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Static Analysis of Executable Assembly Code to Ensure QA and Reuse. Ramakrishnan Venkitaraman Graduate Student, Research Track Computer Science, UT-Dallas Advisor: Dr. Gupta. Companies. Cost of Project. Software Reuse & System Integration. But, the Integrated System does not work. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Static Analysis of Executable Assembly Code to Ensure QA and Reuse
Ramakrishnan VenkitaramanGraduate Student, Research Track
Computer Science, UT-DallasAdvisor: Dr. Gupta
Software Reuse & System Integration
But, the Integrated System does not
work
Cost of ProjectCompanies
Outline
• Need for reusable software binaries
• Our framework for reuse of software binaries
• Automated tool to enforce standard compliance.
Need for reusable software binaries
• Most third-party software is proprietary.• COTS market place• No recompiling, only linking• Reduced development time• Fewer bugs• Time to Market
Scope of the Framework
• Gives the sufficient conditions for software binary code reusability.
• Usability vs. Reusability• Usability is a precondition for reusability• E.g. Array index out of bound reference.
Framework for reusable software Binaries
• Code should not be hard coded• Binaries should not be assumed to be located at a
fixed virtual memory location
• Code should be reentrant• No self-modifying code• Should not make symbol resolution invalid
Problem and Solution
• Problem: Detection of hard coded addresses in programs without accessing source code.
• Solution: “Static Program Analysis”
Interest in Static Analysis
• “We actually went out and bought for 30 million dollars, a company that was in the business of building static analysis tools and now we want to focus on applying these tools to large-scale software systems”
• Remarks by Bill Gates, 17th Annual ACM Conference on Object-Oriented Programming, Systems, Languages and Application, November 2002.
Static Analysis
• Defined as any analysis of a program carried out without completely executing the program.
• Un-decidability: Impossible to build a tool that will precisely detect hard coding.
Hard Coded Addresses
• Bad Programming Practice.
• Results in non relocatable code.
• Results in non reusable code.
Some examples showing hard-coding
void main(){ int * p = 0x8800;
// Some code
*p = …;}
Example1:Directly Hardcoded
void main(){ int *p = 0x80;
int *q = p;
//Some code
*q = …;}
Example2:Indirectly Hardcoded
void main(){ int *p, val;
p = ….;val = …;
if(val) p = 0x900;else p = malloc(…);
*p;}
Example3:Conditional Hardcoding
NOTE: We don’t care ifa pointer is hard coded and is never dereferenced.
Overview Of Our Approach
• Input: Object Code of the Software
• Output: Compliant or Not Compliant status
Activity Diagram for our Static Analyzer
Disassemble Object Code
Split Into Functions
Obtain Basic Blocks
Obtain Flow Graph
Static Analysis
Output the Result
Basic Aim Of Analysis
• Find a path to trace pointer origin.
• Problem: Exponential Complexity • Static Analysis approximation makes it linear
Analyzing Source Code – Easy#include<stdio.h>
void main(){ int *p, *q;
//some code
p = (int*)8000;
//some code
q = p;
//some code
*q = 5;}
{ { q } }
{ { p } }
P IS HARD CODED
So, the program is not compliant with the standard
Analyzing Assembly Code is Hard
• Problem• No type information is available• Instruction level pipeline and parallelism
• Solution• Backward analysis• Use Abstract Interpretation
Analyzing Assembly – Hard
000007A0 main:000007A0 07BD09C2 SUB.D2 SP,0x8,SP000007A4 020FA02A MVK.S2 0x1f40,B4000007A8 023C22F6 STW.D2T2 B4,*+SP[0x1]000007AC 00002000 NOP 2000007B0 023C42F6 STW.D2T2 B4,*+SP[0x2]000007B4 00002000 NOP 2000007B8 0280A042 MVK.D2 5,B5000007BC 029002F6 STW.D2T2 B5,*+B4[0x0]000007C0 00002000 NOP 2000007C4 008C8362 BNOP.S2 B3,4000007C8 07BD0942 ADD.D2 SP,0x8,SP000007CC 00000000 NOP 000007D0 00000000 NOP
{{ }}
{ { B4 } }
{{ B4 }}
B4 = 0x1f40
So, B4 is HARD CODED
Code is NOT Compliant
Abstract Interpretation Based Analysis
• Domains from which variables draw their values are approximated by abstract domains.
• The original domains are called concrete domains.
Phases In Analysis
• Phase 1: Find the set of dereferenced pointers.
• Phase 2: Check the safety of dereferenced pointers.
Building Unsafe Sets (Phase 1)
• The first element is added to the unsafe set during pointer dereferencing.• E.g. If “*Reg” in the disassembled code, the unsafe set is
initialized to {Reg}.
• ‘N’ Pointers Dereferenced ‘N’ Unsafe sets
• Maintained as SOUS (Set Of Unsafe Sets)
Populating Unsafe Sets (Phase 2)
• For e.g., if• Reg = reg1 + reg2, the element “Reg” is deleted
from the unsafe set, and the elements “reg1”, “reg2”, are inserted into the unsafe set.
• Contents of the unsafe set will now become {reg1, reg2}.
Handling Loops
• Complex: # iterations of loop may not be known until runtime.
• Cycle the loop until the unsafe set reaches a “fixed point”.• No new information is added to the unsafe set
during successive iterations.
Merging Information
• If no merging, then exponential complexity.
• Mandatory when loops
• Information loss.
If (Cond)
ThenBlock B
ElseBlock C
Block D
Block A
Block E
Proof – Analysis is Sound
• Consistency of α and γ functions is established by showing the existence of Galois Connection. That is,
• x = α(γ(x))• y belongs to γ(α(y))
Extensive Compliance Checking
• Handle all cases occurring in programs.
• Single pointer, double pointer, triple pointer…
• Global pointer variables.
• Static and Dynamic arrays.
Extensive Compliance Checking
• Loops – all forms (e.g. for, while…)
• Function calls.
• Pipelining and Parallelism.
• Merging information from multiple paths.
Analysis Stops when…
• Compliance of all the pointers are established.
• Errors and warnings are reported.
• Log file containing statistics of the analysis is created.
Analysis Results
Program # Lines # * Ptrs # Hard Coded
Chain Length
Running Time (ms)
t_read 80 3 0 0 1280
timer1 126 17 6 1 1441
mcbsp1 196 0 0 0 1270
figtest 292 19 10 2 1521
m_hdrv 345 6 2 1 2262
dat 949 10 8 12 2512
gui_codec 1139 109 28 1 3063
codec 1188 109 28 1 3043
stress 1203 105 0 1 4505
demo 1350 82 47 9 4716
Related Work
• UNO Project – Bell Labs• Analyze at source level
• TI XDAIS Standard• Contains 35 rules and 15 guidelines.• SIX General Programming Rules.
• No tool currently exists to check for compliance.
Current Status and Future Work
• Prototype Implementation done • But, context insensitive, intra-procedural
• Extend to context sensitive, inter-procedural.
• Extend compliance check for other rules.
So…
• Reuse of software binaries is essential.
• Hard Coding and non-reentrancy are bad programming practices. • Non relocatable/reusable code.
• A Static Analysis based technique is useful and practical.
TI XDAIS Standard• Six General Programming Rules
1) All programs should follow the runtime conventions of TI’s C programming language.
2) Algorithms must be re-entrant.
3) No hard coded data memory locations.
4) No hard coded program memory locations.
5) Algorithms must characterize their ROM-ability.
6) No peripheral device accesses.
• No tool exists to check for compliance
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