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| 179 | decky | 1 | \documentclass{llncs} |
| 2 | \usepackage{graphicx} |
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| 3 | |||
| 4 | \title{A Road to a Formally Verified General-Purpose Operating System} |
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| 5 | \author{Martin D\v{e}ck\'{y}} |
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| 180 | decky | 6 | \institute{Department of Distributed and Dependable Systems\\ |
| 184 | decky | 7 | Faculty of Mathematics and Physics, Charles University\\ |
| 8 | Malostransk\'{e} n\'{a}m\v{e}st\'{i} 25, Prague 1, 118~00, Czech Republic\\ |
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| 9 | \email{martin.decky@d3s.mff.cuni.cz}} |
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| 179 | decky | 10 | |
| 11 | \begin{document} |
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| 12 | \maketitle |
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| 13 | |||
| 14 | \begin{abstract} |
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| 15 | Methods of formal description and verification represent a viable way for achieving |
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| 16 | fundamentally bug-free software. However, in reality only a small subset of the existing operating |
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| 17 | systems were ever formally verified, despite the fact that an operating system is a critical part |
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| 180 | decky | 18 | of almost any other software system. This paper points out several key design choices which |
| 19 | should make the formal verification of an operating system easier and presents a work-in-progress |
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| 20 | and initial experiences with formal verification of HelenOS, a state-of-the-art microkernel-based |
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| 21 | operating system, which, however, was not designed specifically with formal verification in mind, |
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| 22 | as this is mostly prohibitive due to time and budget constrains. |
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| 179 | decky | 23 | |
| 24 | The contribution of this paper is the shift of focus from attempts to use a single ``silver-bullet'' |
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| 25 | formal verification method which would be able to verify everything to a combination of multiple |
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| 180 | decky | 26 | formalisms and techniques to successfully cover various aspects of the operating system. |
| 27 | A reliable and dependable operating system is the emerging property of the combination, |
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| 28 | thanks to the suitable architecture of the operating system. |
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| 179 | decky | 29 | \end{abstract} |
| 30 | |||
| 31 | \section{Introduction} |
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| 32 | \label{introduction} |
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| 180 | decky | 33 | Operating systems (OSes for short) have a somewhat special position among all software. |
| 34 | OSes are usually designed to run on bare hardware. This means that they do not require |
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| 35 | any special assumptions on the environment except the assumptions on the properties and |
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| 36 | behavior of hardware. In many cases it is perfectly valid to consider the hardware |
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| 183 | decky | 37 | as \emph{idealized hardware} (zero mathematical probability of failure, perfect compliance |
| 180 | decky | 38 | with the specifications, etc.). This means that it is solely the OS that defines the |
| 39 | environment for other software. |
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| 179 | decky | 40 | |
| 180 | decky | 41 | OSes represent the lowest software layer and provide services to essentially all other |
| 42 | software. Considering the principle of recursion, the properties of an OS form the |
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| 43 | assumptions for the upper layers of software. Thus the dependability of end-user and |
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| 44 | enterprise software systems is always limited by the dependability of the OS. |
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| 179 | decky | 45 | |
| 180 | decky | 46 | Finally, OSes are non-trivial software on their own. The way they are generally designed |
| 47 | and programmed (spanning both the kernel and user mode, manipulating execution contexts |
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| 48 | and concurrency, handling critical hardware-related operations) represent significant |
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| 49 | and interesting challenges for software analysis. |
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| 179 | decky | 50 | |
| 51 | \medskip |
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| 52 | |||
| 180 | decky | 53 | These are probably the most important reasons that led to several research initiatives |
| 54 | in the recent years which target the creation of a formally verified OSes from scratch |
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| 55 | (e.g. \cite{seL4}). Methods of formal description and verification provide fundamentally |
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| 56 | better guarantees of desirable properties than non-exhaustive engineering methods such |
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| 57 | as testing. |
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| 179 | decky | 58 | |
| 180 | decky | 59 | However, 98~\%\footnote{98~\% of client computers connected to the Internet as of January |
| 60 | 2010~\cite{marketshare}.} of the market share of general-purpose OSes is taken |
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| 61 | by Windows, Mac~OS~X and Linux. These systems were clearly not designed with formal |
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| 62 | verification in mind from the very beginning. The situation on the embedded, real-time |
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| 63 | and special-purpose OSes market is probably different, but it is unlikely that the |
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| 64 | segmentation of the desktop and server OSes market is going to change very rapidly |
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| 65 | in the near future. |
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| 179 | decky | 66 | |
| 180 | decky | 67 | The architecture of these major desktop and server OSes is monolithic, which makes |
| 68 | any attempts to do formal verification on them extremely challenging due to the large |
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| 183 | decky | 69 | state space. Fortunately we can observe that aspects of several novel approaches from |
| 180 | decky | 70 | the OS research from the late 1980s and early 1990s (microkernel design, user space |
| 71 | file system and device drivers, etc.) are slowly emerging in these originally purely |
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| 72 | monolithic implementations. |
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| 179 | decky | 73 | |
| 180 | decky | 74 | \medskip |
| 179 | decky | 75 | |
| 180 | decky | 76 | In this paper we show how specific design choices can markedly improve the feasibility |
| 77 | of verification of an OS, even if the particular OS was not designed |
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| 78 | specifically with formal verification in mind. These design choices can be gradually |
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| 79 | introduced (and in fact some of them have already been introduced) to mainstream |
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| 80 | general-purpose OSes. |
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| 179 | decky | 81 | |
| 180 | decky | 82 | Our approach is not based on using a single ``silver-bullet'' formalism, methodology or |
| 183 | decky | 83 | tool, but on combining various engineering, semi-formal and formal approaches. |
| 180 | decky | 84 | While the lesser formal approaches give lesser guarantees, they can complement |
| 85 | the formal approaches on their boundaries and increase the coverage of the set of |
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| 86 | all hypothetical interesting properties of the system. |
