This is an implementation of the equivalence checker presented in "Semantic Program Alignment for Equivlance Checking" by Berkeley Churchill, Oded Padon, Rahul Sharma and Alex Aiken, presented at PLDI 2019. Preprint PDF. This software is based on STOKE.
Limitations. This artifact can be used to reproduce many of the results of the paper, but not all of them. In particular, the paper describes a system to discharge proof obligations concurrently using a large number of systems in the cloud. This artifact only supports discharging proof obligations on one core, and so it is much more limitted. The artifact can be reliably use to check:
- the strlen benchmark (section 5.3)
- benchmark from [7] described in Section 5.4.
- the running example (section 2)
- some of the TSVC benchmarks
There are a few reasons why the system described in the paper that uses cloud instances can verify more of the TSVC benchmarks than the artifact here:
- The cloud system supports discharging proof obligations with multiple SMT solvers, e.g., both Z3 and CVC4, and choosing the fastest one. The same goes for the choice of memory model. Often a particular benchmark will have several difficult proof obligations, and different solvers are needed for each one.
- This artifact does not implement a timeout for SMT solvers, so if a solver gets stuck, the whole problem gets stuck.
- When multiple solvers and a timeout is available, a few of the benchmarks need a large amount of compute time -- e.g. 1000 CPU-hours. The artifact runs each benchmark in a process that only utilizes 1 CPU core.
- Getting Started
- Step-by-Step Instructions
- Running Your Own Benchmarks
- Understanding and Extending the Code
- Archived Execution Traces
- Post Publication Erata and Acknowledgements
You will need root access to a machine (physical or
virtual) with a Sandy Bridge processor or later. This is true of most
computers with Intel chips released 2012 or later. On linux, you can
check this by running cat /proc/cpuinfo | grep avx
. If there are
results, then your machine is suitable. We require this because the
Sandy Bridge architecture adds the "Advanced Vector Extensions" (AVX)
instructions to x86-64, and our verification benchmarks may use these
instructions.
You will need 20GB of disk space and at least 12GB of RAM (more is better). Having extra cores and memory allows you to run multiple benchmarks in parallel, but is not necessary.
We have tested these instructions on linux with docker version 18.06.1-ce, but any operating system with a recent docker install should be suitable.
- Install Docker CE. Follow the instructions for your platform:
- Windows https://hub.docker.com/editions/community/docker-ce-desktop-windows
- Mac https://hub.docker.com/editions/community/docker-ce-desktop-mac
- Ubuntu https://docs.docker.com/install/linux/docker-ce/ubuntu/
- Debian https://docs.docker.com/install/linux/docker-ce/debian/
- Fedora https://docs.docker.com/install/linux/docker-ce/fedora/
- CentOS https://docs.docker.com/install/linux/docker-ce/centos/
- Test the docker install. Note that you may need to use
sudo
for all docker commands:
$ sudo docker run hello-world
(should print a message containing "Hello from Docker!")
- Pull the image from DockerHub
$ sudo docker pull bchurchill/pldi19
- Run the image
$ sudo docker run -d -P --name eqchecker bchurchill/pldi19
- Now you can SSH locally
$ sudo docker port eqchecker 22
0.0.0.0:XXXXX
$ ssh -pXXXXX [email protected]
(password is 'checker')
- Build the code by running,
$ cd equivalence-checker
$ ./configure.sh
$ make
- You may optionally run unit tests:
$ make test
- Further a test script is available that ensures that our example benchmark works:
cd pldi19
./test.sh
- When you're done with the artifact, you can cleanup by running
$ sudo docker stop eqchecker
$ sudo docker container rm eqchecker
$ sudo docker image rm bchurchill/pldi19
You can also build your own docker images. You will need to start by building the "base" image by running sudo docker build -f Dockerfile.base .
, tag it, and then build the real image with sudo docker build .
.
We highly recommend using Docker because it ensures that all the right libraries and packages are installed. A particular difficulty is getting the right version of gcc
and related system libraries. You should be able to get the software to run on newer distros, but the main trouble will be getting the compiler to work; gcc-5
introduces some breaking changes. Right now this tool works with gcc-4.9
.
If you don't want to use Docker at all, there are instructions on building an environment suitable for compiling the code in STOKE.md
. In addition to those steps you will need to install SageMath
. You can also take a look at Dockerfile
and Dockerfile.base
to see how we build the environment.
-
Be sure that you've compiled the code as described in the setup instructions; run the tests for added assurances.
