[llvm-dev] [cfe-dev] More verbose -mspeculative-load-hardening
Zola Bridges via llvm-dev
llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org
Thu Apr 23 12:59:53 PDT 2020
Hi milsegv,
I work on SLH. I haven't thought about the feature you'd like to see. It
sounds pretty interesting. What would you like to use it for? Are you
trying to learn more about how SLH works or are you hoping to use this
feature for your project? I'm also interested in what you're working on for
Spectre v1 detection if you'd like to share!
I'm not sure how to go from the Machine IR that the SLH pass works on to
the original C++ source code, so I can't give you advice on implementing
that in LLVM. Hopefully someone else can chime in who understands the LLVM
stack better than me.
*If you'd like to get a better understanding of how SLH works:*
Have you looked into using the LLVM_DEBUG macro? You can use it to print
where you want from the SLH pass.
Check it out here:
https://llvm.org/docs/ProgrammersManual.html#the-llvm-debug-macro-and-debug-option
You'll
have to add it where you want to see what SLH is doing in the
X86SpeculativeLoadHardening.cpp file and rebuild from source to get the new
error messages.
Another useful thing for you might be to pass either of these to clang when
you enable -mspeculative-load-hardening
- -mllvm -print-after-all
- -mllvm -print-after="x86-slh"
This will let you look at the code before and after the SLH transformations.
*If you want to implement this new feature that you want to build on:*
One thing about your question to print where SLH applies the mitigation.
I'd say the mitigation has multiple parts and it may be easier to
understand your problem if you get more granular about what you mean. Do
you want to know which loads in the C++ source get hardened? Or which
conditions had instrumentation added? There are the instruction sequences
that are added to track the predicate state and there are the instruction
sequences that are added to mask data dependent loads and probably other
parts that I can't think of off the top of my head. To figure out what you
want to print it might be helpful to read this design doc if you haven't
seen it: https://llvm.org/docs/SpeculativeLoadHardening.html.
Zola Bridges
On Wed, Apr 22, 2020 at 9:52 AM Praveen Velliengiri via cfe-dev <
cfe-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote:
> Hi
> I think llvm-dev list (CC'ed) have more visibility in this.
>
> On Wed, 22 Apr 2020 at 22:18, milsegv via cfe-dev <cfe-dev at lists.llvm.org>
> wrote:
>
>> Hello everyone,
>>
>> It may not be the best place to ask this but I found nothing on the
>> internet about it.
>> I'm working on Spectre V1 detection and stumbled upon the mitigation
>> provided by clang, the "-mspeculative-load-hardening" option. I found it
>> really interesting, and my question is the following: is there a way to
>> tweak the compiler to print a message whenever it applies the mitigation,
>> telling the user at which line of its code it applied the patch ?
>> I have no idea of the difficulty of such a feature, but I'm ready to
>> learn how to do it myself if anybody has time to tell me how to !
>>
>> Thanks for any help,
>> milsegv
>> _______________________________________________
>> cfe-dev mailing list
>> cfe-dev at lists.llvm.org
>> https://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/cfe-dev
>>
> _______________________________________________
> cfe-dev mailing list
> cfe-dev at lists.llvm.org
> https://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/cfe-dev
>
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20200423/c3be8cb3/attachment.html>
More information about the llvm-dev
mailing list