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| 179 | decky | 87 | |
| 180 | decky | 88 | We also demonstrate work-in-progress case study of an general-purpose research OS |
| 89 | that was not created specifically with formal verification in mind from the very |
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| 90 | beginning, but that was designed according to state-of-the-art OS principles. |
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| 179 | decky | 91 | |
| 92 | \medskip |
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| 93 | |||
| 180 | decky | 94 | \noindent\textbf{Structure of the Paper.} In Section \ref{design} we introduce |
| 95 | the design choices and our case study in more detail. In Section \ref{analysis} we |
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| 96 | discuss our approach of the combination of methods and tools. In Section \ref{evaluation} |
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| 97 | we present a preliminary evaluation of our efforts and propose the imminent next steps |
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| 98 | to take. Finally, in Section \ref{conclusion} we present the conclusion of the paper. |
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| 179 | decky | 99 | |
| 180 | decky | 100 | \section{Operating Systems Design} |
| 101 | \label{design} |
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| 102 | Two very common schemes of OS design are \emph{monolithic design} and \emph{microkernel design}. |
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| 103 | Without going into much detail of any specific implementation, we can define the monolithic design as |
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| 104 | a preference to put numerous aspects of the core OS functionality into the kernel, while microkernel |
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| 105 | design is a preference to keep the kernel small, with just a minimal set of features. |
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| 179 | decky | 106 | |
| 180 | decky | 107 | The features which are missing from the kernel in the microkernel design are implemented |
| 108 | in user space, usually by means of libraries, servers (e.g. processes/tasks) and/or software components. |
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| 179 | decky | 109 | |
| 110 | \subsection{HelenOS} |
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| 111 | \label{helenos} |
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| 180 | decky | 112 | \emph{HelenOS} is a general-purpose research OS which is being developed at Charles |
| 179 | decky | 113 | University in Prague. The source code is available under the BSD open source license and can be |
| 114 | freely downloaded from the project web site~\cite{helenos}. The authors of the code base are |
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| 115 | both from the academia and from the open source community (several contributors are employed |
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| 180 | decky | 116 | as Solaris kernel developers and many are freelance IT professionals). |
| 179 | decky | 117 | |
| 118 | HelenOS uses a preemptive priority-feedback scheduler, it supports SMP hardware and it is |
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| 119 | designed to be highly portable. Currently it runs on 7 distinct hardware architectures, including the |
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| 120 | most common IA-32, x86-64 (AMD64), IA-64, SPARC~v9 and PowerPC. It also runs on ARMv7 and MIPS, |
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| 121 | but currently only in simulators and not on physical hardware. |
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| 122 | |||
| 123 | Although HelenOS is still far from being an everyday replacement for Linux or Windows due to the lack |
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| 124 | of end-user applications (whose development is extremely time-consuming, but unfortunately of |
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| 125 | no scientific value), the essential foundations such as file system support and TCP/IP networking |
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| 126 | are already in place. |
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| 127 | |||
| 180 | decky | 128 | HelenOS does not currently target embedded devices (although the ARMv7 port can be very easily |
| 129 | modified to run on various embedded boards) and does not implement real-time features. |
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| 130 | Many development projects such as task snapshoting and migration, support for MMU-less |
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| 131 | platforms and performance monitoring are currently underway. |
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| 179 | decky | 132 | |
| 133 | \medskip |
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| 134 | |||
| 184 | decky | 135 | HelenOS can be briefly described as microkernel multiserver OS. However, the actual design |
| 180 | decky | 136 | guiding principles of the HelenOS are more elaborate: |
| 179 | decky | 137 | |
| 180 | decky | 138 | \begin{description} |
| 139 | \item[Microkernel principle] Every functionality of the OS that does not |
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| 179 | decky | 140 | have to be necessary implemented in the kernel should be implemented in user space. This |
| 141 | implies that subsystems such as the file system, device drivers (except those which are |
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| 142 | essential for the basic kernel functionality), naming and trading services, networking, |
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| 143 | human interface and similar features should be implemented in user space. |
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| 180 | decky | 144 | \item[Full-fledged principle] Features which need to be placed in kernel should |
| 145 | be implemented by full-fledged algorithms and data structures. In contrast |
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| 146 | to several other microkernel OSes, where the authors have deliberately chosen |
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| 179 | decky | 147 | the most simplistic approach (static memory allocation, na\"{\i}ve algorithms, simple data |
| 148 | structures), HelenOS microkernel tries to use the most advanced and suitable means available. |
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| 149 | It contains features such as AVL and B+ trees, hashing tables, SLAB memory allocator, multiple |
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| 150 | in-kernel synchronization primitives, fine-grained locking and so on. |
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| 180 | decky | 151 | \item[Multiserver principle] Subsystems in user space should be decomposed with the smallest |
| 179 | decky | 152 | reasonable granularity. Each unit of decomposition should be encapsulated in a separate task. |
| 153 | The tasks represent software components with isolated address spaces. From the design point of |
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| 184 | decky | 154 | view the kernel can be seen as a separate software component, too. |
| 155 | \item[Split of mechanism and policy] The kernel should only provide low-level me\-chanisms, |
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| 179 | decky | 156 | while the high-level policies which are built upon these mechanisms should be defined in |
| 157 | user space. This also implies that the policies should be easily replaceable while keeping |
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| 158 | the low-level mechanisms intact. |
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| 180 | decky | 159 | \item[Encapsulation principle] The communication between the tasks/components should be |
| 179 | decky | 160 | implemented only via a set of well-defined interfaces. In the user-to-user case the preferred |
| 161 | communication mechanism is HelenOS IPC, which provides reasonable mix of abstraction and |
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| 162 | performance (RPC-like primitives combined with implicit memory sharing for large data |
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| 163 | transfers). In case of synchronous user-to-kernel communication the usual syscalls are used. |
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| 164 | HelenOS IPC is used again for asynchronous kernel-to-user communication. |
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| 180 | decky | 165 | \item[Portability principle] The design and implementation should always maintain a high |
