11 LLVM has a simple code coverage instrumentation built in (SanitizerCoverage).
12 It inserts calls to user-defined functions on function-, basic-block-, and edge- levels.
13 Default implementations of those callbacks are provided and implement
14 simple coverage reporting and visualization,
15 however if you need *just* coverage visualization you may want to use
16 :doc:`SourceBasedCodeCoverage <SourceBasedCodeCoverage>` instead.
18 Tracing PCs with guards
19 =======================
21 With ``-fsanitize-coverage=trace-pc-guard`` the compiler will insert the following code
26 __sanitizer_cov_trace_pc_guard(&guard_variable)
28 Every edge will have its own `guard_variable` (uint32_t).
30 The compiler will also insert calls to a module constructor:
34 // The guards are [start, stop).
35 // This function will be called at least once per DSO and may be called
36 // more than once with the same values of start/stop.
37 __sanitizer_cov_trace_pc_guard_init(uint32_t *start, uint32_t *stop);
39 With an additional ``...=trace-pc,indirect-calls`` flag
40 ``__sanitizer_cov_trace_pc_indirect(void *callee)`` will be inserted on every indirect call.
42 The functions `__sanitizer_cov_trace_pc_*` should be defined by the user.
48 // trace-pc-guard-cb.cc
51 #include <sanitizer/coverage_interface.h>
53 // This callback is inserted by the compiler as a module constructor
54 // into every DSO. 'start' and 'stop' correspond to the
55 // beginning and end of the section with the guards for the entire
56 // binary (executable or DSO). The callback will be called at least
57 // once per DSO and may be called multiple times with the same parameters.
58 extern "C" void __sanitizer_cov_trace_pc_guard_init(uint32_t *start,
60 static uint64_t N; // Counter for the guards.
61 if (start == stop || *start) return; // Initialize only once.
62 printf("INIT: %p %p\n", start, stop);
63 for (uint32_t *x = start; x < stop; x++)
64 *x = ++N; // Guards should start from 1.
67 // This callback is inserted by the compiler on every edge in the
68 // control flow (some optimizations apply).
69 // Typically, the compiler will emit the code like this:
71 // __sanitizer_cov_trace_pc_guard(guard);
72 // But for large functions it will emit a simple call:
73 // __sanitizer_cov_trace_pc_guard(guard);
74 extern "C" void __sanitizer_cov_trace_pc_guard(uint32_t *guard) {
75 if (!*guard) return; // Duplicate the guard check.
76 // If you set *guard to 0 this code will not be called again for this edge.
77 // Now you can get the PC and do whatever you want:
78 // store it somewhere or symbolize it and print right away.
79 // The values of `*guard` are as you set them in
80 // __sanitizer_cov_trace_pc_guard_init and so you can make them consecutive
81 // and use them to dereference an array or a bit vector.
82 void *PC = __builtin_return_address(0);
84 // This function is a part of the sanitizer run-time.
85 // To use it, link with AddressSanitizer or other sanitizer.
86 __sanitizer_symbolize_pc(PC, "%p %F %L", PcDescr, sizeof(PcDescr));
87 printf("guard: %p %x PC %s\n", guard, *guard, PcDescr);
92 // trace-pc-guard-example.cc
94 int main(int argc, char **argv) {
98 .. code-block:: console
100 clang++ -g -fsanitize-coverage=trace-pc-guard trace-pc-guard-example.cc -c
101 clang++ trace-pc-guard-cb.cc trace-pc-guard-example.o -fsanitize=address
102 ASAN_OPTIONS=strip_path_prefix=`pwd`/ ./a.out
104 .. code-block:: console
106 INIT: 0x71bcd0 0x71bce0
107 guard: 0x71bcd4 2 PC 0x4ecd5b in main trace-pc-guard-example.cc:2
108 guard: 0x71bcd8 3 PC 0x4ecd9e in main trace-pc-guard-example.cc:3:7
110 .. code-block:: console
112 ASAN_OPTIONS=strip_path_prefix=`pwd`/ ./a.out with-foo
115 .. code-block:: console
117 INIT: 0x71bcd0 0x71bce0
118 guard: 0x71bcd4 2 PC 0x4ecd5b in main trace-pc-guard-example.cc:3
119 guard: 0x71bcdc 4 PC 0x4ecdc7 in main trace-pc-guard-example.cc:4:17
120 guard: 0x71bcd0 1 PC 0x4ecd20 in foo() trace-pc-guard-example.cc:2:14
125 **Experimental, may change or disappear in future**
127 With ``-fsanitize-coverage=inline-8bit-counters`` the compiler will insert
128 inline counter increments on every edge.
129 This is similar to ``-fsanitize-coverage=trace-pc-guard`` but instead of a
130 callback the instrumentation simply increments a counter.
