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Re: return value buffer malloc()'ed vs alloca()'ed
- From: Andrew Haley <aph at redhat dot com>
- To: Igor Bogomazov <ygrex at ygrex dot ru>
- Cc: libffi-discuss at sourceware dot org
- Date: Tue, 08 Oct 2013 18:33:29 +0100
- Subject: Re: return value buffer malloc()'ed vs alloca()'ed
- Authentication-results: sourceware.org; auth=none
- References: <20131008101354 dot 43baeeeb at ygrex-mac>
On 10/08/2013 06:13 PM, Igor Bogomazov wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I've been trying to investigate valgrind warnings for a while and found
> an undocumented feature, please let me know if it is well-known.
>
> What I did.
>
> I modified a code given in Â2.2 Simple Example so that return value
> (rc), originally declared as (int), became an (int *)malloc(sizeof(int))
> so that it is resident in heap since that. Of cource, (&rc) replaced
> with (rc) later in the code.
>
> What I get.
>
> valgrind complaints about ÂInvalid write of size 8Â while ÂAddress
> 0x55ec040 is 0 bytes inside a block of size 4 alloc'dÂ, it is exactly
> that allocated (rc) buffer.
>
> Notes.
>
> Allocating buffer for the return value using alloca() does the trick and
> makes valgrind silent.
>
> Further.
>
> I looked at x86/unix64.S, it is exactly the line:
> movq %rax, (%rdi)
> that causes the valgrind's warning (at .Lst_uint32)
>
> That is my question: is it necessary to allocate a buffer for the return
> value with alloca() and never with malloc()?
As far as I can see, libffi always writes a whole word into the rvalue:
.Lst_uint8:
movzbq %al, %rax
movq %rax, (%rdi)
ret
.align 2
.Lst_sint8:
movsbq %al, %rax
movq %rax, (%rdi)
ret
.align 2
.Lst_uint16:
movzwq %ax, %rax
movq %rax, (%rdi)
.align 2
...
This looks quite deliberate, but it is rather different from what the
documentation specifies:
RVALUE is a pointer to a chunk of memory that will hold the result
of the function call. This must be large enough to hold the
result and must be suitably aligned; it is the caller's
responsibility to ensure this
So it's definitely a bug, but I don't know whether it's a bug in libffi or
in its documentation.
Andrew.