1 ================================
2 Application Data Integrity (ADI)
3 ================================
5 SPARC M7 processor adds the Application Data Integrity (ADI) feature.
6 ADI allows a task to set version tags on any subset of its address
7 space. Once ADI is enabled and version tags are set for ranges of
8 address space of a task, the processor will compare the tag in pointers
9 to memory in these ranges to the version set by the application
10 previously. Access to memory is granted only if the tag in given pointer
11 matches the tag set by the application. In case of mismatch, processor
14 Following steps must be taken by a task to enable ADI fully:
16 1. Set the user mode PSTATE.mcde bit. This acts as master switch for
17 the task's entire address space to enable/disable ADI for the task.
19 2. Set TTE.mcd bit on any TLB entries that correspond to the range of
20 addresses ADI is being enabled on. MMU checks the version tag only
21 on the pages that have TTE.mcd bit set.
23 3. Set the version tag for virtual addresses using stxa instruction
24 and one of the MCD specific ASIs. Each stxa instruction sets the
25 given tag for one ADI block size number of bytes. This step must
26 be repeated for entire page to set tags for entire page.
28 ADI block size for the platform is provided by the hypervisor to kernel
29 in machine description tables. Hypervisor also provides the number of
30 top bits in the virtual address that specify the version tag. Once
31 version tag has been set for a memory location, the tag is stored in the
32 physical memory and the same tag must be present in the ADI version tag
33 bits of the virtual address being presented to the MMU. For example on
34 SPARC M7 processor, MMU uses bits 63-60 for version tags and ADI block
35 size is same as cacheline size which is 64 bytes. A task that sets ADI
36 version to, say 10, on a range of memory, must access that memory using
37 virtual addresses that contain 0xa in bits 63-60.
39 ADI is enabled on a set of pages using mprotect() with PROT_ADI flag.
40 When ADI is enabled on a set of pages by a task for the first time,
41 kernel sets the PSTATE.mcde bit fot the task. Version tags for memory
42 addresses are set with an stxa instruction on the addresses using
43 ASI_MCD_PRIMARY or ASI_MCD_ST_BLKINIT_PRIMARY. ADI block size is
44 provided by the hypervisor to the kernel. Kernel returns the value of
45 ADI block size to userspace using auxiliary vector along with other ADI
46 info. Following auxiliary vectors are provided by the kernel:
48 ============ ===========================================
49 AT_ADI_BLKSZ ADI block size. This is the granularity and
50 alignment, in bytes, of ADI versioning.
51 AT_ADI_NBITS Number of ADI version bits in the VA
52 ============ ===========================================
58 - Version tag values of 0x0 and 0xf are reserved. These values match any
59 tag in virtual address and never generate a mismatch exception.
61 - Version tags are set on virtual addresses from userspace even though
62 tags are stored in physical memory. Tags are set on a physical page
63 after it has been allocated to a task and a pte has been created for
66 - When a task frees a memory page it had set version tags on, the page
67 goes back to free page pool. When this page is re-allocated to a task,
68 kernel clears the page using block initialization ASI which clears the
69 version tags as well for the page. If a page allocated to a task is
70 freed and allocated back to the same task, old version tags set by the
71 task on that page will no longer be present.
73 - ADI tag mismatches are not detected for non-faulting loads.
75 - Kernel does not set any tags for user pages and it is entirely a
76 task's responsibility to set any version tags. Kernel does ensure the
77 version tags are preserved if a page is swapped out to the disk and
78 swapped back in. It also preserves that version tags if a page is
81 - ADI works for any size pages. A userspace task need not be aware of
82 page size when using ADI. It can simply select a virtual address
83 range, enable ADI on the range using mprotect() and set version tags
84 for the entire range. mprotect() ensures range is aligned to page size
85 and is a multiple of page size.
87 - ADI tags can only be set on writable memory. For example, ADI tags can
88 not be set on read-only mappings.
95 With ADI enabled, following new traps may occur:
97 Disrupting memory corruption
98 ----------------------------
100 When a store accesses a memory localtion that has TTE.mcd=1,
101 the task is running with ADI enabled (PSTATE.mcde=1), and the ADI
102 tag in the address used (bits 63:60) does not match the tag set on
103 the corresponding cacheline, a memory corruption trap occurs. By
104 default, it is a disrupting trap and is sent to the hypervisor
105 first. Hypervisor creates a sun4v error report and sends a
106 resumable error (TT=0x7e) trap to the kernel. The kernel sends
107 a SIGSEGV to the task that resulted in this trap with the following
110 siginfo.si_signo = SIGSEGV;
112 siginfo.si_code = SEGV_ADIDERR;
113 siginfo.si_addr = addr; /* PC where first mismatch occurred */
114 siginfo.si_trapno = 0;
117 Precise memory corruption
118 -------------------------
120 When a store accesses a memory location that has TTE.mcd=1,
121 the task is running with ADI enabled (PSTATE.mcde=1), and the ADI
122 tag in the address used (bits 63:60) does not match the tag set on
123 the corresponding cacheline, a memory corruption trap occurs. If
124 MCD precise exception is enabled (MCDPERR=1), a precise
125 exception is sent to the kernel with TT=0x1a. The kernel sends
126 a SIGSEGV to the task that resulted in this trap with the following
129 siginfo.si_signo = SIGSEGV;
131 siginfo.si_code = SEGV_ADIPERR;
132 siginfo.si_addr = addr; /* address that caused trap */
133 siginfo.si_trapno = 0;
