Open source binary analysis tools.
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Tristan Ravitch 8047a5d0ed
arm: Add transfer functions for division (#249)
Add support for abstract interpretation of division operations in the ARM
backend (when the operands to division are concretely known). 

This commit also adds extended documentation on the semantics of these
operations.

The concrete evaluation eliminates constant division operations.  The abstract
cases are probably obsolete in light of that, but are still interesting...

These changes were motivated by insufficient simplification around some of the syscall/errno handling code in musl
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macaw-aarch32-symbolic Revise handling of syscalls in AArch32 to match X86 (#246) 2021-11-24 11:59:56 -08:00
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This is the main repository for the Macaw binary analysis framework. This framework is implemented to offer extensible support for architectures.

Overview

The main algorithm implemented so far is a code discovery procedure which will discover reachable code in the binary given one or more entry points such as _start or the current symbols.

The Macaw libraries are:

  • macaw-base -- The core architecture-independent operations and algorithms.
  • macaw-symbolic -- Library that provides symbolic simulation of Macaw programs via Crucible.
  • macaw-x86 -- Provides definitions enabling Macaw to be used on X86_64 programs.
  • macaw-x86-symbolic -- Adds Macaw-symbolic extensions needed to support x86.
  • macaw-semmc -- Contains the architecture-independent components of the translation from semmc semantics into macaw IR. This provides the shared infrastructure for all of our backends; this will include the Template Haskell function to create a state transformer function from learned semantics files provided by the semmc library.
  • macaw-arm -- Enables macaw for ARM (32-bit) binaries by reading the semantics files generated by semmc and using Template Haskell to generate a function that transforms machine states according to the learned semantics.
  • macaw-arm-symbolic -- Enables macaw/crucible symbolic simulation for ARM (32-bit) architectures.
  • macaw-ppc -- Enables macaw for PPC (32-bit and 64-bit) binaries by reading the semantics files generated by semmc and using Template Haskell to generate a function that transforms machine states according to the learned semantics..
  • macaw-ppc-symbolic -- Enables macaw/crucible symbolic simulation for PPC architectures
  • macaw-refinement -- Enables additional architecture-independent refinement of code discovery. This can enable discovery of more functionality than is revealed by the analysis in macaw-base.

The libraries that make up Macaw are released under the BSD license.

These Macaw core libraries depend on a number of different supporting libraries, including:

  • elf-edit -- loading and parsing of ELF binary files
  • galois-dwarf -- retrieval of Dwarf debugging information from binary files
  • flexdis86 -- disassembly and semantics for x86 architectures
  • dismantle -- disassembly for ARM and PPC architectures
  • semmc -- semantics definitions for ARM and PPC architectures
  • crucible -- Symbolic execution and analysis
  • what4 -- Symbolic representation for the crucible backend
  • parameterized-utils -- utilities for working with parameterized types

Building

Preparation

Dependencies for building Macaw that are not obtained from Hackage are supported via Git submodules:

$ git submodule update --init

Building with Cabal

The Macaw libraries can be individually built with Cabal v1, but as a group and more easily with Cabal v2:

$ ln -s cabal.project.dist cabal.project
$ cabal v2-configure
$ cabal v2-build all

To build a single library, either specify that library name instaed of all, or change to that library's subdirectory before building:

$ cabal v2-build macaw-refinement

or

$ cd refinement
$ cabal v2-build

Building with Stack

To build with Stack, first create a top-level stack.yaml file by symlinking to one of the provided stack-ghc-<version>.yaml files. E.g.

$ ln -s stack-ghc-8.6.3.yaml stack.yaml
$ stack build

Status

This codebase is a work in progress. Support for PowerPC support (both 32 and 64 bit) and X86_64 is reasonably robust. Support for ARM is ongoing.

License

This code is made available under the BSD3 license and without any support.