Re: C tricks for efficient stack zeroing

From: Julia Cartwright
Date: Tue Mar 06 2018 - 21:17:13 EST


On Fri, Mar 02, 2018 at 08:50:17PM +0100, Jason A. Donenfeld wrote:
[..]
> What would be really nice would be to somehow keep track of the
> maximum stack depth, and just before the function returns, clear from
> the maximum depth to its stack base, all in one single call. This
> would not only make the code faster and less brittle, but it would
> also clean up some algorithms quite a bit.
>
> Ideally this would take the form of a gcc attribute on the function,
> but I was unable to find anything of that nature. I started looking
> for little C tricks for this, and came up dry too. I realize I could
> probably just take the current stack address and zero out until _the
> very end_ but that seems to overshoot and would probably be bad for
> performance. The best I've been able to do come up with are some
> x86-specific macros, but that approach seems a bit underwhelming.
> Other approaches include adding a new attribute via the gcc plugin
> system, which could make this kind of thing more complete [cc'ing
> pipacs in case he's thought about that before].

Can objtool support a static stack usage analysis?

I'm wondering if it's possible to place these sensitive functions in a
special linker section, like .text.stackzero.<tag>; objtool could
collect static call data (as it already does) and stack usage, spitting
out a symbol definition stackzero_<tag>_max_depth, which you could then
use to bound your zeroing.

Obviously this is a static analysis, with the limitations therein.

Julia