Dirty rects always contain full tiles with delegated rendering.
[chromium-blink-merge.git] / base / security_unittest.cc
blobcf3b1296667ff7942b143a7890edde6a197f1778
1 // Copyright (c) 2013 The Chromium Authors. All rights reserved.
2 // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be
3 // found in the LICENSE file.
5 #include <fcntl.h>
6 #include <stdio.h>
7 #include <stdlib.h>
8 #include <string.h>
9 #include <sys/stat.h>
10 #include <sys/types.h>
12 #include <algorithm>
13 #include <limits>
15 #include "base/file_util.h"
16 #include "base/logging.h"
17 #include "base/memory/scoped_ptr.h"
18 #include "build/build_config.h"
19 #include "testing/gtest/include/gtest/gtest.h"
21 #if defined(OS_POSIX)
22 #include <sys/mman.h>
23 #include <unistd.h>
24 #endif
26 using std::nothrow;
27 using std::numeric_limits;
29 namespace {
31 // This function acts as a compiler optimization barrier. We use it to
32 // prevent the compiler from making an expression a compile-time constant.
33 // We also use it so that the compiler doesn't discard certain return values
34 // as something we don't need (see the comment with calloc below).
35 template <typename Type>
36 Type HideValueFromCompiler(volatile Type value) {
37 #if defined(__GNUC__)
38 // In a GCC compatible compiler (GCC or Clang), make this compiler barrier
39 // more robust than merely using "volatile".
40 __asm__ volatile ("" : "+r" (value));
41 #endif // __GNUC__
42 return value;
45 // - NO_TCMALLOC (should be defined if we compile with linux_use_tcmalloc=0)
46 // - ADDRESS_SANITIZER because it has its own memory allocator
47 // - IOS does not use tcmalloc
48 // - OS_MACOSX does not use tcmalloc
49 #if !defined(NO_TCMALLOC) && !defined(ADDRESS_SANITIZER) && \
50 !defined(OS_IOS) && !defined(OS_MACOSX)
51 #define TCMALLOC_TEST(function) function
52 #else
53 #define TCMALLOC_TEST(function) DISABLED_##function
54 #endif
56 // TODO(jln): switch to std::numeric_limits<int>::max() when we switch to
57 // C++11.
58 const size_t kTooBigAllocSize = INT_MAX;
60 // Detect runtime TCMalloc bypasses.
61 bool IsTcMallocBypassed() {
62 #if defined(OS_LINUX) || defined(OS_CHROMEOS)
63 // This should detect a TCMalloc bypass from Valgrind.
64 char* g_slice = getenv("G_SLICE");
65 if (g_slice && !strcmp(g_slice, "always-malloc"))
66 return true;
67 #elif defined(OS_WIN)
68 // This should detect a TCMalloc bypass from setting
69 // the CHROME_ALLOCATOR environment variable.
70 char* allocator = getenv("CHROME_ALLOCATOR");
71 if (allocator && strcmp(allocator, "tcmalloc"))
72 return true;
73 #endif
74 return false;
77 bool CallocDiesOnOOM() {
78 // The sanitizers' calloc dies on OOM instead of returning NULL.
79 // The wrapper function in base/process_util_linux.cc that is used when we
80 // compile without TCMalloc will just die on OOM instead of returning NULL.
81 #if defined(ADDRESS_SANITIZER) || defined(MEMORY_SANITIZER) || \
82 defined(THREAD_SANITIZER) || (defined(OS_LINUX) && defined(NO_TCMALLOC))
83 return true;
84 #else
85 return false;
86 #endif
89 // Fake test that allow to know the state of TCMalloc by looking at bots.
90 TEST(SecurityTest, TCMALLOC_TEST(IsTCMallocDynamicallyBypassed)) {
91 printf("Malloc is dynamically bypassed: %s\n",
92 IsTcMallocBypassed() ? "yes." : "no.");
95 // The MemoryAllocationRestrictions* tests test that we can not allocate a
96 // memory range that cannot be indexed via an int. This is used to mitigate
97 // vulnerabilities in libraries that use int instead of size_t. See
98 // crbug.com/169327.