-
In
~/equivalence-checker/pldi19
you will find all the benchmarks from the paper. For getting started, we will demonstrate running our tool on the example from section 2 of the paper. Navigate to~/equivalence-checker/pldi19/paper_example
. -
To see the source code for the programs we are comparing, run
cat source.c
. We will prove thatbitflip()
performs the same computation asbitflip_vec()
. -
Run
make
to compile the functions withgcc -O1
and disassemble them. The assembly code is written into the folderopt1
. -
Our tool needs test cases to find an alignment between the two programs. For this example, we use a symbolic execution tool to generate test cases for execution paths up to a bound. Run
make tcgen
. This should finish within 10 seconds. The generated testcases can be found in thetestcases
file; each testcase includes a value for each machine register and values for a subset of memory locations. -
Run
./demo.sh | tee trace
to perform verification and save the output to the file calledtrace
. If verification succeeds, you will see the messageEquivalent: yes
at the end of the output. This should finish in under 30 seconds; it may appear to hang briefly while some matrix computations are performed. -
Review the trace file. It contains:
- The assembly of the two programs being compared.
- The alignment predicates guessed, in order. e.g. "Trying alignment predicate..."
- For some alignment predicates, the PAA that was initially constructed before simplification.
- The PAA after simplication.
- If the PAA accepts all test cases, there will be output from learning the invariants. You should see matrices here.
- After invariant learning, you will see the discharge of a series of proof obligations.
- For our examples, once proof obligations start being checked the proof usually succeeds (but this isn't guaranteed -- another alignment predicate may be tried if they fail).
- At the end of the trace, the final PAA along with all the invariants are printed.
Note that the trace file may contain some ANSI-escape codes like
<E2><89><A4>
. These can be used to render colors in the output for
debugging counterexamples from the SMT solver. If you're not trying to
debug, these can be ignored.
To gain a deeper understanding of the PAA, one needs to see how the basic blocks of the two programs are numbered.
(see also Getting Started)
- Navigate to
~/equivalence-checker/pldi19/paper_example
- Run
make
- Run
make tcgen
- Run
./demo.sh
-
Navigate to
~/equivalence-checker/pldi19/strlen
. -
Run
make
-
Run
./demo.sh
. Depending on your machine, it should finish within 10 minutes and end with "Equivalent: yes".
Getting the right test cases for strlen is tricky; in the image we
have included a set that will certainly work. We've also provided
a script to generate them, but sometimes these test cases don't
provide sufficient code coverage. You can try regenerating the test
cases using make tcgen
and updating demo.sh
to point to the
testcases
file rather than testcases.good
. It may take a few
tries.
- Navigate to
~/equivalence-checker/pldi19/TSVC
- Run
make
. This will build the benchmarks in clean.c with each of gcc -O1 ("baseline"), gcc -O3 ("gcc") and clang -O3 ("llvm"). - Run
make tcgen
. This randomly generates a new set of test cases for the TSVC benchmarks using a utility we have specifically constructed for this purpose. All benchmarks use the same set of test cases, except s176 uses fewer. - Run
cat benchmarks
to see the list of available benchmarks. - To run a benchmark, use
$ ./demo.rb verify <compiler1> <compiler2> <benchmark-name>
for example:
$ ./demo.rb verify baseline gcc s000
The output will be written to a file in the traces
folder, any
errors to a file in the misc
folder, and a report of the time
into the times
folder. The exact filenames can be seen in the
output of the demo.rb script.
In the paper, we have performed the baseline-gcc comparison and the baseline-llvm comparison for each benchmark.
The benchmarks below should be able to run reliably without
the cloud infrastructure. Others may work too, depending on
your hardware (and patience!). By default these run using Z3
and the flat memory model. One can also try CVC4 by editing
demo.rb
- s000-gcc
- s000-llvm
- s1112-gcc
- s121-gcc
- s121-llvm
- s1221-gcc
- s1221-llvm
- s1251-gcc
- s1351-gcc
- s1351-llvm
- s173-gcc
- s2244-gcc
- vpv-gcc
- vpvpv-gcc
- vpvtv-gcc
- vtv-gcc
- vtvtv-gcc
- If you have several cores and extra memory available, you can use the following commands to run multiple benchmarks in parallel:
./demo.rb verify-all <filename>
./demo.rb verify-gcc <filename>
./demo.rb verify-llvm <filename>
In each case, filename contains a newline-delimited list of benchmarks (e.g. like the 'benchmarks' file). In general it's best to have one core per benchmark running concurrently. verify-all invokes the validator twice for each benchmark, once for gcc and once for llvm, while verify-gcc and verify-llvm just compare the selected compiler with the baseline.
The files benchmarks.1
and benchmarks.2
each list half of
the benchmarks functions (14 each). So, if you have 14+ cores and a lot of
RAM (e.g. 256GB), you can try running './demo.rb verify-gcc benchmarks.1' to
run 14 of the benchmarks in parallel. However, we haven't tested
all of the benchmarks in single-threaded execution, and some could
take a very long time to finish.
