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374 строки
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ReStructuredText
374 строки
14 KiB
ReStructuredText
Address Sanitizer
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=================
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What is Address Sanitizer?
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--------------------------
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Address Sanitizer (ASan) is a fast memory error detector that detects
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use-after-free and out-of-bound bugs in C/C++ programs. It uses a
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compile-time instrumentation to check all reads and writes during the
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execution. In addition, the runtime part replaces the ``malloc`` and
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``free`` functions to check dynamically allocated memory. More
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information on how ASan works can be found on `the Address Sanitizer
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wiki <https://github.com/google/sanitizers/wiki/AddressSanitizer>`__.
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A `meta bug called asan-maintenance <https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=asan-maintenance>`__
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is maintained to keep track of all the bugs found with ASan.
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Downloading artifact builds
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---------------------------
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For Linux and Windows users, the easiest way to get Firefox builds with
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Address Sanitizer is to download a continuous integration asan build of
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mozilla-central (updated at least daily):
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- mozilla-central optimized builds:
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`linux <https://firefox-ci-tc.services.mozilla.com/api/index/v1/task/gecko.v2.mozilla-central.latest.firefox.linux64-asan-opt/artifacts/public/build/target.tar.bz2>`__
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`windows <https://firefox-ci-tc.services.mozilla.com/api/index/v1/task/gecko.v2.mozilla-central.latest.firefox.win64-asan-opt/artifacts/public/build/target.zip>`__
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(recommended for testing)
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- mozilla-central debug builds:
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`linux <https://firefox-ci-tc.services.mozilla.com/api/index/v1/task/gecko.v2.mozilla-central.latest.firefox.linux64-asan-debug/artifacts/public/build/target.tar.bz2>`__
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`windows <https://firefox-ci-tc.services.mozilla.com/api/index/v1/task/gecko.v2.mozilla-central.latest.firefox.win64-asan-debug/artifacts/public/build/target.zip>`__
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(recommended for debugging if the optimized builds don't do the job)
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Creating Try builds
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-------------------
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If for some reason you can't use the pre-built binaries mentioned in the
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previous section (e.g. you want a non-Linux build or you need to test a
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patch), you can either build Firefox yourself (see the following
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section) or use the `try
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server </tools/try/>`__ to
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create the customized build for you. Pushing to try requires L1 commit
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access. If you don't have this access yet you can request access (see
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`Becoming A Mozilla
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Committer <https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/about/governance/policies/commit/>`__
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and `Mozilla Commit Access
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Policy <https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/about/governance/policies/commit/access-policy/>`__
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for the requirements).
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The tree contains `several mozconfig files for creating asan
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builds <https://searchfox.org/mozilla-central/search?q=&case=true&path=browser%2Fconfig%2Fmozconfigs%2F*%2F*asan*>`__
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(the "nightly-asan" files create release builds, whereas the
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"debug-asan" files create debug+opt builds). For Linux builds, the
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appropriate configuration file is used by the ``linux64-asan`` target.
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If you want to create a macOS or Windows build, you'll need to copy the
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appropriate configuration file over the regular debug configuration
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before pushing to try. For example:
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::
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cp browser/config/mozconfigs/macosx64/debug-asan browser/config/mozconfigs/macosx64/debug
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You can then `push to Try in the usual
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way </tools/try/index.html#using-try>`__
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and, once the build is complete, download the appropriate build
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artifact.
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Creating local builds on Windows
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--------------------------------
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On Windows, ASan is supported only in 64-bit builds.
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Run ``mach bootstrap`` to get an updated clang-cl in your
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``~/.mozbuild`` directory, then use the following
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`mozconfig <https://wiki.developer.mozilla.org/docs/Configuring_Build_Options>`__:
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::
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ac_add_options --target=x86_64-pc-mingw32
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ac_add_options --host=x86_64-pc-mingw32
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ac_add_options --enable-address-sanitizer
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ac_add_options --disable-jemalloc
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export CC="clang-cl.exe"
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export CXX="clang-cl.exe"
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export LDFLAGS="clang_rt.asan_dynamic-x86_64.lib clang_rt.asan_dynamic_runtime_thunk-x86_64.lib"
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CLANG_LIB_DIR="$(cd ~/.mozbuild/clang/lib/clang/*/lib/windows && pwd)"
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export MOZ_CLANG_RT_ASAN_LIB_PATH="${CLANG_LIB_DIR}/clang_rt.asan_dynamic-x86_64.dll"
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export LIB=$LIB:$CLANG_LIB_DIR
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If you want to use a different LLVM (see the `clang-cl
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instructions <https://wiki.developer.mozilla.org/docs/Mozilla/Developer_guide/Build_Instructions/Building_Firefox_on_Windows_with_clang-cl>`__),
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alter CLANG_LIB_DIR as appropriate.
