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- This document explains potential effects of speculation, and how undesirable
- effects can be mitigated portably using common APIs.
- ===========
- Speculation
- ===========
- To improve performance and minimize average latencies, many contemporary CPUs
- employ speculative execution techniques such as branch prediction, performing
- work which may be discarded at a later stage.
- Typically speculative execution cannot be observed from architectural state,
- such as the contents of registers. However, in some cases it is possible to
- observe its impact on microarchitectural state, such as the presence or
- absence of data in caches. Such state may form side-channels which can be
- observed to extract secret information.
- For example, in the presence of branch prediction, it is possible for bounds
- checks to be ignored by code which is speculatively executed. Consider the
- following code:
- int load_array(int *array, unsigned int index)
- {
- if (index >= MAX_ARRAY_ELEMS)
- return 0;
- else
- return array[index];
- }
- Which, on arm64, may be compiled to an assembly sequence such as:
- CMP <index>, #MAX_ARRAY_ELEMS
- B.LT less
- MOV <returnval>, #0
- RET
- less:
- LDR <returnval>, [<array>, <index>]
- RET
- It is possible that a CPU mis-predicts the conditional branch, and
- speculatively loads array[index], even if index >= MAX_ARRAY_ELEMS. This
- value will subsequently be discarded, but the speculated load may affect
- microarchitectural state which can be subsequently measured.
- More complex sequences involving multiple dependent memory accesses may
- result in sensitive information being leaked. Consider the following
- code, building on the prior example:
- int load_dependent_arrays(int *arr1, int *arr2, int index)
- {
- int val1, val2,
- val1 = load_array(arr1, index);
- val2 = load_array(arr2, val1);
- return val2;
- }
- Under speculation, the first call to load_array() may return the value
- of an out-of-bounds address, while the second call will influence
- microarchitectural state dependent on this value. This may provide an
- arbitrary read primitive.
- ====================================
- Mitigating speculation side-channels
- ====================================
- The kernel provides a generic API to ensure that bounds checks are
- respected even under speculation. Architectures which are affected by
- speculation-based side-channels are expected to implement these
- primitives.
- The array_index_nospec() helper in <linux/nospec.h> can be used to
- prevent information from being leaked via side-channels.
- A call to array_index_nospec(index, size) returns a sanitized index
- value that is bounded to [0, size) even under cpu speculation
- conditions.
- This can be used to protect the earlier load_array() example:
- int load_array(int *array, unsigned int index)
- {
- if (index >= MAX_ARRAY_ELEMS)
- return 0;
- else {
- index = array_index_nospec(index, MAX_ARRAY_ELEMS);
- return array[index];
- }
- }
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