-
Navigate to
~/equivalence-checker/pldi19/aplas17
-
Run
make
-
Run
./demo.sh
.
For this benchmark, a working set of test cases is provided in the repository (and the Docker image). However, one can also copy a randomly generated testcase file from the TSVC benchmarks into this folder and use those instead.
The easiest way to run your own benchmark is to copy the
paper_example
folder, run make clean
, and then update the C code
for your benchmark. There are a few other things that need to be
updated as well:
-
If you have re-named the functions, update the TARGET and REWRITE in the
variables
file with the paths to the generated assembly code. -
If you have changed the parameter types or the return types of the function, you will need to update the DEF_INS and LIVE_OUTS sets in the
variables
file. Each of these variables contains a set of x86-64 registers. The best way to find the correct setting is to lookup the x86-64 System V ABI's calling convention (which places integer/pointer parameters in rdi, rsi, rdx, rcx, r8, r9, and integer/pointers return values into rax) or to read the assembly code. -
The biggest and most important thing to update are the test cases. The simplest thing to try is to just run
make tcgen
. This will try to use a symbolic executor to make test cases. However, there are two important caveats. First, the symbolic executor can't guarantee code coverage. If verification fails, you should try giving the system more test cases (although this slows it down). You can (a) increase the number of test cases used for training by supplying the --training_set_size parameter (defaults to 20); and/or (b) set a higher bound in the Makefile for the symbolic executor.
Second, if your binary contains read-only data (e.g. addressed via
RIP-offset addressing) you need to do extra work. You need to manually
create a file called rodata
with a test case that contains all the
read-only memory locations along with values. Then, ./demo.rb needs
to be updated with a flag --rodata </path/to/rodata>
. An example
of this file can be found in the ~/equivalence-checker/pldi19/TSVC
folder. We unfortunately don't have tools to automate this (yet), so
it's easier to stick with functions that don't require read-only data.
It is important to double-check that your test cases actually work
for both programs. Problems can come up, for example, when one
program reads memory locations that the other program doesn't (as in
the strlen benchmark, see section 5.3, esp. lines 1000-1009). The
tool will give warnings that appear after "COLLECTING DATA..." if
the test cases don't work right. The command stoke debug sandbox --target </path/to/assembly.s> --testcases </path/to/testcases> --index <N> --debug
can be used to understand why a particular test
case is failing.
For long running loops, you may need to provide the --max_jumps
option to the verification tool, which is used to stop and abort
any loops that seem to be executing forever when performing dynamic
analysis (the default value is 1024 iterations). However, this is
rarely the bottleneck for our benchmarks since the symbolic executor
doesn't generate test cases that run for so many iterations.
- We have placed bounds on the values of
rsi
andrdi
to avoid certain overflow conditions. If you need this for your benchmark, you can add them with the--assume
option indemo.sh
. The--assume
option parses a limited set of expressions where the leaf nodes are of the formX_%reg
, whereX
is eithert
orr
(fortarget
orrewrite
) and%reg
is an x86-64 register name. The parser and its grammar can be found in~/equivalence-checker/src/expr/expr_parser.h
(v) It's unlikely you will need to change it, but you can try
increasing TARGET_BOUND
and REWRITE_BOUND
to 30 in the variables
file as a fail-safe option.
If a benchmark is failing (i.e. execution isn't ending or it returns "Equivalent: no") there are a few possible causes:
- The two programs might not be equivalent.
- The correct alignment predicate is not in the search space.
- A good alignment predicate is found, but the learned invariants aren't strong enough for a proof.
- There aren't enough test cases to create a correct PAA or learn correct invariants. That is, the test cases might not cover all program behaviors.
- The proof obligations are taking a long time -- so long that the search space isn't being explored quickly enough.
- There's a bug in the tool.
