rust/src/operator.rs
2019-10-18 11:11:50 +09:00

147 lines
5.4 KiB
Rust

use rustc::ty::{Ty, layout::LayoutOf};
use rustc::mir;
use crate::*;
pub trait EvalContextExt<'tcx> {
fn pointer_inbounds(
&self,
ptr: Pointer<Tag>
) -> InterpResult<'tcx>;
fn binary_ptr_op(
&self,
bin_op: mir::BinOp,
left: ImmTy<'tcx, Tag>,
right: ImmTy<'tcx, Tag>,
) -> InterpResult<'tcx, (Scalar<Tag>, bool, Ty<'tcx>)>;
fn ptr_eq(
&self,
left: Scalar<Tag>,
right: Scalar<Tag>,
) -> InterpResult<'tcx, bool>;
fn pointer_offset_inbounds(
&self,
ptr: Scalar<Tag>,
pointee_ty: Ty<'tcx>,
offset: i64,
) -> InterpResult<'tcx, Scalar<Tag>>;
}
impl<'mir, 'tcx> EvalContextExt<'tcx> for super::MiriEvalContext<'mir, 'tcx> {
/// Test if the pointer is in-bounds of a live allocation.
#[inline]
fn pointer_inbounds(&self, ptr: Pointer<Tag>) -> InterpResult<'tcx> {
let (size, _align) = self.memory.get_size_and_align(ptr.alloc_id, AllocCheck::Live)?;
ptr.check_inbounds_alloc(size, CheckInAllocMsg::InboundsTest)
}
fn binary_ptr_op(
&self,
bin_op: mir::BinOp,
left: ImmTy<'tcx, Tag>,
right: ImmTy<'tcx, Tag>,
) -> InterpResult<'tcx, (Scalar<Tag>, bool, Ty<'tcx>)> {
use rustc::mir::BinOp::*;
trace!("ptr_op: {:?} {:?} {:?}", *left, bin_op, *right);
Ok(match bin_op {
Eq | Ne => {
// This supports fat pointers.
let eq = match (*left, *right) {
(Immediate::Scalar(left), Immediate::Scalar(right)) =>
self.ptr_eq(left.not_undef()?, right.not_undef()?)?,
(Immediate::ScalarPair(left1, left2), Immediate::ScalarPair(right1, right2)) =>
self.ptr_eq(left1.not_undef()?, right1.not_undef()?)? &&
self.ptr_eq(left2.not_undef()?, right2.not_undef()?)?,
_ => bug!("Type system should not allow comparing Scalar with ScalarPair"),
};
(Scalar::from_bool(if bin_op == Eq { eq } else { !eq }), false, self.tcx.types.bool)
}
Lt | Le | Gt | Ge => {
// Just compare the integers.
// TODO: Do we really want to *always* do that, even when comparing two live in-bounds pointers?
let left = self.force_bits(left.to_scalar()?, left.layout.size)?;
let right = self.force_bits(right.to_scalar()?, right.layout.size)?;
let res = match bin_op {
Lt => left < right,
Le => left <= right,
Gt => left > right,
Ge => left >= right,
_ => bug!("We already established it has to be one of these operators."),
};
(Scalar::from_bool(res), false, self.tcx.types.bool)
}
Offset => {
let pointee_ty = left.layout.ty
.builtin_deref(true)
.expect("Offset called on non-ptr type")
.ty;
let ptr = self.pointer_offset_inbounds(
left.to_scalar()?,
pointee_ty,
right.to_scalar()?.to_isize(self)?,
)?;
(ptr, false, left.layout.ty)
}
_ => bug!("Invalid operator on pointers: {:?}", bin_op)
})
}
fn ptr_eq(
&self,
left: Scalar<Tag>,
right: Scalar<Tag>,
) -> InterpResult<'tcx, bool> {
let size = self.pointer_size();
// Just compare the integers.
// TODO: Do we really want to *always* do that, even when comparing two live in-bounds pointers?
let left = self.force_bits(left, size)?;
let right = self.force_bits(right, size)?;
Ok(left == right)
}
/// Raises an error if the offset moves the pointer outside of its allocation.
/// We consider ZSTs their own huge allocation that doesn't overlap with anything (and nothing
/// moves in there because the size is 0). We also consider the NULL pointer its own separate
/// allocation, and all the remaining integers pointers their own allocation.
fn pointer_offset_inbounds(
&self,
ptr: Scalar<Tag>,
pointee_ty: Ty<'tcx>,
offset: i64,
) -> InterpResult<'tcx, Scalar<Tag>> {
// FIXME: assuming here that type size is less than `i64::max_value()`.
let pointee_size = self.layout_of(pointee_ty)?.size.bytes() as i64;
let offset = offset
.checked_mul(pointee_size)
.ok_or_else(|| err_panic!(Overflow(mir::BinOp::Mul)))?;
// Now let's see what kind of pointer this is.
let ptr = if offset == 0 {
match ptr {
Scalar::Ptr(ptr) => ptr,
Scalar::Raw { .. } => {
// Offset 0 on an integer. We accept that, pretending there is
// a little zero-sized allocation here.
return Ok(ptr);
}
}
} else {
// Offset > 0. We *require* a pointer.
self.force_ptr(ptr)?
};
// Both old and new pointer must be in-bounds of a *live* allocation.
// (Of the same allocation, but that part is trivial with our representation.)
self.pointer_inbounds(ptr)?;
let ptr = ptr.signed_offset(offset, self)?;
self.pointer_inbounds(ptr)?;
Ok(Scalar::Ptr(ptr))
}
}