ALSO assign the low-order bits of the
infinite-precision operation into *result on overflow, behaving more
like:
*result = a + b;
return ! (a <= SIZE_MAX - b);
Ah, interesting. I didn't notice that. I figured "output is
indeterminate on error" is generally acceptable. Is there a particular
use for the low-order bits, on overflow?
for unsigned types (where C has guaranteed modulo semantics), and a
much more complicated solution with signed types (basically, perform
the operation in the unsigned counterparts, and then cast those
low-order bits back to signed at the end).
> }
>
> bool
> mul_size_t_overflow (size_t a, size_t b, size_t *result)
> {
> if (b == 0 || a <= SIZE_MAX / b) {
> *result = a * b;
> return false;
> }
> return true;
> }
>
>
> (10) The (unsigned) type-generic macros could look something like this.
> First, we'd need to check if the types of "a", "b" and
"result" were (i)
> integers, (ii) unsigned, and (iii) had identical range.
Check (i) is a nice safety valve. Check (ii) is essential to avoid
the nastiness that would be required for correct results with signed
types, but with a larger macro, we could indeed support it (gnulib
demonstrates that). But I'm inclined to insist on (ii) until we
encounter a case where we really care about signed overflow; insisting
that we use unsigned sizes (contrary to emacs' choice of using a
signed idx_t type for compiler assistance) is easier to maintain, even
if it reduces the places where the compiler can help us. Check (iii)
is the one I question as being strictly necessary; if we can correctly
predict the size of the result after arithmetic promotion, we can
determine the maximum value that we must fit within even if the inputs
underwent a size change.
Yes, this might work with the above (vague) uintmax_t-based approach; we
could use ((typeof (*r))-1) as the desired actual limit.
...
> I don't consider bit-fields at all because they are pure evil anyway. :)
Too true!
...
> (11) Then we could do this, for example:
>
> #include <stdbool.h>
> #include <string.h>
>
> /* This macro does not evaluate any one of its arguments, unless the argument
> * has variably modified type.
> */
> #define HAVE_SAME_UINT_TYPES(a, b) \
> ((typeof (a))1 / 2 == 0 && \
> (typeof (b))1 / 2 == 0 && \
> (typeof (a))-1 > 0 && \
> (typeof (b))-1 > 0 && \
> (typeof (a))-1 == (typeof (b))-1 && \
> sizeof a == sizeof b)
Yes, this is relying on gcc's typeof extension, but we said above that
should be okay.
>
> /* This macro evaluates each of "a", "b" and "r"
exactly once, assuming neither
> * has variably modified type.
> */
> #define ADD_UINT_OVERFLOW(a, b, r) \
> ({ \
> typedef char static_assert_1[-1 + 2 * HAVE_SAME_UINT_TYPES(a, b)]; \
> typedef char static_assert_2[-1 + 2 * HAVE_SAME_UINT_TYPES(a, *r)]; \
We could perhaps relax this to:
typedef char static_assert[-1 + 2 * HAVE_SAME_UINT_TYPES((a)+(b), *r)]; \
if we merely care about the promoted result type having the same type
as where we are storing the result, and if we also assert that
sizeof(*r)>=sizeof(int) (for result types smaller than int, the logic
is a lot messier, because of arithmetic promotion).
Right, I didn't consider types with lesser integer conversion rank than
that of "unsigned int" -- I don't think we'd use "short" for
memory
allocation, sizes, indexing, file offsets etc.
I wouldn't want to be more gnulib than gnulib :) (Not that I looked at
it -- I intentionally didn't.)
> typeof (a) a2 = a, b2 = b, max = -1, result; \
> void *r2 = r; \
> bool overflow = true; \
> \
> if (a2 <= max - b2) { \
> result = a2 + b2; \
> memcpy(r2, &result, sizeof result); \
> overflow = false; \
> } \
> overflow; \
> })
>
>
> Note that using this would require a bit more pedantry than usual at the
> *call sites*; for example, adding constants "1" and "2u" would
not work.
Per the above, constant "1" would never work (it is a signed
constant). That's why figuring out a macro that works with arbitrary
type inputs, so long as their integer promotion doesn't overflow
(which is what the compiler builtins do) is nicer, but indeed harder.
Using a function instead of a macro gets you the implicit promotion
(you can pass 1 to a function taking size_t, whereas the macro
computing typeof(1) will see a signed type).
>
> TBH, I think the macros I created above are hideous. I like call sites
> to be explicit about types, and so I'd prefer the much simpler;
> type-specific add_size_t_overflow() and mul_size_t_overflow() functions.
Your macros were not too hideous, but only because they made limiting
assumptions like forcing unsigned types and not caring about
arithmetic promotion. The gnulib macros are more generic, but even
more hideous.
>
> (Beyond reverting b31859402d14, I'd even replace the type-specific
> ADD_UINT64_T_OVERFLOW, MUL_UINT64_T_OVERFLOW, ADD_SIZE_T_OVERFLOW,
> MUL_SIZE_T_OVERFLOW function-like macros with actual functions. Just let
> the compiler inline whatever it likes.)
>
> Comments?
As long as we have good unit tests for the particular use cases we
care about detecting, I can live with either a generic macro or with
type-specific functional interfaces. I'm a bit worried that using
functions may fail to catch overflow on the implicit type conversions
of arguments passed to the function; maybe it's possible to do a
hybrid, by writing a function that checks for type equality but then
calls a function for the actual overflow check, so that we are ensured
that callers use the correct types, but have the ease of reading the
overflow check in a function that doesn't require even more macro
expansions to see what it is doing.
Let me try this (later, only a sketch now):
- use macros for checking that the input and output types are (ii)
unsigned (i) integer types, ignore their (iii) particular ranges
- convert the inputs to uintmax_t and perform the operation in uintmax_t
unconditionally, only *remembering* -- using the same in-advance checks
-- if UINTMAX_MAX is overflowed,
- deduce the actual result limit from ((typeof (*r))-1),
- assign the low-order bits in any case -- if either the uintmax_t
operation overflows or the actual result limit is exceeded, it all
happens in unsigned, so it's well-defined (modular reduction). Return
the overflow status correctly.
Thanks,
Laszlo