SGX: Clear additional flag on enclave entry
An attacker could set both the AC flag in CR0 as in rflags. This causes the enclave to perform an AEX upon a misaligned memory access, and an attacker learns some information about the internal enclave state.
The AC flag in rflags is copied from userspace upon an enclave entry. Upon AEX it is copied and later restored. This patch forces the rflag.AC bit to be reset right after an enter.
self-profiling: Update measureme to 0.4.0 and remove non-RAII methods from profiler.
This PR removes all non-RAII based profiling methods from `SelfProfilerRef` 🎉
It also delegates the `TimingGuard` implementation to `measureme`, now that that is available there.
r? @wesleywiser
Insurance policy in case `iter.size_hint()` lies.
Follow up to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/64949/files#r334235076.
(If the perf impact is bad we can use `debug_assert!` instead.)
The good news is that the UI tests pass locally so `iter.size_hint()` seems to be honest *thus far*.
On the other hand, with the status quo we do not have an insurance policy should that change in some case. This is problematic because a) this could possibly make some program be accepted which shouldn't, b) the compiler itself could have memory unsafety if the correctness of the iterator is assumed in `unsafe { ... }` code (even though the blame lies with the `unsafe { ... }` block in question.)
r? @RalfJung
cc @nnethercote
Use revisions to run the EFIABI in multiple configurations, compiling
for each supported UEFI platform, and checking the ABI generated in the
LLVM IR is correct.
Use no_core to make it easier to test.
Adds a new ABI for the EFIAPI calls. This ABI should reflect the latest
version of the UEFI specification at the time of commit (UEFI spec 2.8,
URL below). The specification says that for x86_64, we should follow the
win64 ABI, while on all other supported platforms (ia32, itanium, arm,
arm64 and risc-v), we should follow the C ABI.
To simplify the implementation, we will simply follow the C ABI on all
platforms except x86_64, even those technically unsupported by the UEFI
specification.
https://uefi.org/sites/default/files/resources/UEFI_Spec_2_8_final.pdf