File: zero_page_pc.cpp

package info (click to toggle)
llvm-toolchain-11 1%3A11.0.1-2
  • links: PTS, VCS
  • area: main
  • in suites: bullseye
  • size: 995,808 kB
  • sloc: cpp: 4,767,656; ansic: 760,916; asm: 477,436; python: 170,940; objc: 69,804; lisp: 29,914; sh: 23,855; f90: 18,173; pascal: 7,551; perl: 7,471; ml: 5,603; awk: 3,489; makefile: 2,573; xml: 915; cs: 573; fortran: 503; javascript: 452
file content (16 lines) | stat: -rw-r--r-- 721 bytes parent folder | download | duplicates (13)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
// Check that ASan correctly detects SEGV on the zero page.
// RUN: %clangxx_asan %s -o %t && not %run %t 2>&1 | FileCheck %s

typedef void void_f();
int main() {
  void_f *func = (void_f *)0x4;
  func();
  // x86 reports the SEGV with both address=4 and pc=4.
  // On PowerPC64 ELFv1, the pointer is taken to be a function-descriptor
  // pointer out of which three 64-bit quantities are read. This will SEGV, but
  // the compiler is free to choose the order. As a result, the address is
  // either 0x4, 0xc or 0x14. The pc is still in main() because it has not
  // actually made the call when the faulting access occurs.
  // CHECK: {{AddressSanitizer: (SEGV|access-violation).*(address|pc) 0x0*[4c]}}
  return 0;
}