Le0nn / sys

Sys: A Static/Symbolic Tool for Finding Good Bugs in Good (Browser) Code

Home Page:https://cseweb.ucsd.edu/~dstefan/pubs/brown:2020:sys.pdf

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Sys: A Static/Symbolic Tool for Finding Good Bugs in Good (Browser) Code

Install

Install dependencies

  • llvm-9
  • boolector configured with --shared option. See the build() and package() functions in this file as an example of how to install boolector after you clone it.
  • The Haskell tool Stack

Build project

Once you have all the dependencies installed you should be able to just build the tool:

stack build

Test

Once you built the tool you can build and run our tests with:

stack test

This will run a more-or-less full version of our test suite, along with regression tests for every bug that we list in the paper. The suite takes a little over two minutes on laptop with 64GB of RAM and 8 threads. All tests with one exception---a bug whose source we're having trouble tracking down---should pass. If anything else fails, try re-running the tests; the solver may have timed out (this hasn't happened on our machines, but since we can't give you a login for annonymity, its a possibility that it will happen on your machine).

If you just want to reproduce the paper results and nothing else, run:

stack test --ta '-p End-to-end'

Run

Once you built the tool you can now use it to find bugs!

stack exec sys

The tool takes several options:

  -d DIR    --libdir=DIR   directory (or file) to analyze
  -e EXTN   --extn=EXTN    file extension
  -c CHECK  --check=CHECK  checker to run
  • The -d option is used to specify the directory (containing the LLVM files) or a single LLVM file.
  • The -e option is used to specify the extension of files to check. This is useful when building your project with different optimizations levels (e.g., .ll-O0 for debug build with -O0 and .ll-O0_p for production).
    • ll matches all *.ll files
    • O0 matches all *.ll-O0 and *.ll-O0_p files
    • O1 matches all *.ll-O1 and *.ll-O1_p files
    • O2 matches all *.ll-O2 and *.ll-O2_p files
    • O3 matches all *.ll-O3 and *.ll-O3_p files
    • Og matches all *.ll-Og and *.ll-Og_p files
    • Os matches all *.ll-Os and *.ll-Os_p files
    • Oz matches all *.ll-Oz and *.ll-Os_z files
    • prod matches all *_p files
    • any matches all files
  • The -c option is used to specify the checker to run, one of:
    • uninit: Uninitialized memory checker
    • heapoob: Malloc OOB checker
    • concroob: Negative index OOB checker
    • userinput: User input checker

Example

To find the uninitialized memory access bug that our tool found in Firefox's Prio library:

$ stack exec sys -- -c uninit -e prod -d ./test/Bugs/Uninit/Firefox/serial.ll-O2_p

The tool flags two bugs. Let's look at the first:

Stack uninit bug
Name "serial_read_mp_array_73"
in 
Name "serial_read_mp_array"
path-to-file
[UnName 4,UnName 71]

If you inspect the serial_read_mp_array() function, the buggy block path is %4 (the first block) to %71,where we use [%73].

Directory structure

├── app            -- Executable used to run the checkers
├── src
│   ├── Checkers   -- Static and symbolic checkers
│   ├── Control    -- Logging helpers
│   ├── LLVMAST    -- LLVM AST interface
│   ├── InternalIR -- Internal IR used to represent paths for both static and symex
│   ├── Static     -- Static checker DSL
│   └── Symex      -- Symbolic DSL and execution engine
└── test           -- Tests

About

Sys: A Static/Symbolic Tool for Finding Good Bugs in Good (Browser) Code

https://cseweb.ucsd.edu/~dstefan/pubs/brown:2020:sys.pdf

License:GNU General Public License v2.0


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