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If you launch an ASan build under WinDbg, you may see spurious
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first-chance Access Violation exceptions. These come from ASan creating
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shadow memory pages on demand, and can be ignored. Run ``sxi av`` to
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ignore these exceptions. (You will still catch second-chance Access
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Violation exceptions if you actually crash.)
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LeakSanitizer (LSan) is not supported on Windows.
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Creating local builds on Linux or Mac
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-------------------------------------
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Build prerequisites
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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LLVM/Clang
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^^^^^^^^^^
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The ASan instrumentation is implemented as an LLVM pass and integrated
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into Clang. Any clang version that is capable of compiling Firefox has
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everything needed to do an ASAN build.
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Building Firefox
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Getting the source
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Using that or any later revision, all you need to do is to :ref:`get yourself
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a clone of mozilla-central <Mercurial overview>`.
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Adjusting the build configuration
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Create the build configuration file ``mozconfig`` with the following
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content in your mozilla-central directory:
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::
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# Combined .mozconfig file for ASan on Linux+Mac
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mk_add_options MOZ_OBJDIR=@TOPSRCDIR@/objdir-ff-asan
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# Enable ASan specific code and build workarounds
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ac_add_options --enable-address-sanitizer
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# Add ASan to our compiler flags
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export CFLAGS="-fsanitize=address -Dxmalloc=myxmalloc -fPIC"
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export CXXFLAGS="-fsanitize=address -Dxmalloc=myxmalloc -fPIC"
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# Additionally, we need the ASan flag during linking. Normally, our C/CXXFLAGS would
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# be used during linking as well but there is at least one place in our build where
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# our CFLAGS are not added during linking.
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# Note: The use of this flag causes Clang to automatically link the ASan runtime :)
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export LDFLAGS="-fsanitize=address"
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# These three are required by ASan
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ac_add_options --disable-jemalloc
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ac_add_options --disable-crashreporter
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ac_add_options --disable-elf-hack
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# Keep symbols to symbolize ASan traces later
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export MOZ_DEBUG_SYMBOLS=1
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ac_add_options --enable-debug-symbols
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ac_add_options --disable-install-strip
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# Settings for an opt build (preferred)
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# The -gline-tables-only ensures that all the necessary debug information for ASan
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# is present, but the rest is stripped so the resulting binaries are smaller.
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ac_add_options --enable-optimize="-O2 -gline-tables-only"
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ac_add_options --disable-debug
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# Settings for a debug+opt build
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#ac_add_options --enable-optimize
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#ac_add_options --enable-debug
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# MacOSX only: Uncomment and adjust this path to match your SDK
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# ac_add_options --with-macos-sdk=/Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Platforms/MacOSX.platform/Developer/SDKs/MacOSX10.8.sdk
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You may also need this, as seen in
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``browser/config/mozconfigs/linux64/nightly-asan`` (the config file used
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for Address Sanitizer builds used for automated testing):
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::
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# ASan specific options on Linux
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ac_add_options --enable-valgrind
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Starting the build process
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Now you start the build process using the regular ``./mach build``
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command.
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Starting Firefox
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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After the build has completed, ``./mach run`` with the usual options for
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running in a debugger (``gdb``, ``lldb``, ``rr``, etc.) work fine, as do
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the ``--disable-e10s`` and other options.
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Building only the JavaScript shell
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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If you want to build only the JavaScript shell instead of doing a full
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Firefox build, the build script below will probably help you to do so.
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Execute this script in the ``js/src/`` subdirectory and pass a directory
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name as the first parameter. The build will then be created in a new
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subdirectory with that name.
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::
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#! /bin/sh
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if [ -z $1 ] ; then
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echo "usage: $0 <dirname>"
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elif [ -d $1 ] ; then
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echo "directory $1 already exists"
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else
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autoconf2.13
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mkdir $1
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cd $1
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CC="clang" \
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CXX="clang++" \
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CFLAGS="-fsanitize=address" \
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CXXFLAGS="-fsanitize=address" \
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LDFLAGS="-fsanitize=address" \
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../configure --enable-debug --enable-optimize --enable-address-sanitizer --disable-jemalloc
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fi
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Getting Symbols in Address Sanitizer Traces
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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By default, ASan traces are unsymbolized and only print the
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binary/library and a memory offset instead. In order to get more useful
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traces, containing symbols, there are two approaches.
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Using the LLVM Symbolizer (recommended)
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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LLVM ships with a symbolizer binary that ASan will readily use to
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immediately output symbolized traces. To use it, just set the
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environment variable ``ASAN_SYMBOLIZER_PATH`` to reflect the location of
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your ``llvm-symbolizer`` binary, before running the process. This
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program is usually included in an LLVM distribution. Stacks without
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symbols can also be post-processed, see bellow.