132 Users need to implement a single function to capture the counters at startup.
137 void __sanitizer_cov_8bit_counters_init(char *start, char *end) {
138 // [start,end) is the array of 8-bit counters created for the current DSO.
139 // Capture this array in order to read/modify the counters.
146 **Experimental, may change or disappear in future**
148 With ``-fsanitize-coverage=inline-bool-flag`` the compiler will insert
149 setting an inline boolean to true on every edge.
150 This is similar to ``-fsanitize-coverage=inline-8bit-counter`` but instead of
151 an increment of a counter, it just sets a boolean to true.
153 Users need to implement a single function to capture the flags at startup.
158 void __sanitizer_cov_bool_flag_init(bool *start, bool *end) {
159 // [start,end) is the array of boolean flags created for the current DSO.
160 // Capture this array in order to read/modify the flags.
167 **Experimental, may change or disappear in future**
169 **Note:** this instrumentation might be incompatible with dead code stripping
170 (``-Wl,-gc-sections``) for linkers other than LLD, thus resulting in a
171 significant binary size overhead. For more information, see
172 `Bug 34636 <https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=34636>`_.
174 With ``-fsanitize-coverage=pc-table`` the compiler will create a table of
175 instrumented PCs. Requires either ``-fsanitize-coverage=inline-8bit-counters``,
176 or ``-fsanitize-coverage=inline-bool-flag``, or ``-fsanitize-coverage=trace-pc-guard``.
178 Users need to implement a single function to capture the PC table at startup:
183 void __sanitizer_cov_pcs_init(const uintptr_t *pcs_beg,
184 const uintptr_t *pcs_end) {
185 // [pcs_beg,pcs_end) is the array of ptr-sized integers representing
186 // pairs [PC,PCFlags] for every instrumented block in the current DSO.
187 // Capture this array in order to read the PCs and their Flags.
188 // The number of PCs and PCFlags for a given DSO is the same as the number
189 // of 8-bit counters (-fsanitize-coverage=inline-8bit-counters), or
190 // boolean flags (-fsanitize-coverage=inline=bool-flags), or trace_pc_guard
191 // callbacks (-fsanitize-coverage=trace-pc-guard).
192 // A PCFlags describes the basic block:
193 // * bit0: 1 if the block is the function entry block, 0 otherwise.
200 With ``-fsanitize-coverage=trace-pc`` the compiler will insert
201 ``__sanitizer_cov_trace_pc()`` on every edge.
202 With an additional ``...=trace-pc,indirect-calls`` flag
203 ``__sanitizer_cov_trace_pc_indirect(void *callee)`` will be inserted on every indirect call.
204 These callbacks are not implemented in the Sanitizer run-time and should be defined
206 This mechanism is used for fuzzing the Linux kernel
207 (https://github.com/google/syzkaller).
209 Instrumentation points
210 ======================
211 Sanitizer Coverage offers different levels of instrumentation.
213 * ``edge`` (default): edges are instrumented (see below).
214 * ``bb``: basic blocks are instrumented.
215 * ``func``: only the entry block of every function will be instrumented.
217 Use these flags together with ``trace-pc-guard`` or ``trace-pc``,
218 like this: ``-fsanitize-coverage=func,trace-pc-guard``.
220 When ``edge`` or ``bb`` is used, some of the edges/blocks may still be left
221 uninstrumented (pruned) if such instrumentation is considered redundant.
222 Use ``no-prune`` (e.g. ``-fsanitize-coverage=bb,no-prune,trace-pc-guard``)
223 to disable pruning. This could be useful for better coverage visualization.
238 It contains 3 basic blocks, let's name them A, B, C:
250 If blocks A, B, and C are all covered we know for certain that the edges A=>B
251 and B=>C were executed, but we still don't know if the edge A=>C was executed.
252 Such edges of control flow graph are called
253 `critical <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Control_flow_graph#Special_edges>`_.
254 The edge-level coverage simply splits all critical edges by introducing new
255 dummy blocks and then instruments those blocks:
270 Support for data-flow-guided fuzzing.
271 With ``-fsanitize-coverage=trace-cmp`` the compiler will insert extra instrumentation
272 around comparison instructions and switch statements.
273 Similarly, with ``-fsanitize-coverage=trace-div`` the compiler will instrument
274 integer division instructions (to capture the right argument of division)
275 and with ``-fsanitize-coverage=trace-gep`` --
276 the `LLVM GEP instructions <https://llvm.org/docs/GetElementPtr.html>`_
277 (to capture array indices).
278 Similarly, with ``-fsanitize-coverage=trace-loads`` and ``-fsanitize-coverage=trace-stores``
279 the compiler will instrument loads and stores, respectively.
