// Copyright 2015 The Chromium Authors
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be
// found in the LICENSE file.
#include "ppapi/tests/test_nacl_irt_stack_alignment.h"
#include <stddef.h>
#include "ppapi/c/pp_var.h"
#include "ppapi/c/ppb_var.h"
#include "ppapi/cpp/instance.h"
#include "ppapi/cpp/module.h"
#include "ppapi/cpp/var.h"
#include "ppapi/tests/testing_instance.h"
// This whole test is really only meant for x86-32 NaCl (not PNaCl).
//
// This is a regression test for the IRT code being sensitive to stack
// alignment. The de jure ABI is that the stack should be aligned to
// 16 bytes at call sites. However, the de facto ABI is that the IRT
// worked in the past when called with misaligned stack. NaCl code is
// now compiled to expect the proper 16-byte alignment, but the IRT
// code must remain compatible with old binaries that failed to do so.
#if defined(__i386__)
REGISTER_TEST_CASE(NaClIRTStackAlignment);
bool TestNaClIRTStackAlignment::Init() {
var_interface_ = static_cast<const PPB_Var*>(
pp::Module::Get()->GetBrowserInterface(PPB_VAR_INTERFACE));
return var_interface_ && CheckTestingInterface();
}
void TestNaClIRTStackAlignment::RunTests(const std::string& filter) {
RUN_TEST(MisalignedCallVarAddRef, filter);
}
// This calls the given function with the stack explicitly misaligned.
// If the function (in the IRT) was compiled wrongly, it will crash.
void MisalignedCall(void (*func)(PP_Var), const PP_Var* arg)
asm("MisalignedCall") __attribute__((regparm(2)));
// regparm(2) means: First argument in %eax, second argument in %edx.
// Writing this with an inline asm would require explaining all the
// call-clobbers register behavior in the asm clobber list, which is a
// lot with all the SSE and FPU state. It's far simpler just to make
// it a function call the compiler knows is a function call, and then
// write the function itself in pure assembly.
asm("MisalignedCall:\n"
// Use an SSE register to copy the 16 bytes of memory.
// Note this instruction does not care about alignment.
// The pointer is not necessarily aligned to 16 bytes.
"movups (%edx), %xmm0\n"
// Set up a frame so we can recover the stack pointer after alignment.
"push %ebp\n"
"mov %esp, %ebp\n"
// Align the stack properly to 16 bytes.
"andl $-16, %esp\n"
// Now make space for the 16 bytes of argument data,
// plus another 4 bytes so the stack pointer is misaligned.
"subl $20, %esp\n"
// Copy the argument onto the (misaligned) top of stack.
"movups %xmm0, (%esp)\n"
// Now call into the IRT, and hilarity ensues.
"naclcall %eax\n"
// Standard epilogue.
"mov %ebp, %esp\n"
"pop %ebp\n"
"naclret");
std::string TestNaClIRTStackAlignment::TestMisalignedCallVarAddRef() {
PP_Var var;
var.type = PP_VARTYPE_INT32;
var.padding = 0;
var.value.as_int = 23;
ASSERT_EQ(sizeof(var), static_cast<size_t>(16));
// This will crash if the test fails.
MisalignedCall(var_interface_->AddRef, &var);
MisalignedCall(var_interface_->Release, &var);
PASS();
}
#endif // defined(__i386__)