| 179 | decky | 166 | level of platform neutrality and portability. Platform-specific code in the kernel, core |
| 180 | decky | 167 | libraries and tasks implementing device drivers should be clearly separated from the |
| 168 | generic code (either by component decomposition or at least by internal compile-time APIs). |
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| 169 | \end{description} |
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| 179 | decky | 170 | |
| 180 | decky | 171 | In Section \ref{analysis} we argue that several of these design principles significantly improve |
| 172 | the feasibility of formal verification of the entire system. On the other hand, other design principles |
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| 173 | induce new interesting challenges for formal description and verification. |
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| 179 | decky | 174 | |
| 175 | The run-time architecture of HelenOS is inherently dynamic. The bindings between the components are |
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| 180 | decky | 176 | not created at compile-time, but during bootstrap and can be modified to a large degree also during |
| 177 | normal operation mode of the system (via human interaction and external events). |
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| 179 | decky | 178 | |
| 180 | decky | 179 | The design of the ubiquitous HelenOS IPC mechanism and the associated threading model present |
| 180 | the possibility to significantly reduce the size of the state space which needs to be explored |
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| 181 | by formal verification tools, but at the same time it is quite hard to express these |
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| 182 | constrains in many formalisms. The IPC is inherently asynchronous with constant message buffers |
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| 183 | in the kernel and dynamic buffers in user space. It uses the notions of uni-directional bindings, |
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| 184 | mandatory pairing of requests and replies, binding establishment and abolishment handshakes, |
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| 185 | memory sharing and fast message forwarding. |
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| 179 | decky | 186 | |
| 187 | For easier management of the asynchronous messages and the possibility to process multiple |
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| 188 | messages from different peers without the usual kernel threading overhead, the core user space |
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| 180 | decky | 189 | library manages the execution flow by so-called \emph{fibrils}. A fibril is a user-space-managed |
| 190 | thread with cooperative scheduling. A different fibril is scheduled every time the current fibril |
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| 191 | is about to be blocked while sending out IPC requests (because the kernel buffers of the addressee |
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| 179 | decky | 192 | are full) or while waiting on an IPC reply. This allows different execution flows within the |
| 180 | decky | 193 | same thread to process multiple requests and replies. To safeguard proper sequencing of IPC |
| 194 | messages and provide synchronization, special fibril-aware synchronization primitives |
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| 179 | decky | 195 | (mutexes, condition variables, etc.) are available. |
| 196 | |||
| 197 | Because of the cooperative nature of fibrils, they might cause severe performance under-utilization |
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| 198 | in SMP configurations and system-wide bottlenecks. As multicore processors are more and more |
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| 199 | common nowadays, that would be a substantial design flaw. Therefore the fibrils can be also freely |
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| 200 | (and to some degree even automatically) combined with the usual kernel threads, which provide |
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| 201 | preemptive scheduling and true parallelism on SMP machines. Needless to say, this combination is |
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| 202 | also a grand challenge for the formal reasoning. |
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| 203 | |||
| 204 | \medskip |
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| 205 | |||
| 180 | decky | 206 | Incidentally, the \emph{full-fledged principle} causes that the size of the HelenOS microkernel is |
| 207 | considerably larger compared to other ``scrupulous'' microkernel implementations. The average |
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| 208 | footprint of the kernel on IA-32 ranges from 569~KiB when all logging messages, asserts, symbol |
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| 209 | resolution and the debugging kernel console are compiled in, down to 198~KiB for a non-debugging |
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| 210 | production build. But we do not believe that the raw size of the microkernel is a relevant quality |
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| 211 | criterion per se, without taking the actual feature set into account. |
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| 212 | |||
| 213 | \medskip |
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| 214 | |||
| 179 | decky | 215 | To sum up, the choice of HelenOS as our case study is based on the fact that it was not designed |
| 180 | decky | 216 | in advance with formal verification in mind (some of the design principles might be beneficial, |
| 217 | but others might be disadvantageous), but the design of HelenOS is also non-trivial and not obsolete. |
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| 179 | decky | 218 | |
| 219 | \subsection{The C Programming Language} |
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| 180 | decky | 220 | A large majority of OSes is coded in the C programming language (HelenOS is no exception |
| 221 | to this). The choice of C in the case of kernel is usually well-motivated, since the C language was designed |
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| 222 | specifically for implementing system software~\cite{c}: It is reasonably low-level in the sense that it allows |
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| 223 | to access the memory and other hardware resources with similar effectiveness as from assembler; |
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| 179 | decky | 224 | It also requires almost no run-time support and it exports many features of the von Neumann hardware |
| 225 | architecture to the programmer in a very straightforward, but still relatively portable way. |
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| 226 | |||
| 227 | However, what is the biggest advantage of C in terms of run-time performance is also the biggest weakness |
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| 228 | for formal reasoning. The permissive memory access model of C, the lack of any reference safety |
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| 229 | enforcement, the weak type system and generally little semantic information in the code -- all these |
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| 184 | decky | 230 | properties do not allow to make many general assumptions about the code. |
| 179 | decky | 231 | |
| 184 | decky | 232 | Programming languages which target controlled environments such as Java and C\(\sharp\) are |
| 179 | decky | 233 | generally easier for formal reasoning because they provide a well-known set of primitives |
| 234 | and language constructs for object ownership, threading and synchronization. Many non-imperative |
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| 235 | programming languages can be even considered to be a form of ``executable specification'' and thus |
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| 236 | very suitable for formal reasoning. In C, almost everything is left to the programmer who |
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| 237 | is free to set the rules. |
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| 238 | |||
| 239 | \medskip |
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| 240 | |||
| 180 | decky | 241 | The reasons for frequent use of C in the user space of many established OSes (and HelenOS) is |
| 242 | probably much more questionable. In the case of HelenOS, except for the core libraries and tasks |