281 Currently, these flags do not work by themselves - they require one
282 of ``-fsanitize-coverage={trace-pc,inline-8bit-counters,inline-bool}``
285 Unless ``no-prune`` option is provided, some of the comparison instructions
286 will not be instrumented.
290 // Called before a comparison instruction.
291 // Arg1 and Arg2 are arguments of the comparison.
292 void __sanitizer_cov_trace_cmp1(uint8_t Arg1, uint8_t Arg2);
293 void __sanitizer_cov_trace_cmp2(uint16_t Arg1, uint16_t Arg2);
294 void __sanitizer_cov_trace_cmp4(uint32_t Arg1, uint32_t Arg2);
295 void __sanitizer_cov_trace_cmp8(uint64_t Arg1, uint64_t Arg2);
297 // Called before a comparison instruction if exactly one of the arguments is constant.
298 // Arg1 and Arg2 are arguments of the comparison, Arg1 is a compile-time constant.
299 // These callbacks are emitted by -fsanitize-coverage=trace-cmp since 2017-08-11
300 void __sanitizer_cov_trace_const_cmp1(uint8_t Arg1, uint8_t Arg2);
301 void __sanitizer_cov_trace_const_cmp2(uint16_t Arg1, uint16_t Arg2);
302 void __sanitizer_cov_trace_const_cmp4(uint32_t Arg1, uint32_t Arg2);
303 void __sanitizer_cov_trace_const_cmp8(uint64_t Arg1, uint64_t Arg2);
305 // Called before a switch statement.
306 // Val is the switch operand.
307 // Cases[0] is the number of case constants.
308 // Cases[1] is the size of Val in bits.
309 // Cases[2:] are the case constants.
310 void __sanitizer_cov_trace_switch(uint64_t Val, uint64_t *Cases);
312 // Called before a division statement.
313 // Val is the second argument of division.
314 void __sanitizer_cov_trace_div4(uint32_t Val);
315 void __sanitizer_cov_trace_div8(uint64_t Val);
317 // Called before a GetElemementPtr (GEP) instruction
318 // for every non-constant array index.
319 void __sanitizer_cov_trace_gep(uintptr_t Idx);
321 // Called before a load of appropriate size. Addr is the address of the load.
322 void __sanitizer_cov_load1(uint8_t *addr);
323 void __sanitizer_cov_load2(uint16_t *addr);
324 void __sanitizer_cov_load4(uint32_t *addr);
325 void __sanitizer_cov_load8(uint64_t *addr);
326 void __sanitizer_cov_load16(__int128 *addr);
327 // Called before a store of appropriate size. Addr is the address of the store.
328 void __sanitizer_cov_store1(uint8_t *addr);
329 void __sanitizer_cov_store2(uint16_t *addr);
330 void __sanitizer_cov_store4(uint32_t *addr);
331 void __sanitizer_cov_store8(uint64_t *addr);
332 void __sanitizer_cov_store16(__int128 *addr);
338 With ``-fsanitize-coverage=control-flow`` the compiler will create a table to collect
339 control flow for each function. More specifically, for each basic block in the function,
340 two lists are populated. One list for successors of the basic block and another list for
341 non-intrinsic called functions.
343 **TODO:** in the current implementation, indirect calls are not tracked
344 and are only marked with special value (-1) in the list.
346 Each table row consists of the basic block address
347 followed by ``null``-ended lists of successors and callees.
348 The table is encoded in a special section named ``sancov_cfs``
362 The code above contains 4 basic blocks, let's name them A, B, C, D:
374 The collected control flow table is as follows:
375 ``A, B, C, null, null, B, D, null, @bar, null, C, D, null, null, D, null, null.``
377 Users need to implement a single function to capture the CF table at startup:
382 void __sanitizer_cov_cfs_init(const uintptr_t *cfs_beg,
383 const uintptr_t *cfs_end) {
384 // [cfs_beg,cfs_end) is the array of ptr-sized integers representing
385 // the collected control flow.
389 Disabling instrumentation with ``__attribute__((no_sanitize("coverage")))``
390 ===========================================================================
392 It is possible to disable coverage instrumentation for select functions via the
393 function attribute ``__attribute__((no_sanitize("coverage")))``. Because this
394 attribute may not be supported by other compilers, it is recommended to use it
395 together with ``__has_feature(coverage_sanitizer)``.
397 Disabling instrumentation without source modification
398 =====================================================
400 It is sometimes useful to tell SanitizerCoverage to instrument only a subset of the
401 functions in your target without modifying source files.
402 With ``-fsanitize-coverage-allowlist=allowlist.txt``
403 and ``-fsanitize-coverage-ignorelist=blocklist.txt``,
404 you can specify such a subset through the combination of an allowlist and a blocklist.
