// RUN: %clang_scudo %s -o %t // RUN: SCUDO_OPTIONS=allocator_may_return_null=0 not %run %t malloc 2>&1 | FileCheck %s // RUN: SCUDO_OPTIONS=allocator_may_return_null=1 %run %t malloc 2>&1 // RUN: SCUDO_OPTIONS=allocator_may_return_null=0 not %run %t calloc 2>&1 | FileCheck %s // RUN: SCUDO_OPTIONS=allocator_may_return_null=1 %run %t calloc 2>&1 // RUN: %run %t usable 2>&1 // Tests for various edge cases related to sizes, notably the maximum size the // allocator can allocate. Tests that an integer overflow in the parameters of // calloc is caught. #include <assert.h> #include <malloc.h> #include <stdlib.h> #include <string.h> #include <limits> int main(int argc, char **argv) { assert(argc == 2); if (!strcmp(argv[1], "malloc")) { // Currently the maximum size the allocator can allocate is 1ULL<<40 bytes. size_t size = std::numeric_limits<size_t>::max(); void *p = malloc(size); if (p) return 1; size = (1ULL << 40) - 16; p = malloc(size); if (p) return 1; } if (!strcmp(argv[1], "calloc")) { // Trigger an overflow in calloc. size_t size = std::numeric_limits<size_t>::max(); void *p = calloc((size / 0x1000) + 1, 0x1000); if (p) return 1; } if (!strcmp(argv[1], "usable")) { // Playing with the actual usable size of a chunk. void *p = malloc(1007); if (!p) return 1; size_t size = malloc_usable_size(p); if (size < 1007) return 1; memset(p, 'A', size); p = realloc(p, 2014); if (!p) return 1; size = malloc_usable_size(p); if (size < 2014) return 1; memset(p, 'B', size); free(p); } return 0; } // CHECK: allocator is terminating the process