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| 243 | (such as device drivers), C might be easily replaced by any high-level and perhaps even |
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| 244 | non-imperative programming language. The reasons for using C in this context are mostly historical. |
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| 179 | decky | 245 | |
| 180 | decky | 246 | However, as we have stated in Section \ref{introduction}, the way general-purpose OSes |
| 179 | decky | 247 | are implemented changes only slowly and therefore any propositions which require radical modification |
| 248 | of the existing code base before committing to the formal verification are not realistic. |
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| 249 | |||
| 250 | \section{Analysis} |
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| 251 | \label{analysis} |
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| 252 | |||
| 253 | \begin{figure}[t] |
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| 254 | \begin{center} |
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| 182 | decky | 255 | \resizebox*{125mm}{!}{\includegraphics{diag}} |
| 179 | decky | 256 | \caption{Overview of the formalisms and tools proposed.} |
| 257 | \label{fig:diag} |
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| 258 | \end{center} |
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| 259 | \end{figure} |
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| 260 | |||
| 261 | In this section, we analyze the properties we would like to check in a general-purpose |
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| 183 | decky | 262 | OS. Each set of properties usually requires a specific verification method, tool or toolchain. |
| 179 | decky | 263 | |
| 180 | decky | 264 | Our approach will be mostly bottom-up, or, in other words, from the lower levels of abstraction |
| 179 | decky | 265 | to the higher levels of abstraction. If the verification fails on a lower level, it usually |
| 266 | does not make much sense to continue with the higher levels of abstraction until the issues |
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| 180 | decky | 267 | are tackled. A structured overview of the formalisms, methods and tools can be seen on |
| 268 | Figure \ref{fig:diag}. |
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| 179 | decky | 269 | |
| 180 | decky | 270 | \medskip |
| 271 | |||
| 272 | Some of the proposed methods cannot be called ``formal methods'' in the rigorous understanding |
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| 273 | of the term. However, even methods which are based on semi-formal reasoning and non-exhaustive |
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| 274 | testing provide some limited guarantees in their specific context. A valued property |
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| 275 | of the formal methods is to preserve these limited guarantees even on the higher levels |
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| 184 | decky | 276 | of abstraction, thus allowing the semi-formal methods to complement the big picture |
| 277 | where the formal methods do not provide any feasible verification so far. This increases |
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| 278 | the coverage of the set of all hypothetical interesting properties of the system (although |
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| 279 | it is probably impossible to formally define this entire set). |
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| 180 | decky | 280 | |
| 281 | \medskip |
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| 282 | |||
| 179 | decky | 283 | Please note that the titles of the following sections do not follow any particular established |
| 183 | decky | 284 | taxonomy. We have simply chosen the names to be intuitively descriptive. |
| 179 | decky | 285 | |
| 286 | \subsection{C Language Compiler and Continuous Integration Tool} |
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| 287 | \label{clang} |
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| 181 | decky | 288 | The initial levels of abstraction do not go far from the C source code and common engineering |
| 289 | approaches. First, we would certainly like to know whether our code base is compliant with the |
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| 290 | programming language specification and passes only the basic semantic checks (proper number |
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| 291 | and types of arguments passed to functions, etc.). It is perhaps not very surprising that |
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| 182 | decky | 292 | these decisions can be made by any plain C compiler. However, with the current implementation |
| 181 | decky | 293 | of HelenOS even this is not quite trivial. |
| 294 | |||
| 184 | decky | 295 | Besides the requirement to support 7 hardware platforms, the system's com\-pile-time configuration |
| 181 | decky | 296 | can be also affected by approximately 65 configuration options, most of which are booleans, |
| 297 | the rest are enumerated types. |
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| 179 | decky | 298 | |
| 299 | These configuration options are bound by logical propositions in conjunctive or disjunctive |
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| 300 | normal forms and while some options are freely configurable, the value of others gets inferred |
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| 181 | decky | 301 | by the build system of HelenOS. The overall number of distinct configurations in which |
| 179 | decky | 302 | HelenOS can be compiled is at least one order of magnitude larger than the plain number |
| 303 | of supported hardware platforms. |
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| 304 | |||
| 305 | Various configuration options affect conditional compilation and linking. The programmers |
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| 306 | are used to make sure that the source code compiles and links fine with respect to the |
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| 307 | most common and obvious configurations, but the unforeseen interaction of the less common |
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| 308 | configuration options might cause linking or even compilation errors. |
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| 309 | |||
| 310 | \medskip |
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| 311 | |||
| 312 | A straightforward solution is to generate all distinct configurations, starting from the |
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| 313 | open variables and inferring the others. This can be part of the continuous integration |
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| 314 | process which would try to compile and link the sources in all distinct configurations. |
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| 315 | |||
| 181 | decky | 316 | If we want to be really pedantic, we should also make sure that we run all higher |
| 179 | decky | 317 | level verification methods on all configurations generated by this step. That would certainly |
| 318 | require to multiply the time required by the verification methods at least by the number |
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| 319 | of the distinct configurations. Constraining the set of configurations to just the most |
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| 181 | decky | 320 | representative ones is perhaps a reasonable compromise to make the verification realistic. |
| 179 | decky | 321 | |
| 322 | \subsection{Regression and Unit Tests} |
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| 181 | decky | 323 | Running regression and unit tests which are part of HelenOS code base in the continuous |
| 324 | integration process is fairly easy. The only complication lies in the technicalities: |
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| 179 | decky | 325 | We need to setup an automated network of physical machines and simulators which can run the |
| 326 | appropriate compilation outputs for the specific platforms. We need to be able to reboot |
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| 327 | them remotely and distribute the boot images to them. And last but not least, we need to be |
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| 328 | able to gather the results from them. |
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| 181 | decky | 329 | |
| 330 | Testing is always non-exhaustive, thus the guarantees provided by tests are strictly limited |
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| 331 | to the use cases and contexts which are being explicitly tested. However, it is arguably |