100 TEST(SecurityTest, TCMALLOC_TEST(MemoryAllocationRestrictionsMalloc)) {
101 if (!IsTcMallocBypassed()) {
102 scoped_ptr<char, base::FreeDeleter> ptr(static_cast<char*>(
103 HideValueFromCompiler(malloc(kTooBigAllocSize))));
104 ASSERT_TRUE(!ptr);
108 TEST(SecurityTest, TCMALLOC_TEST(MemoryAllocationRestrictionsCalloc)) {
109 if (!IsTcMallocBypassed()) {
110 scoped_ptr<char, base::FreeDeleter> ptr(static_cast<char*>(
111 HideValueFromCompiler(calloc(kTooBigAllocSize, 1))));
112 ASSERT_TRUE(!ptr);
116 TEST(SecurityTest, TCMALLOC_TEST(MemoryAllocationRestrictionsRealloc)) {
117 if (!IsTcMallocBypassed()) {
118 char* orig_ptr = static_cast<char*>(malloc(1));
119 ASSERT_TRUE(orig_ptr);
120 scoped_ptr<char, base::FreeDeleter> ptr(static_cast<char*>(
121 HideValueFromCompiler(realloc(orig_ptr, kTooBigAllocSize))));
122 ASSERT_TRUE(!ptr);
123 // If realloc() did not succeed, we need to free orig_ptr.
124 free(orig_ptr);
128 typedef struct {
129 char large_array[kTooBigAllocSize];
130 } VeryLargeStruct;
132 TEST(SecurityTest, TCMALLOC_TEST(MemoryAllocationRestrictionsNew)) {
133 if (!IsTcMallocBypassed()) {
134 scoped_ptr<VeryLargeStruct> ptr(
135 HideValueFromCompiler(new (nothrow) VeryLargeStruct));
136 ASSERT_TRUE(!ptr);
140 TEST(SecurityTest, TCMALLOC_TEST(MemoryAllocationRestrictionsNewArray)) {
141 if (!IsTcMallocBypassed()) {
142 scoped_ptr<char[]> ptr(
143 HideValueFromCompiler(new (nothrow) char[kTooBigAllocSize]));
144 ASSERT_TRUE(!ptr);
148 // The tests bellow check for overflows in new[] and calloc().
150 #if defined(OS_IOS) || defined(OS_WIN) || defined(THREAD_SANITIZER)
151 #define DISABLE_ON_IOS_AND_WIN_AND_TSAN(function) DISABLED_##function
152 #else
153 #define DISABLE_ON_IOS_AND_WIN_AND_TSAN(function) function
154 #endif
156 // There are platforms where these tests are known to fail. We would like to
157 // be able to easily check the status on the bots, but marking tests as
158 // FAILS_ is too clunky.
159 void OverflowTestsSoftExpectTrue(bool overflow_detected) {
160 if (!overflow_detected) {
161 #if defined(OS_LINUX) || defined(OS_ANDROID) || defined(OS_MACOSX)
162 // Sadly, on Linux, Android, and OSX we don't have a good story yet. Don't
163 // fail the test, but report.
164 printf("Platform has overflow: %s\n",
165 !overflow_detected ? "yes." : "no.");
166 #else
167 // Otherwise, fail the test. (Note: EXPECT are ok in subfunctions, ASSERT
168 // aren't).
169 EXPECT_TRUE(overflow_detected);
170 #endif
174 // Test array[TooBig][X] and array[X][TooBig] allocations for int overflows.
175 // IOS doesn't honor nothrow, so disable the test there.
176 // Crashes on Windows Dbg builds, disable there as well.
177 TEST(SecurityTest, DISABLE_ON_IOS_AND_WIN_AND_TSAN(NewOverflow)) {
178 const size_t kArraySize = 4096;
179 // We want something "dynamic" here, so that the compiler doesn't
180 // immediately reject crazy arrays.
181 const size_t kDynamicArraySize = HideValueFromCompiler(kArraySize);
182 // numeric_limits are still not constexpr until we switch to C++11, so we
183 // use an ugly cast.
184 const size_t kMaxSizeT = ~static_cast<size_t>(0);
185 ASSERT_EQ(numeric_limits<size_t>::max(), kMaxSizeT);
186 const size_t kArraySize2 = kMaxSizeT / kArraySize + 10;
187 const size_t kDynamicArraySize2 = HideValueFromCompiler(kArraySize2);
189 scoped_ptr<char[][kArraySize]> array_pointer(new (nothrow)
190 char[kDynamicArraySize2][kArraySize]);
191 OverflowTestsSoftExpectTrue(!array_pointer);
193 // On windows, the compiler prevents static array sizes of more than
194 // 0x7fffffff (error C2148).
195 #if !defined(OS_WIN) || !defined(ARCH_CPU_64_BITS)
197 scoped_ptr<char[][kArraySize2]> array_pointer(new (nothrow)
198 char[kDynamicArraySize][kArraySize2]);
199 OverflowTestsSoftExpectTrue(!array_pointer);
201 #endif // !defined(OS_WIN) || !defined(ARCH_CPU_64_BITS)
204 // Call calloc(), eventually free the memory and return whether or not
205 // calloc() did succeed.
