Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Reverse-Engineering Instruction Encodings Wilson Hsieh, University of Utah Dawson Engler, Stanford University Godmar Back, University of Utah What’s the Problem? Dynamic code generation, JIT compilation – Emit instructions quickly – Therefore, avoid assembler Need to know how to produce binary instructions Want to express instructions in assembly “Generate add %l1, %l2, %l1 for SPARC” Reverse-Engineering Instruction Encodings USENIX ‘01 What Do We Do? How can I get the following mapping: assembly instruction binary format That mapping exists in the assembler already! assembly instruction assembler binary instruction So let’s reverse-engineer it out of the assembler. Reverse-Engineering Instruction Encodings USENIX ‘01 DERIVE Tool Chain instruction description DERIVE assembler Reverse-Engineering Instruction Encodings debugger encoding description code emitter generator disassembler JIT compiler code emitter USENIX ‘01 Instruction Descriptions /* SPARC fragment */ iregs = ( %g0, %g1, %g2, ..., %i6, %i7 ); and, andcc, andn, ... &op& r_1:iregs, r_2:iregs, r_dest:iregs | &op& r_1:iregs, imm, r_dest:iregs ; ba, bn, bne, … &op& | &op&”,a” ; Reverse-Engineering Instruction Encodings &label& &label& USENIX ‘01 DERIVE Tool Chain instruction description DERIVE assembler Reverse-Engineering Instruction Encodings debugger encoding description code emitter generator disassembler JIT compiler code emitter USENIX ‘01 Encoding Descriptions /* MIPS breakpoint instruction */ { “break”, “&op& imm”, 1, /* operand */ 4, /* bytes */ ... { 0xd, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, }, /* opcode information */ { /* operand information */ { “imm”, /* name */ IMMED, /* an immediate */ IDENT, /* encoded value = input value */ 0, /* lowest value */ 10, /* length */ ... 16, /* bit offset */ I_UNSIGNED, /* unsigned field */ ... }, } } Reverse-Engineering Instruction Encodings USENIX ‘01 DERIVE Tool Chain instruction description DERIVE assembler Reverse-Engineering Instruction Encodings debugger encoding description code emitter generator disassembler JIT compiler code emitter USENIX ‘01 Code Emitters /* x86 addl instruction */ #define E_addl_rr_1(_code, rf, rt) do {\ register unsigned short _0 = (0xc001\ | ((((rf)) << 11))\ | (((rt)) << 8)));\ *(unsigned short*)((char*) _code) = _0;\ _code = (void *)((char *) _code + 2);\ } while (0) /* emit “addl %ecx, %ebx” in code_buffer */ E_addl_rr_1(code_buffer, REGecx, REGebx); Reverse-Engineering Instruction Encodings USENIX ‘01 Instruction Model Opcode Registers (names) – Register sets 31 0 – Cache prefetch hints on MIPS – Address scale on x86 Immediates (integers) – Not registers Labels (jump targets) – Absolute jumps – Relative jumps Reverse-Engineering Instruction Encodings O P C O D E A R G A R G A R G 1 2 3 USENIX ‘01 Overall Strategy Solve for one field at a time – Hold other fields fixed and vary the desired field – Use randomization when necessary to find legal values Anything that is not in a field is the opcode Reverse-Engineering Instruction Encodings USENIX ‘01 Intuition Behind DERIVE Assembly instruction and %g7, %g6, %g0; and %g7, %g6, %g1; and %g7, %g6, %g2; and %g7, %g6, %g3; and %g7, %g6, %g4; and %g7, %g6, %g5; and %g7, %g6, %g6; and %g7, %g6, %g7; and %g7, %g6, %o0; and %g7, %g6, %o1; and %g7, %g6, %o2; and %g7, %g6, %o3; and %g7, %g6, %o4; Reverse-Engineering Instruction Encodings Binary encoding 0x8009 0xc006 0x8209 0xc006 0x8409 0xc006 0x8609 0xc006 0x8809 0xc006 0x8a09 0xc006 0x8c09 0xc006 0x8e09 0xc006 0x9009 0xc006 