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| 332 | easier to express many common use cases in the primary programming language than in some |
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| 333 | different formalism. As we follow the bottom-up approach, filtering out the most obvious |
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| 334 | bugs by testing can save us a lot of valuable time which would be otherwise waisted by |
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| 335 | a futile verification by more formal (and more time-consuming) methods. |
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| 179 | decky | 336 | |
| 337 | \subsection{Instrumentation} |
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| 338 | Instrumentation tools for detecting memory leaks, performance bottlenecks and soft-deadlocks |
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| 181 | decky | 339 | are also not usually considered to be formal verification tools (since it is hard to define |
| 340 | exact formal properties which are being verified by the non-exhaustive nature of these tools). |
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| 341 | They are also rarely utilized on regular basis as part of the continuous integration process. |
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| 342 | But again, it might be helpful to just mention them in the big picture. |
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| 179 | decky | 343 | |
| 344 | If some regression or unit tests fail, they sometimes do not give sufficient information to |
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| 345 | tell immediately what is the root cause of the issue. In that case running the faulting tests |
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| 346 | on manually or automatically instrumented executable code might provide more data and point |
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| 347 | more directly to the actual bug. |
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| 348 | |||
| 349 | \subsection{Verifying C Language Compiler} |
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| 181 | decky | 350 | C language compilers are traditionally also not considered to be formal verification tools. |
| 351 | Many people just say that C compilers are good at generating executable code, but do not |
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| 352 | care much about the semantics of the source code (on the other hand, formal verification |
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| 353 | tools usually do not generate any executable code at all). However, with recent development |
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| 354 | in the compiler domain, the old paradigms are shifting. |
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| 179 | decky | 355 | |
| 356 | As the optimization passes and general maturity of the compilers improve over time, |
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| 357 | the compilers try to extract and use more and more semantic information from the source code. |
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| 358 | The C language is quite poor on explicit semantic information, but the verifying compilers |
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| 359 | try to rely on vendor-specific language extensions and on the fact that some semantic information |
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| 360 | can be added to the source code without changing the resulting executable code. |
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| 361 | |||
| 362 | The checks done by the verifying compilers cannot result in fatal errors in the usual cases (they |
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| 363 | are just warnings). Firstly, the compilers still need to successfully compile a well-formed C source |
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| 364 | code compliant to some older standard (e.g. C89) even when it is not up with the current quality |
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| 365 | expectations. Old legacy source code should still pass the compilation as it did decades ago. |
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| 366 | |||
| 181 | decky | 367 | Secondly, the checks run by the verifying compilers are usually not based on abstract interpretation. |
| 368 | They are mostly realized as abstract syntax tree transformations much in the line with the supporting |
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| 369 | routines of the compilation process (data and control flow graph analysis, dead code elimination, |
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| 370 | register allocation, etc.) and the evaluation function is basically the matching of antipatterns |
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| 371 | of common programming bugs. |
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| 179 | decky | 372 | |
| 373 | The checks are usually conservative. The verifying compilers identify code constructs which are suspicious, |
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| 374 | which might arise out of programmer's bad intuition and so on, but even these code snippets cannot be |
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| 375 | tagged as definitive bugs (since the programmer can be simply in a position where he/she really wants to |
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| 376 | do something very strange, but nevertheless legitimate). It is upon the programmer |
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| 377 | to examine the root cause of the compiler warning, tell whether it is really a bug or just a false |
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| 378 | positive and fix the issue by either amending some additional semantic information (e.g. adding an |
||
| 379 | explicit typecast or a vendor-specific language extension) or rewriting the code. |
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| 181 | decky | 380 | |
| 381 | Although this level of abstraction is coarse-grained and conservative, it can be called semi-formal, |
||
| 382 | since the properties which are being verified can be actually defined quite exactly and they |
||
| 383 | are reasonably general. They do not deal with single traces of methods, runs and use |
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| 384 | cases like tests, but they deal with all possible contexts in which the code can run. |
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| 179 | decky | 385 | |
| 386 | \subsection{Static Analyzer} |
||
| 387 | Static analyzers try to go deeper than verifying compilers. Besides detecting common antipatterns of |
||
| 388 | bugs, they also use techniques such as abstract interpretation to check for more complex properties. |
||
| 389 | |||
| 390 | Most commercial static analyzers come with a predefined set of properties which cannot be easily changed. |
||
| 391 | They are coupled with the commonly used semantics of the environment and generate domain-specific models |
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| 392 | of the software based not only on the syntax of the source code, but also based on the assumptions derived |
||
| 393 | from the memory access model, allocation and deallocation rules, tracking of references and tracking of |
||
| 394 | concurrency locks. |
||
| 395 | |||
| 396 | The biggest advantage of static analyzers is that they can be easily included in the development or |
||
| 397 | continuous integration process as an additional automated step, very similar to the verifying compilers. |
||
| 181 | decky | 398 | No manual definition of code-specific properties is needed and false positives can be relatively easily |
| 399 | eliminated by amending some explicit additional information to the source code within the boundaries |
||
| 400 | of the programming language. |
||
| 179 | decky | 401 | |
| 181 | decky | 402 | The authors of static analyzers claim large quantities of bugs detected or prevented~\cite{billion}, |
| 403 | but static analyzers are still relatively limited by the kind of bugs they are designed to detect. |
||
| 404 | They are usually good at pointing out common issues with security implications (specific types of |
||
| 405 | buffer and stack overruns, usage of well-known functions in an unsafe way, clear cases of forgotten |
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| 179 | decky | 406 | deallocation of resources and release of locks, etc.). Unfortunately, many static analyzers |
| 407 | only analyze a single-threaded control flow and are thus unable to detect concurrency issues |
||
| 408 | such as deadlocks. |
||
| 409 | |||