136 ADI tag mismatch on a load always results in precise trap.
142 When a task has not enabled ADI and attempts to set ADI version
143 on a memory address, processor sends an MCD disabled trap. This
144 trap is handled by hypervisor first and the hypervisor vectors this
145 trap through to the kernel as Data Access Exception trap with
146 fault type set to 0xa (invalid ASI). When this occurs, the kernel
147 sends the task SIGSEGV signal with following info::
149 siginfo.si_signo = SIGSEGV;
151 siginfo.si_code = SEGV_ACCADI;
152 siginfo.si_addr = addr; /* address that caused trap */
153 siginfo.si_trapno = 0;
156 Sample program to use ADI
157 -------------------------
159 Following sample program is meant to illustrate how to use the ADI
168 #include <sys/mman.h>
172 #define AT_ADI_BLKSZ 48
175 #define AT_ADI_NBITS 49
179 #define PROT_ADI 0x10
182 #define BUFFER_SIZE 32*1024*1024UL
184 main(int argc, char* argv[], char* envp[])
186 unsigned long i, mcde, adi_blksz, adi_nbits;
187 char *shmaddr, *tmp_addr, *end, *veraddr, *clraddr;
193 while(*envp++ != NULL);
194 for (auxv = (Elf64_auxv_t *)envp; auxv->a_type != AT_NULL; auxv++) {
195 switch (auxv->a_type) {
197 adi_blksz = auxv->a_un.a_val;
200 adi_nbits = auxv->a_un.a_val;
204 if (adi_blksz == 0) {
205 fprintf(stderr, "Oops! ADI is not supported\n");
209 printf("ADI capabilities:\n");
210 printf("\tBlock size = %ld\n", adi_blksz);
211 printf("\tNumber of bits = %ld\n", adi_nbits);
213 if ((shmid = shmget(2, BUFFER_SIZE,
214 IPC_CREAT | SHM_R | SHM_W)) < 0) {
215 perror("shmget failed");
219 shmaddr = shmat(shmid, NULL, 0);
220 if (shmaddr == (char *)-1) {
221 perror("shm attach failed");
222 shmctl(shmid, IPC_RMID, NULL);
226 if (mprotect(shmaddr, BUFFER_SIZE, PROT_READ|PROT_WRITE|PROT_ADI)) {
227 perror("mprotect failed");
231 /* Set the ADI version tag on the shm segment
235 end = shmaddr + BUFFER_SIZE;
236 while (tmp_addr < end) {
238 "stxa %1, [%0]0x90\n\t"
240 : "r" (tmp_addr), "r" (version));
241 tmp_addr += adi_blksz;
243 asm volatile("membar #Sync\n\t");
245 /* Create a versioned address from the normal address by placing
246 * version tag in the upper adi_nbits bits
248 tmp_addr = (void *) ((unsigned long)shmaddr << adi_nbits);
249 tmp_addr = (void *) ((unsigned long)tmp_addr >> adi_nbits);
250 veraddr = (void *) (((unsigned long)version << (64-adi_nbits))
251 | (unsigned long)tmp_addr);
253 printf("Starting the writes:\n");
254 for (i = 0; i < BUFFER_SIZE; i++) {
255 veraddr[i] = (char)(i);
256 if (!(i % (1024 * 1024)))
261 printf("Verifying data...");
263 for (i = 0; i < BUFFER_SIZE; i++)
264 if (veraddr[i] != (char)i)
265 printf("\nIndex %lu mismatched\n", i);
268 /* Disable ADI and clean up
270 if (mprotect(shmaddr, BUFFER_SIZE, PROT_READ|PROT_WRITE)) {
271 perror("mprotect failed");
275 if (shmdt((const void *)shmaddr) != 0)
276 perror("Detach failure");
277 shmctl(shmid, IPC_RMID, NULL);
282 if (shmdt((const void *)shmaddr) != 0)
283 perror("Detach failure");
284 shmctl(shmid, IPC_RMID, NULL);