Some things to try:
-
Use the bounded validator to see if actually the programs are not equivalent. The bounded validator is unsound, but for terminating programs it is complete with a sufficiently high bound. Many of the examples come with a
./bounded.sh
in their folder for this purpose. Thestoke_debug_verify
tool can be told to use the bounded validator by provided--strategy bounded
, along with a--bound <N>
parameter. Alternatively, you can test the code or check the correctness by hand. -
Try supplying your own alignment predicate. Doing so eliminates failure mode #2 above and also more clearly isolates the problem in all the other cases (it sometimes resolves failure modes #5 and #6). This can be done by supplying the
--alignment_predicate
argument along with an expression. It parses a limited set of expressions where the leaf nodes are of the formX_%reg
, where X is eithert
orr
(for 'target' or 'rewrite') and%reg
is an x86-64 register name. The parser and its grammar can be found in~/equivalence-checker/src/expr/expr_parser.h
. For example, you can specify--alignment_predicate "t_%rax+1=%r_rdx"
to align traces when the target program's value for%rax
is one less than the rewrite's value for%rdx
. You can also use--alignment_predicate_heap
to force the traces to only align when heap states match. -
If you have supplied your own alignment predicate but there's still a failure, then there are two possibilities:
(A) The PAA is constructed successfully and it accepts all the test cases. The proof obligations start to discharge, but ultimately it fails. This suggests failure mode #3 or #4. One needs to inspect the failed proof obligation and SMT counterexample to determine if it's because the PAA is missing an edge (#4) or if the tool is failing to prove a necessary invariant (#3). The tool is generally quite verbose, and in addition to giving a counterexample for failed proof obligations it dynamically executes the counterexample as an error-detecting strategy (to defend against failure mode #6) and reports if the dynamic execution differs from an expected value.
(B) The PAA can't be built or it doesn't accept all the test cases. Here, the most likely causes are that the alignment predicate is still wrong (#2), you need more test cases (#4), or the programs aren't actually equivalent (#1).
This section is intended as a brief description of the code base for
anyone who wants to extend the code. The ~/equivalence-checker/src
and
~/equivalence-checker/tools
folders contain all the source code for
our tools. The tools folder has the command line tools which make use
of the code in the src folder to do all the heavy lifting.
If ever you want to rebuild the code, running make
in the top level
directory should be sufficient. A make clean
usually helps if there
seems to be a problem.
The src folder has a number of subfolders:
validator
- This is where the equivalence checker resides, along
with semantics for all the x86-64 instructions, all the code for
alignment, building the PAA, discharging proof obligations, etc.
symstate
- Data structures for representing an x86-64 system
symbolically, along with abstractions of symbolic bitvectors and
arrays that serve as a frontend to the SMT solver.
solver
- Interfaces with SMT solvers.
state
- Data structure for representing the concrete state of an
x86-64 system.
sandbox
- Code to execute safely x86-64 code concretely against our
internal state representation.
cfg
, tunit
- Data structures for representing assembly code as
control flow graphs and static analysis.
expr
- An expression parser
diassembler
- The disassembler
ext
- folder for external code. Most notably includes Z3, CVC4 and
x64asm (the library used to JIT assembly code and run it for the
sandbox).
serialize, stategen, kerberos, target, unionfind
- Other utilities (not relevant)
cost, search, transform, verifier
- Used by the superoptimizer (not relevant)
Within the validator folder:
ddec.cc
- This is where our algorithm is implemented. It all begins
in the verify() function. (The name DDEC is in reference to
"Data-Driven Equivalence Checking" by Sharma et al, which our
work extends)
handlers
- semantics for x86-64 instructions
invariants
- data structures to represent different kinds of invariants
variable.cc
- An abstraction to represent registers, memory locations,
paa.cc
- The representation of the program alignment automata, and some
of the important methods. learn_state_data
is where the PAA checks that
it accepts the test inputs and gathers states to learn invariants.
learner.cc
- Code to learn invariants from concerete executions.
data_collector.cc
- An abstraction on top of the sandbox to collect
data from concrete execution traces
smt_obligation_checker.cc
- Code to check the proof obligations.
int_matrix.cc
- Uses sage to compute nullspaces over an integer ring.
sage.cc
- Interface with SageMath
Since the tool is built upon STOKE, consulting the STOKE documentation may be helpful too. This can be found at https://github.com/StanfordPL/stoke
If you want to add an invariant to the system, there are two things you need to do:
-
Add the invariant in the
invariants
folder. This means writing code to evaluate whether the invariant holds over a pair of symbolic states and over a pair of concrete states. -
Adjust
learner.cc
to learn this invariant from a concrete execution.
The key step is to add a new "handler" in the "handlers" folder. This
is discussed in more detail in a README.md
file which appears in the
src/validator
folder. (That documentation is a little dataed, but
correct enough to make progress).
Here, you will want to change the verify()
function in ddec.cc
to
construct a different set of alignment predicates to pass to the
test_alignment_predicate
function.
Since some of the TSVC benchmarks take a long time to run, we
have included in the artifact traces from these benchmarks from
successful runs using the cloud instances. These can be found in the
pldi19-traces.tar.xz
file. These traces are from the tool around the
time of submission -- the exact text in the traces differs from what
the tool currently produces.
Special thanks to the following who have helped find and fix bugs in our software:
- Nikhil Durgam of IIT Bombay discovered a soundness bug when using the flat memory model. Our tool would generate incorrect constraints to check that the final memory states were equal. (Mar 31, 2020)