206 bool CallocReturnsNull(size_t nmemb, size_t size) {
207 scoped_ptr<char, base::FreeDeleter> array_pointer(
208 static_cast<char*>(calloc(nmemb, size)));
209 // We need the call to HideValueFromCompiler(): we have seen LLVM
210 // optimize away the call to calloc() entirely and assume
211 // the pointer to not be NULL.
212 return HideValueFromCompiler(array_pointer.get()) == NULL;
215 // Test if calloc() can overflow.
216 TEST(SecurityTest, CallocOverflow) {
217 const size_t kArraySize = 4096;
218 const size_t kMaxSizeT = numeric_limits<size_t>::max();
219 const size_t kArraySize2 = kMaxSizeT / kArraySize + 10;
220 if (!CallocDiesOnOOM()) {
221 EXPECT_TRUE(CallocReturnsNull(kArraySize, kArraySize2));
222 EXPECT_TRUE(CallocReturnsNull(kArraySize2, kArraySize));
223 } else {
224 // It's also ok for calloc to just terminate the process.
225 #if defined(GTEST_HAS_DEATH_TEST)
226 EXPECT_DEATH(CallocReturnsNull(kArraySize, kArraySize2), "");
227 EXPECT_DEATH(CallocReturnsNull(kArraySize2, kArraySize), "");
228 #endif // GTEST_HAS_DEATH_TEST
232 #if (defined(OS_LINUX) || defined(OS_CHROMEOS)) && defined(__x86_64__)
233 // Check if ptr1 and ptr2 are separated by less than size chars.
234 bool ArePointersToSameArea(void* ptr1, void* ptr2, size_t size) {
235 ptrdiff_t ptr_diff = reinterpret_cast<char*>(std::max(ptr1, ptr2)) -
236 reinterpret_cast<char*>(std::min(ptr1, ptr2));
237 return static_cast<size_t>(ptr_diff) <= size;
240 // Check if TCMalloc uses an underlying random memory allocator.
241 TEST(SecurityTest, TCMALLOC_TEST(RandomMemoryAllocations)) {
242 if (IsTcMallocBypassed())
243 return;
244 size_t kPageSize = 4096; // We support x86_64 only.
245 // Check that malloc() returns an address that is neither the kernel's
246 // un-hinted mmap area, nor the current brk() area. The first malloc() may
247 // not be at a random address because TCMalloc will first exhaust any memory
248 // that it has allocated early on, before starting the sophisticated
249 // allocators.
250 void* default_mmap_heap_address =
251 mmap(0, kPageSize, PROT_READ|PROT_WRITE,
252 MAP_PRIVATE|MAP_ANONYMOUS, -1, 0);
253 ASSERT_NE(default_mmap_heap_address,
254 static_cast<void*>(MAP_FAILED));
255 ASSERT_EQ(munmap(default_mmap_heap_address, kPageSize), 0);
256 void* brk_heap_address = sbrk(0);
257 ASSERT_NE(brk_heap_address, reinterpret_cast<void*>(-1));
258 ASSERT_TRUE(brk_heap_address != NULL);
259 // 1 MB should get us past what TCMalloc pre-allocated before initializing
260 // the sophisticated allocators.
261 size_t kAllocSize = 1<<20;
262 scoped_ptr<char, base::FreeDeleter> ptr(
263 static_cast<char*>(malloc(kAllocSize)));
264 ASSERT_TRUE(ptr != NULL);
265 // If two pointers are separated by less than 512MB, they are considered
266 // to be in the same area.
267 // Our random pointer could be anywhere within 0x3fffffffffff (46bits),
268 // and we are checking that it's not withing 1GB (30 bits) from two
269 // addresses (brk and mmap heap). We have roughly one chance out of
270 // 2^15 to flake.
271 const size_t kAreaRadius = 1<<29;
272 bool in_default_mmap_heap = ArePointersToSameArea(
273 ptr.get(), default_mmap_heap_address, kAreaRadius);
274 EXPECT_FALSE(in_default_mmap_heap);
276 bool in_default_brk_heap = ArePointersToSameArea(
277 ptr.get(), brk_heap_address, kAreaRadius);
278 EXPECT_FALSE(in_default_brk_heap);
280 // In the implementation, we always mask our random addresses with
281 // kRandomMask, so we use it as an additional detection mechanism.
282 const uintptr_t kRandomMask = 0x3fffffffffffULL;
283 bool impossible_random_address =
284 reinterpret_cast<uintptr_t>(ptr.get()) & ~kRandomMask;
285 EXPECT_FALSE(impossible_random_address);
288 #endif // (defined(OS_LINUX) || defined(OS_CHROMEOS)) && defined(__x86_64__)
290 } // namespace