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.. warning::
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.. note::
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**Warning:** On OS X, the content sandbox prevents the symbolizer
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from running. To use llvm-symbolizer on ASan output from a
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content process, the content sandbox must be disabled. This can be
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done by setting ``MOZ_DISABLE_CONTENT_SANDBOX=1`` in your run
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environment. Setting this in .mozconfig has no effect.
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Post-Processing Traces with asan_symbolize.py
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Instead of using the llvm-symbolizer binary, you can also pipe the
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output through the ``asan_symbolize.py`` script, shipped with LLVM
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(``$LLVM_HOME/projects/compiler-rt/lib/asan/scripts/asan_symbolize.py``),
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often included in LLVM distributions. The disadvantage is that the
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script will need to use ``addr2line`` to get the symbols, which means
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that every library will have to be loaded into memory
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(including``libxul``, which takes a bit).
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However, in certain situations it makes sense to use this script. For
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example, if you have/received an unsymbolized trace, then you can still
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use the script to turn it into a symbolized trace, given that you can
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get the original binaries that produced the unsymbolized trace. In order
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for the script to work in such cases, you need to ensure that the paths
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in the trace point to the actual binaries, or change the paths
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accordingly.
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Since the output of the ``asan_symbolize.py`` script is still mangled,
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you might want to pipe the output also through ``c++filt`` afterwards.
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Troubleshooting / Known problems
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Cannot specify -o when generating multiple output files
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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If you get the error
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"``cannot specify -o when generating multiple output files"`` from
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clang, disable ``elf-hack`` in your ``mozconfig`` to work around the
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issue:
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::
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ac_add_options --disable-elf-hack
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Optimized build
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Since `an issue with -O2/-Os and
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ASan <https://github.com/google/sanitizers/issues/20>`__
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has been resolved, the regular optimizations used by Firefox should work
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without any problems. The optimized build has only a barely noticeable
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speed penalty and seems to be even faster than regular debug builds.
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No "AddressSanitizer: **libc** interceptors initialized" shows after running ./mach run
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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::
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$ ASAN_OPTIONS=verbosity=2 ./mach run
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Use the above command instead
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"An admin user name and password" is required to enter Developer Mode
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Please enable **Developer** **mode** by:
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::
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$ /usr/sbin/DevToolsSecurity -enable
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Developer mode is now enabled.
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Debugging issues that ASan finds
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--------------------------------
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When ASan discovers an issue it will simply print an error message and
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exit the app. To stop the app in a debugger before ASan exits it, set a
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breakpoint on ``__asan::ReportGenericError``. For more info on using
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ASan and debugging issues that it uncovers, see the page `Address
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sanitizer and a
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debugger <https://github.com/google/sanitizers/wiki/AddressSanitizerAndDebugger>`__
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page on the upstream wiki.
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``__asan_describe_address(pointer)`` issued at the debugger prompt or
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even directly in the code allows outputting lots of information about
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this memory address (thread and stack of allocation, of deallocation,
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whether or not it is a bit outside a known buffer, thread and stack of
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allocation of this buffer, etc.). This can be useful to understand where
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some buffer that is not aligned was allocated, when doing SIMD work, for
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example.
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`rr <https://rr-project.org/>`__ (Linux x86 only) works great with ASan
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and combined, this combo allows doing some very powerful debugging
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strategies.
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LeakSanitizer
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-------------
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LeakSanitizer (LSan) is a special execution mode for regular ASan. It
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takes advantage of how ASan tracks the set of live blocks at any given
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point to print out the allocation stack of any block that is still alive
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at shutdown, but is not reachable from the stack, according to a
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conservative scan. This is very useful for detecting leaks of things
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such as ``char*`` that do not participate in the usual Gecko shutdown
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leak detection. LSan is supported on x86_64 Linux and OS X.
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LSan is enabled by default in ASan builds, as of more recent versions of
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Clang. To make an ASan build not run LSan, set the environment variable
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``ASAN_OPTIONS`` to ``detect_leaks=0`` (or add it as an entry to a
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``:``-separated list if it is already set to something). If you want to
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enable it when it is not for some reason, set it to 1 instead of 0. If
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LSan is enabled and you are using a non-debug build, you will also want
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to set the environment variable ``MOZ_CC_RUN_DURING_SHUTDOWN=1``, to
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ensure that we run shutdown GCs and CCs to avoid spurious leaks.
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If an object that is reported by LSan is intentionally never freed, a
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symbol can be added to ``build/sanitizers/lsan_suppressions.txt`` to get
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LSan to ignore it.
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For some more information on LSan, see the `Leak Sanitizer wiki
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page <https://github.com/google/sanitizers/wiki/AddressSanitizerLeakSanitizer>`__.
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A `meta bug called lsan <https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=lsan>`__
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is maintained to keep track of all the bugs found with LSan.
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