| 410 | \subsection{Static Verifier} |
||
| 411 | There is one key difference between a static analyzer and a static verifier: Static verifiers |
||
| 412 | allow the user to specify one's own properties, in terms of preconditions, postconditions and |
||
| 413 | invariants in the code. Many static verifiers also target true multithreaded usage patterns |
||
| 414 | and have the capability to check proper locking order, hand-over-hand locking and even liveliness. |
||
| 415 | |||
| 183 | decky | 416 | In the context of an OS kernel and core libraries two kinds of properties are common: |
| 179 | decky | 417 | |
| 181 | decky | 418 | \begin{description} |
| 419 | \item[Consistency constrains] These properties define the correct way how data is supposed |
||
| 179 | decky | 420 | to be manipulated by some related set of subroutines. Checking for these |
| 421 | properties ensures that data structures and internal states will not get corrupt due |
||
| 422 | to bugs in the functions and methods which are designed to manipulate them. |
||
| 181 | decky | 423 | \item[Interface enforcements] These properties define the correct semantics by which |
| 179 | decky | 424 | a set of subroutines should be used by the rest of the code. Checking for these properties |
| 425 | ensures that some API is always used by the rest of the code in a specified way |
||
| 181 | decky | 426 | and all reported exceptions are handled by the client code. |
| 427 | \end{description} |
||
| 179 | decky | 428 | |
| 429 | \subsection{Model Checker} |
||
| 430 | \label{modelcheck} |
||
| 431 | On the first sight it does not seem to be reasonable to consider general model checkers as |
||
| 183 | decky | 432 | relevant independent tools for formal verification of an existing OS. While many different |
| 433 | tools use model checkers as their backends, verifying a complete model of the entire |
||
| 179 | decky | 434 | system created by hand seems to be infeasible both in the sense of time required for the model |
| 435 | creation and resources required by the checker to finish the exhaustive traversal of the model's |
||
| 184 | decky | 436 | state space. |
| 179 | decky | 437 | |
| 438 | Nevertheless, model checkers on their own can still serve a good job verifying abstract |
||
| 439 | properties of key algorithms without dealing with the technical details of the implementation. |
||
| 440 | Various properties of synchronization algorithms, data structures and communication protocols |
||
| 441 | can be verified in the most generic conditions by model checkers, answering the |
||
| 442 | question whether they are designed properly in theory. |
||
| 443 | |||
| 444 | If the implementation of these algorithms and protocols do not behave correctly, we can be sure |
||
| 445 | that the root cause is in the non-compliance between the design and implementation and not a |
||
| 446 | fundamental flaw of the design itself. |
||
| 447 | |||
| 181 | decky | 448 | \subsection{Architecture and Behavior Checker} |
| 449 | All previously mentioned verification methods were targeting internal properties of the OS |
||
| 450 | components. If we are moving to a higher-level abstraction in order to specify correct |
||
| 451 | interaction of the encapsulated components in terms of interface compatibility and communication, |
||
| 452 | we can utilize \emph{Behavior Protocols}~\cite{bp} or some other formalism describing correct |
||
| 453 | interaction between software components. |
||
| 179 | decky | 454 | |
| 181 | decky | 455 | To gain the knowledge about the architecture of the whole OS in terms of software |
| 456 | component composition and bindings, we can use \emph{Architecture Description Language}~\cite{adl} |
||
| 457 | as the specification of the architecture of the system. This language has the possibility to capture |
||
| 458 | interface types (with method signatures), primitive components (in terms of provided and required |
||
| 459 | interfaces), composite components (an architectural compositions of primitive components) and the |
||
| 460 | bindings between the respective interfaces of the components. |
||
| 179 | decky | 461 | |
| 181 | decky | 462 | It is extremely important to define the right role of the behavior and architecture description. |
| 463 | A flawed approach would be to reverse-engineer this description from the source code (either manually |
||
| 183 | decky | 464 | or via some sophisticated tool) and then verify the compliance between the description and |
| 181 | decky | 465 | the implementation. However, different directions can give more interesting results: |
| 466 | |||
| 467 | \begin{description} |
||
| 468 | \item[Description as specification] Behavior and architecture description created independently |
||
| 469 | on the source code serves the role of specification. This has the following primary |
||
| 470 | goals of formal verification: |
||
| 471 | \begin{description} |
||
| 472 | \item[Horizontal compliance] Also called \emph{compatibility}. The goal is to check |
||
| 473 | whether the specifications of components that are bound together are semantically |
||
| 474 | compatible. All required interfaces need to be bound to provided interfaces and |
||
| 475 | the communication between the components cannot lead to \emph{no activity} (a deadlock), |
||
| 476 | \emph{bad activity} (a livelock) or other communication and synchronization errors. |
||
| 184 | decky | 477 | \item[Vertical compliance] Also called \emph{substituability}. The goal is to check whe\-ther |
| 181 | decky | 478 | it is possible to replace a set of primitive components that are nested inside a composite |
| 479 | component by the composite component itself. In other words, this compliance can answer the |
||
| 184 | decky | 480 | question whether the architecture description of the system is sound with respect to the hierarchical |
| 181 | decky | 481 | composition of the components. |
| 184 | decky | 482 | \item[Specification and implementation compliance] Using various means |
| 483 | of generating artificial environments for an isolated component a checker is able to |
||
| 181 | decky | 484 | partially answer the question whether the implementation of the component is an instantiation |
| 485 | of the component specification. |
||
| 486 | \end{description} |
||
| 487 | \item[Description as abstraction] Generating the behavior and architecture description from the |
||
| 488 | source code by means of abstract interpretation can serve the purpose of verifying various |
||
| 489 | properties of the implementation such as invariants, preconditions and postconditions. |
||
| 490 | This is similar to static verification, but on the level of component interfaces. |
||
| 491 | \end{description} |
||
| 492 | |||
| 493 | Unfortunately, most of the behavior and architecture formalisms are static, which is not quite suitable |
||
| 184 | decky | 494 | for the dynamic nature of most OSes. This limitation can be circumvented by considering a relevant |
| 179 | decky | 495 | snapshot of the dynamic run-time architecture. This snapshot fixed in time is equivalent to |
| 496 | a statically defined architecture. |
||
| 497 | |||
| 181 | decky | 498 | \medskip |
| 179 | decky | 499 | |
| 181 | decky | 500 | The key features of software systems with respect to behavior and architecture checkers are the granularity |
| 501 | of the individual primitive components, the level of isolation and complexity of the communication mechanism |
||
| 183 | decky | 502 | between them. Large monolithic OSes created in semantic-poor C present a severe challenge because the |
| 181 | decky | 503 | isolation of the individual components is vague and the communication between them is basically unlimited |
| 504 | (function calls, shared resources, etc.). |
||
| 179 | decky | 505 | |
| 181 | decky | 506 | OSes with explicit component architecture and fine-grained components (such as microkernel multiserver |
| 507 | systems) make the feasibility of the verification much easier, since the degrees of freedom (and thus |
||
| 508 | the state space) is limited. |
||
| 509 | |||
| 179 | decky | 510 | Horizontal and vertical compliance checking can be done exhaustively. This is a fundamental property |
| 181 | decky | 511 | which allows the reasoning about the dependability of the entire component-based OS. |
| 179 | decky | 512 | Assuming that the lower-level verification methods (described in Sections \ref{clang} to \ref{modelcheck}) |
| 513 | prove some specific properties of the primitive components, we can be sure that the composition of |
||
| 181 | decky | 514 | the primitive components into composite components and ultimately into the whole OS |
| 179 | decky | 515 | does not break these properties. |
| 516 | |||
| 517 | The feasibility of many lower-level verification methods from Sections \ref{clang} to \ref{modelcheck} |