0x9209 0xc006 0x9409 0xc006 0x9609 0xc006 0x9809 0xc006 USENIX ‘01 DERIVE Structure Field Type Solver register fields register solver absolute jump targets immediate solver immediate fields immediate solver relative jump targets jump solver Reverse-Engineering Instruction Encodings USENIX ‘01 Register Solver Primary assumptions (for purposes of the talk): – Register fields are independent – All register values are legal Enumerate registers for one field at a time – Hold other fields constant – Solve each field separately Example: 3 register fields, 5 bits per field – 2^5 * 3 = 32 * 3 = 96 combinations Reverse-Engineering Instruction Encodings USENIX ‘01 Intuition Behind DERIVE Assembly instruction and %g7, %g6, %g0; and %g7, %g6, %g1; and %g7, %g6, %g2; and %g7, %g6, %g3; and %g7, %g6, %g4; and %g7, %g6, %g5; and %g7, %g6, %g6; and %g7, %g6, %g7; and %g7, %g6, %o0; and %g7, %g6, %o1; and %g7, %g6, %o2; and %g7, %g6, %o3; and %g7, %g6, %o4; Reverse-Engineering Instruction Encodings Binary encoding 0x8009 0xc006 0x8209 0xc006 0x8409 0xc006 0x8609 0xc006 0x8809 0xc006 0x8a09 0xc006 0x8c09 0xc006 0x8e09 0xc006 0x9009 0xc006 0x9209 0xc006 0x9409 0xc006 0x9609 0xc006 0x9809 0xc006 USENIX ‘01 Immediate Solver Primary assumptions: – Immediate field is a single range of bits in instruction Explore each bit size to find encoding of one field – Values of 1, 2, 4, 8, 16, ... – Again, hold other fields constant Example: 10-bit immediate field – 10 combinations Reverse-Engineering Instruction Encodings USENIX ‘01 Jump Solver Primary assumptions: – Label field is a single range of bits Emit jumps to different offsets – Find where label goes for encoding of “0” – Find smallest jump size – Find high bit by emitting a negative-valued jump Reverse-Engineering Instruction Encodings USENIX ‘01 Solving Time Processor Run Time (minutes) Description (lines) Alpha 6.3 104 ARM ~43. 227 MIPS 2.5 81 PowerPC 4.8 186 SPARC 4.8 97 ~240. 221 4.9 106 x86 x86-kaffe Reverse-Engineering Instruction Encodings USENIX ‘01 Instruction Emitter Generator Reads in DERIVE-generated specifications Produces C macros – Can generate runtime checks – Debugging support – Handles multiple instruction encodings – “Linkage” macros for backpatching Used to retarget Kaffe (publicly available JVM) on x86 – Reduced backend description from 20841267 lines (40%) Reverse-Engineering Instruction Encodings USENIX ‘01 Extensions Can handle instructions that take a subset of registers – SPARC double-word loads Special encodings that are register-dependent – %eax on x86 Can handle simple transformations – Low bits dropped off of jump offsets User can specify transformations – Address scaling on x86 User can specify registers that are dependent – PowerPC post-increment instructions Reverse-Engineering Instruction Encodings USENIX ‘01 Future Work Extending DERIVE – Fields that are broken up into multiple bit ranges – Memoization of computations ATOM-like tools – Reverse-engineering linkers Reverse-Engineering Instruction Encodings USENIX ‘01 Related Work Instruction encoding munging – NJ Toolkit [Ramsey & Fernández, USENIX 1995] Testing assemblers – NJ Toolkit [Fernández and Ramsey, ICSE 1997] Reverse engineering compiler technology – Retarget back-end generators [Collberg, PLDI 1997] Reverse-Engineering Instruction Encodings USENIX ‘01 Summary DERIVE is a cool hack, but it isn’t just a hack. – It is a useful tool. – It is a good proof of concept. – We did some clever tricks to build it. http://www.cs.utah.edu/~wilson/derive.tar.gz Reverse-Engineering Instruction Encodings USENIX ‘01