406 SanitizerCoverage will only instrument functions that satisfy two conditions.
407 First, the function should belong to a source file with a path that is both allowlisted
409 Second, the function should have a mangled name that is both allowlisted and not blocklisted.
411 The allowlist and blocklist format is similar to that of the sanitizer blocklist format.
412 The default allowlist will match every source file and every function.
413 The default blocklist will match no source file and no function.
415 A common use case is to have the allowlist list folders or source files for which you want
416 instrumentation and allow all function names, while the blocklist will opt out some specific
417 files or functions that the allowlist loosely allowed.
419 Here is an example allowlist:
423 # Enable instrumentation for a whole folder
425 # Enable instrumentation for a specific source file
427 # Enable instrumentation for all functions in those files
430 And an example blocklist:
434 # Disable instrumentation for a specific source file that the allowlist allowed
436 # Disable instrumentation for a specific function that the allowlist allowed
439 The use of ``*`` wildcards above is required because function names are matched after mangling.
440 Without the wildcards, one would have to write the whole mangled name.
442 Be careful that the paths of source files are matched exactly as they are provided on the clang
444 For example, the allowlist above would include file ``bar/b.cpp`` if the path was provided
445 exactly like this, but would it would fail to include it with other ways to refer to the same
446 file such as ``./bar/b.cpp``, or ``bar\b.cpp`` on Windows.
447 So, please make sure to always double check that your lists are correctly applied.
449 Default implementation
450 ======================
452 The sanitizer run-time (AddressSanitizer, MemorySanitizer, etc) provide a
453 default implementations of some of the coverage callbacks.
454 You may use this implementation to dump the coverage on disk at the process
459 .. code-block:: console
463 2 __attribute__((noinline))
464 3 void foo() { printf("foo\n"); }
466 5 int main(int argc, char **argv) {
471 % clang++ -g cov.cc -fsanitize=address -fsanitize-coverage=trace-pc-guard
472 % ASAN_OPTIONS=coverage=1 ./a.out; wc -c *.sancov
474 SanitizerCoverage: ./a.out.7312.sancov 2 PCs written
476 % ASAN_OPTIONS=coverage=1 ./a.out foo ; wc -c *.sancov
479 SanitizerCoverage: ./a.out.7316.sancov 3 PCs written
483 Every time you run an executable instrumented with SanitizerCoverage
484 one ``*.sancov`` file is created during the process shutdown.
485 If the executable is dynamically linked against instrumented DSOs,
486 one ``*.sancov`` file will be also created for every DSO.
491 The format of ``*.sancov`` files is very simple: the first 8 bytes is the magic,
492 one of ``0xC0BFFFFFFFFFFF64`` and ``0xC0BFFFFFFFFFFF32``. The last byte of the
493 magic defines the size of the following offsets. The rest of the data is the
494 offsets in the corresponding binary/DSO that were executed during the run.
499 A simple ``sancov`` tool is provided to process coverage files.
500 The tool is part of LLVM project and is currently supported only on Linux.
501 It can handle symbolization tasks autonomously without any extra support
502 from the environment. You need to pass .sancov files (named
503 ``<module_name>.<pid>.sancov`` and paths to all corresponding binary elf files.
504 Sancov matches these files using module names and binaries file names.
506 .. code-block:: console
508 USAGE: sancov [options] <action> (<binary file>|<.sancov file>)...
511 -print - Print coverage addresses
512 -covered-functions - Print all covered functions.
513 -not-covered-functions - Print all not covered functions.
514 -symbolize - Symbolizes the report.
517 -blocklist=<string> - Blocklist file (sanitizer blocklist format).
518 -demangle - Print demangled function name.
519 -strip_path_prefix=<string> - Strip this prefix from file paths in reports
527 ``.sancov`` files do not contain enough information to generate a source-level
528 coverage report. The missing information is contained
529 in debug info of the binary. Thus the ``.sancov`` has to be symbolized
530 to produce a ``.symcov`` file first:
532 .. code-block:: console
534 sancov -symbolize my_program.123.sancov my_program > my_program.123.symcov
536 The ``.symcov`` file can be browsed overlaid over the source code by
537 running ``tools/sancov/coverage-report-server.py`` script that will start
543 By default, .sancov files are created in the current working directory.
544 This can be changed with ``ASAN_OPTIONS=coverage_dir=/path``:
546 .. code-block:: console
548 % ASAN_OPTIONS="coverage=1:coverage_dir=/tmp/cov" ./a.out foo
549 % ls -l /tmp/cov/*sancov
550 -rw-r----- 1 kcc eng 4 Nov 27 12:21 a.out.22673.sancov
551 -rw-r----- 1 kcc eng 8 Nov 27 12:21 a.out.22679.sancov