||
| 181 | decky | 518 | depends largely on the size and complexity of the code under verification. If the entire OS |
| 519 | is decomposed into primitive components with a fine granularity, it is more likely that the |
||
| 179 | decky | 520 | individual primitive components can be verified against a large number of properties. Thanks to the |
| 521 | recursive component composition we can then be sure that these properties also hold for the entire system. |
||
| 522 | |||
| 523 | \medskip |
||
| 524 | |||
| 525 | The compliance between the behavior specification and the actual behavior of the implementation is, unfortunately, |
||
| 526 | the missing link in the chain. This compliance cannot be easily verified in an exhaustive manner. If there is |
||
| 527 | a discrepancy between the specified and the actual behavior of the components, we cannot conclude anything about |
||
| 528 | the properties holding in the entire system. |
||
| 529 | |||
| 530 | However, there is one way how to improve the situation: \emph{code generation}. If we generate implementation |
||
| 531 | from the specification, the compliance between them is axiomatic. If we are able to generate enough |
||
| 532 | code from the specification to run into the hand-written ``business code'' where we check for |
||
| 533 | the lower-level properties, the conclusions about the component composition are going to hold. |
||
| 534 | |||
| 535 | \subsection{Behavior Description Generator} |
||
| 536 | To conclude our path towards higher abstractions we can utilize tools that can |
||
| 537 | generate the behavior descriptions from \emph{textual use cases} written in a domain-constrained English. |
||
| 538 | These generated artifacts can be then compared (e.g. via vertical compliance checking) with the formal |
||
| 539 | specification. Although the comparison might not provide clean-cut results, it can still be |
||
| 540 | helpful to confront the more-or-less informal user expectations on the system with the exact formal description. |
||
| 541 | |||
| 542 | \subsection{Summary} |
||
| 543 | \label{missing} |
||
| 181 | decky | 544 | So far, we have proposed a compact combination of engineering, semi-formal and formal methods which |
| 545 | start at the level of C programming language, offer the possibility to check for the presence of various |
||
| 546 | common antipatterns, check for generic algorithm-related properties, consistency constrains, interface |
||
| 547 | enforcements and conclude with a framework to make these properties hold even in the case of a large |
||
| 548 | OS composed from many components of compliant behavior. |
||
| 179 | decky | 549 | |
| 181 | decky | 550 | We do not claim that there are no missing pieces in the big picture or that the semi-formal verifications |
| 551 | might provide more guarantees in this setup. However, state-of-the-art OS design guidelines can push |
||
| 552 | further the boundaries of practical feasibility of the presented methods. The limited guarantees |
||
| 553 | of the low-level methods hold even in the composition and the high-level formal methods do not have |
||
| 554 | to deal with unlimited degrees of freedom of the primitive component implementation. |
||
| 179 | decky | 555 | |
| 556 | \medskip |
||
| 557 | |||
| 558 | We have spoken only about the functional properties. In general, we cannot apply the same formalisms |
||
| 559 | and methods on extra-functional properties (e.g. timing properties, performance properties, etc.). |
||
| 184 | decky | 560 | And although it probably does make a good sense to reason about component composition for the extra-functi\-onal |
| 179 | decky | 561 | properties, the exact relation might be different compared to the functional properties. |
| 562 | |||
| 563 | The extra-functional properties need to be tackled by our future work. |
||
| 564 | |||
| 565 | \section{Evaluation} |
||
| 566 | \label{evaluation} |
||
| 567 | This section copies the structure of the previous Section \ref{analysis} and adds HelenOS-specific |
||
| 568 | evaluation of the the proposed formalisms and tools. As this is still largely a work-in-progress, |
||
| 569 | in many cases just the initial observations can be made. |
||
| 570 | |||
| 181 | decky | 571 | The choice of the specific methods, tools and formalisms in this initial phase is mostly motivated |
| 572 | by their perceived commonality and author's claims about fitness for the given purpose. An important |
||
| 573 | part of further evaluation would certainly be to compare multiple particular approaches, tools |
||
| 574 | and formalisms to find the optimal combination. |
||
| 575 | |||
| 179 | decky | 576 | \subsection{Verifying C Language Compiler and Continuous Integration Tool} |
| 577 | The primary C compiler used by HelenOS is \emph{GNU GCC 4.4.3} (all platforms)~\cite{gcc} and \emph{Clang 2.6.0} |
||
| 578 | (IA-32)~\cite{clang}. We have taken some effort to support also \emph{ICC} and \emph{Sun Studio} C compilers, |
||
| 579 | but the compatibility with these compilers in not guaranteed. |
||
| 580 | |||
| 581 | The whole code base is compiled with the \texttt{-Wall} and \texttt{-Wextra} compilation options. These options turn on |
||
| 582 | most of the verification checks of the compilers. The compilers trip on common bug antipatterns such |
||
| 583 | as implicit typecasting of pointer types, comparison of signed and unsigned integer values (danger |
||
| 584 | of unchecked overflows), the usage of uninitialized variables, the presence of unused local variables, |
||
| 585 | NULL-pointer dereferencing (determined by conservative local control flow analysis), functions |
||
| 586 | with non-void return typed that do not return any value and so on. We treat all compilation warnings |
||
| 184 | decky | 587 | as fatal errors (\texttt{-Werror}), thus the code base must pass without any warnings. |
| 179 | decky | 588 | |
| 589 | We also turn on several more specific and strict checks. These checks helped to discover several |
||
| 590 | latent bugs in the source code: |
||
| 591 | |||
| 181 | decky | 592 | \begin{description} |
| 593 | \item[\texttt{-Wfloat-equal}] Check for exact equality comparison between floating point values. The |
||
| 179 | decky | 594 | usage of equal comparator on floats is usually misguided due to the inherent computational errors |
| 595 | of floats. |
||
| 181 | decky | 596 | \item[\texttt{-Wcast-align}] Check for code which casts pointers to a type with a stricter alignment |
| 179 | decky | 597 | requirement. On many RISC-based platforms this can cause run-time unaligned access exceptions. |
| 181 | decky | 598 | \item[\texttt{-Wconversion}] Check for code where the implicit type conversion (e.g. from float to integer, |
| 179 | decky | 599 | between signed and unsigned integers or between integers with different number of bits) can |
| 600 | cause the actual value to change. |
||
| 181 | decky | 601 | \end{description} |
| 179 | decky | 602 | |
| 603 | To enhance the semantic information in the source code, we use GCC-specific language extensions to annotate |
||
| 604 | some particular kernel and core library routines: |
||
| 605 | |||
| 181 | decky | 606 | \begin{description} |
| 607 | \item[\texttt{\_\_attribute\_\_((noreturn))}] Functions marked in this way never finish from the point of view |
||
| 179 | decky | 608 | of the current sequential execution flow. The most common case are the routines which restore previously saved |
| 609 | execution context. |
||
| 181 | decky | 610 | \item[\texttt{\_\_attribute\_\_((returns\_twice))}] Functions marked in this way may return multiple times from |
| 179 | decky | 611 | the point of view of the current sequential execution flow. This is the case of routines which save the current |
| 612 | execution context (first the function returns as usual, but the function can eventually ``return again'' |
||
| 613 | when the context is being restored). |
||
| 181 | decky | 614 | \end{description} |
| 179 | decky | 615 | |
| 616 | The use of these extensions has pointed out to several hard-to-debug bugs on the IA-64 platform. |
||
| 617 | |||
| 618 | \medskip |
||
| 619 | |||
| 620 | The automated continuous integration building system is currently work-in-progress. Thus, we do not |
||
| 621 | test all possible configurations of HelenOS with each changeset yet. Currently only |
||
| 622 | a representative set of 14 configurations (at least one for each supported platform) is tested by hand |
||
| 623 | by the developers before committing any non-trivial changeset. |
||
| 624 | |||
| 625 | From occasional tests of other configurations by hand and the frequency of compilation, linkage and |
||
| 626 | even run-time problems we conclude that the automated testing of all feasible configurations will |
