Browse Source

Add a test that segfault handlers ignore non-wasm segfaults (#941)

This is the subject of #940 which while fixed is good to have a
regression test for!
pull/956/head
Alex Crichton 5 years ago
committed by GitHub
parent
commit
b69a061d23
No known key found for this signature in database GPG Key ID: 4AEE18F83AFDEB23
  1. 4
      crates/api/Cargo.toml
  2. 100
      crates/api/tests/host-segfault.rs

4
crates/api/Cargo.toml

@ -44,3 +44,7 @@ default = ['wat']
# to cranelift. Requires Nightly Rust currently, and this is not enabled by
# default.
lightbeam = ["wasmtime-jit/lightbeam"]
[[test]]
name = "host-segfault"
harness = false

100
crates/api/tests/host-segfault.rs

@ -0,0 +1,100 @@
// To handle out-of-bounds reads and writes we use segfaults right now. We only
// want to catch a subset of segfaults, however, rather than all segfaults
// happening everywhere. The purpose of this test is to ensure that we *don't*
// catch segfaults if it happens in a random place in the code, but we instead
// bail out of our segfault handler early.
//
// This is sort of hard to test for but the general idea here is that we confirm
// that execution made it to our `segfault` function by printing something, and
// then we also make sure that stderr is empty to confirm that no weird panics
// happened or anything like that.
use std::env;
use std::process::{Command, ExitStatus};
use wasmtime::*;
const VAR_NAME: &str = "__TEST_TO_RUN";
const CONFIRM: &str = "well at least we ran up to the segfault\n";
fn segfault() -> ! {
unsafe {
print!("{}", CONFIRM);
*(0x4 as *mut i32) = 3;
unreachable!()
}
}
fn main() {
let tests: &[(&str, fn())] = &[
("normal segfault", || segfault()),
("make instance then segfault", || {
let store = Store::default();
let module = Module::new(&store, "(module)").unwrap();
let _instance = Instance::new(&module, &[]).unwrap();
segfault();
}),
];
match env::var(VAR_NAME) {
Ok(s) => {
let test = tests
.iter()
.find(|p| p.0 == s)
.expect("failed to find test")
.1;
test();
}
Err(_) => {
for (name, _test) in tests {
runtest(name);
}
}
}
}
fn runtest(name: &str) {
let me = env::current_exe().unwrap();
let mut cmd = Command::new(me);
cmd.env(VAR_NAME, name);
let output = cmd.output().expect("failed to spawn subprocess");
let stdout = String::from_utf8_lossy(&output.stdout);
let stderr = String::from_utf8_lossy(&output.stderr);
let mut desc = format!("got status: {}", output.status);
if !stdout.trim().is_empty() {
desc.push_str("\nstdout: ----\n");
desc.push_str(" ");
desc.push_str(&stdout.replace("\n", "\n "));
}
if !stderr.trim().is_empty() {
desc.push_str("\nstderr: ----\n");
desc.push_str(" ");
desc.push_str(&stderr.replace("\n", "\n "));
}
if is_segfault(&output.status) {
assert!(
stdout.ends_with(CONFIRM) && stderr.is_empty(),
"failed to find confirmation in test `{}`\n{}",
name,
desc
);
} else {
panic!("\n\nexpected a segfault on `{}`\n{}\n\n", name, desc);
}
}
#[cfg(unix)]
fn is_segfault(status: &ExitStatus) -> bool {
use std::os::unix::prelude::*;
match status.signal() {
Some(libc::SIGSEGV) | Some(libc::SIGBUS) => true,
_ => false,
}
}
#[cfg(windows)]
fn is_segfault(status: &ExitStatus) -> bool {
match status.code().map(|s| s as u32) {
Some(0xc0000005) => true,
_ => false,
}
}
Loading…
Cancel
Save