||
| 627 | be very beneficial. |
||
| 628 | |||
| 629 | \subsection{Regression and Unit Tests} |
||
| 630 | As already stated in the previous section, the continuous integration building system has not been finished |
||
| 631 | yet. Therefore regression and unit tests are executed occasionally by hand, which is time consuming |
||
| 632 | and prone to human omissions. An automated approach is definitively going to be very helpful. |
||
| 633 | |||
| 634 | \subsection{Instrumentation} |
||
| 635 | We are in the process of implementing our own code instrumentation framework which is motivated mainly |
||
| 636 | by the need to support MMU-less architectures in the future. But this framework might be also very helpful |
||
| 181 | decky | 637 | in detecting memory and generic resource leaks. We have not tried \emph{Valgrind}~\cite{valgrind} or any similar |
| 638 | existing tool because of the estimated complexity to adopt it for the usage in HelenOS. |
||
| 179 | decky | 639 | |
| 640 | \subsection{Static Analyzer} |
||
| 641 | The integration of various static analyzers into the HelenOS continuous integration process is underway. |
||
| 642 | For the initial evaluation we have used \emph{Stanse}~\cite{stanse} and \emph{Clang Analyzer}~\cite{clanganalyzer}. |
||
| 643 | Both of them showed to be moderately helpful to point out instances of unreachable dead code, use of language |
||
| 644 | constructs which have ambiguous semantics in C and one case of possible NULL-pointer dereference. |
||
| 645 | |||
| 646 | The open framework of Clang seems to be very promising for implementing domain-specific checks (and at |
||
| 647 | the same time it is also a very promising compiler framework). Our mid-term goal is to incorporate some of the features |
||
| 648 | of Stanse and VCC (see Section \ref{staticverifier2}) into Clang Analyzer. |
||
| 184 | decky | 649 | |
| 650 | HelenOS was also scanned by \emph{Coverity}~\cite{coverity} in 2006 when no errors were detected. However, since |
||
| 651 | that time the code base has not been analyzed by Coverity. |
||
| 179 | decky | 652 | |
| 653 | \subsection{Static Verifier} |
||
| 654 | \label{staticverifier2} |
||
| 655 | We have started to extend the source code of HelenOS kernel with annotations understood |
||
| 656 | by \emph{Frama-C}~\cite{framac} and \emph{VCC}~\cite{vcc}. Initially we have targeted simple kernel data structures |
||
| 657 | (doubly-linked circular lists) and basic locking operations. Currently we are evaluating the initial experiences |
||
| 658 | and we are trying to identify the most suitable methodology, but we expect quite promising results. |
||
| 659 | |||
| 660 | As the VCC is based on the Microsoft C++ Compiler, which does not support many GCC extensions, we have been |
||
| 661 | faced with the requirement to preprocess the source code to be syntactically accepted by VCC. This turned out |
||
| 662 | to be feasible. |
||
| 663 | |||
| 664 | \subsection{Model Checker} |
||
| 665 | We are in the process of creating models of kernel wait queues (basic HelenOS kernel synchronization |
||
| 666 | primitive) and futexes (basic user space thread synchronization primitive) using \emph{Promela} and |
||
| 667 | verify several formal properties (deadlock freedom, fairness) in \emph{Spin}~\cite{spin}. As both the Promela language |
||
| 668 | and the Spin model checker are mature and commonly used tools for such purposes, we expect no major problems |
||
| 669 | with this approach. Because both synchronization primitives are relatively complex, utilizing a model checker |
||
| 670 | should provide a much more trustworthy proof of the required properties than ``paper and pencil''. |
||
| 181 | decky | 671 | |
| 672 | The initial choice of Spin is motivated by its suitability to model threads, their interaction and verify |
||
| 673 | properties related to race conditions and deadlocks (which is the common sources of OS-related bugs). Other |
||
| 674 | modeling formalisms might be more suitable for different goals. |
||
| 179 | decky | 675 | |
| 181 | decky | 676 | \subsection{Architecture and Behavior Checker} |
| 677 | We have created an architecture description in ADL language derived from \emph{SOFA ADL}~\cite{adl} for the |
||
| 678 | majority of the HelenOS components and created the Behavior Protocol specification of these components. |
||
| 679 | Both descriptions were created independently, not by reverse-engineering the existing source code. |
||
| 680 | The architecture is a snapshot of the dynamic architecture just after a successful bootstrap of HelenOS. |
||
| 179 | decky | 681 | |
| 682 | Both the architecture and behavior description is readily available as part of the source code repository |
||
| 683 | of HelenOS, including tools which can preprocess the Behavior Protocols according to the architecture description |
||
| 684 | and create an output suitable for \emph{bp2promela} checker~\cite{bp}. |
||
| 685 | |||
| 686 | As the resulting complexity of the description is larger than any of the previously published case studies |
||
| 181 | decky | 687 | on Behavior Protocols (compare to~\cite{cocome}), our current work-in-progress is to optimize and fine-tune |
| 688 | the bp2promela checker to process the input. |
||
| 179 | decky | 689 | |
| 690 | \medskip |
||
| 691 | |||
| 181 | decky | 692 | We have not started to generate code from the architecture description so far because of time constrains. |
| 693 | However, we believe that this is a very promising way to go and provide reasonable guarantees about |
||
| 694 | the compliance between the specification and the implementation. |
||
| 179 | decky | 695 | |
| 696 | \subsection{Behavior Description Generator} |
||
| 181 | decky | 697 | We have not tackled the issue of behavior description generation yet, although tools such as |
| 698 | \emph{Procasor}~\cite{procasor} are readily available. We do not consider it our priority at this time. |
||
| 179 | decky | 699 | |
| 700 | \section{Conclusion} |
||
| 701 | \label{conclusion} |
||
| 181 | decky | 702 | In this paper we propose a complex combination of various verification methods and tools |
| 703 | to achieve the verification of an entire general-purpose operating system. The proposed |
||
| 704 | approach generally follows a bottom-up route, starting with low-level checks using state-of-the-art |
||
| 705 | verifying C language compilers, following by static analyzers and static verifiers. |
||
| 706 | In specific contexts regression and unit tests, code instrumentation and model checkers |
||
| 707 | for the sake of verification of key algorithms are utilized. |
||
| 179 | decky | 708 | |
| 709 | Thanks to the properties of state-of-the-art microkernel multiserver operating |
||
| 181 | decky | 710 | system design (e.g. software component encapsulation and composition, fine-grained isolated |
| 711 | components), we demonstrate that it should be feasible to successfully verify larger and more |
||
| 712 | complex operating systems than in the case of monolithic designs. We use formal component |
||
| 713 | architecture and behavior description for the closure. The final goal -- a formally verified |
||
| 714 | operating system -- is the emerging property of the combination of the various methods. |
||
| 179 | decky | 715 | |
| 716 | \medskip |
||
| 717 | |||
| 181 | decky | 718 | The contribution of this paper is the shift of focus from attempts to use a single |
| 719 | ``silver-bullet'' method for formal verification of an operating system to a combination |
||
| 720 | of multiple methods supported by a suitable architecture of the operating system. |
||
| 721 | The main benefit is a much larger coverage of the set of all hypothetical properties. |
||
| 179 | decky | 722 | |
| 723 | We also argue that the approach should be suitable for the mainstream |
||
| 724 | general-purpose operating systems in the near future, because they are gradually |
||
| 725 | incorporating more microkernel-based features and fine-grained software components. |
||
| 726 | |||
| 727 | Although the evaluation of the proposed approach on HelenOS is still work-in-progress, the |
||
| 728 | preliminary results and estimates are promising. |
||
| 729 | |||
| 730 | \medskip |
||
| 731 | |||
| 181 | decky | 732 | \noindent\textbf{Acknowledgments.} The author would like to express his gratitude to all contributors of |
| 733 | the HelenOS project. Without their vision and dedication the work on this paper would be almost impossible |
||
| 179 | decky | 734 | |
| 735 | This work was partially supported by the Ministry of Education of the Czech Republic |
||
| 736 | (grant MSM\-0021620838). |
||
| 737 | |||
| 738 | \begin{thebibliography}{99} |
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| 758 | \end{document} |