[kaffe] completed bytecode verifier!
Jim Pick
jim at kaffe.org
Thu Aug 7 15:11:02 PDT 2003
Excellent!
Thanks for all the hard work you've put in.
Cheers,
- Jim
On Thu, 07 Aug 2003 10:52:25 -0400 (EDT)
"Rob Gonzalez" <rgonzale at wso.williams.edu> wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I just committed the bytecode verifier. It's a huge chunk of code and
> it's very likely that there are little bugs lurking around in it...I can't
> even count how many off-by-one errors I had during development.
>
> The LostTrampolineFrame regression test now fails, but I'm pretty sure
> that's no fault of the verifier. The test expects the verification of one
> of the classes to fail, which it does, though it now fails during linking
> where it used to fail in code analysis just prior to execution.
>
> Section 4.8 of the JVML Spec 2 lists the static and structural constraints
> the verifier must check. The following is a list of constraints that I do
> not check and the reasons for not doing so:
>
> 4.8.1: Static constraints
> - The value of the count operand of each invokeinterface instruction must
> reflect the number of local variables necessary to store the arguments
> to be passed to the interface method, as implied by the descriptor of
> the CONSTANT_NameAndType_info structure referenced by the
> CONSTANT_InterfaceMethodref constant pool entry
>
> I don't check this because other VM's ignore the count argument as well.
>
> - The new instruction cannot be used to create an instance of an abstract
> class.
>
> This should be checked, but it cannot be checked by the verifier because
> the verifier cannot load classes unless they are necessary for type
> checking. Thus if the type of class created by the new instruction is
> not loaded, there's no way to check if it's abstract.
>
> This should be checked in code-analyse.
>
>
> 4.8.2: Structural Constraints
> - Each invokespecial instruction must name an instance initialization
> method (§3.9), a method in the current class, or a method in a
> superclass of the current class.
>
> Not enforced by Sun's verifier.
>
> - Each instance initialization method (§3.9), except for the instance
> initialization method derived from the constructor of class Object, must
> call either another instance initialization method of this or an
> instance initialization method of its direct superclass super before its
> instance members are accessed.
>
> TODO :). Clearly this is subject to the halting problem because of
> branches and all, so I wanted to explore Sun's behavior a little more
> before committing to a design for this. BCEL's JustIce verifier throws
> a VerifyError if any branch occurrs before a call to another <init>()
> method, which seems pretty reasonable to me.
>
> - The instruction following each jsr or jsr_w instruction may be returned
> to only by a single ret instruction.
>
> I don't see why this is a constraint, and I don't see how to check it
> without imposing unreasonable restrictions on the bytecode. I treat the
> ret instruction basically as a goto.
>
> - No jsr or jsr_w instruction may be used to recursively call a subroutine
> if that subroutine is already present in the subroutine call
> chain. (Subroutines can be nested when using try-finally constructs from
> within a finally clause. For more information on Java virtual machine
> subroutines, see §4.9.6.)
>
> TODO. Not a big deal, I just hate messing with the subroutine stuff.
>
>
> Furthermore, when merging operand stacks during pass 3b, if corresponding
> types on each stack are not compatible I simply ignore the error unless it
> really becomes a problem. It doesn't take much to convince yourself that
> this is OK.
>
>
> TODO next: remove all the (now) unnecessary checks currently performed in
> code-analyse.c.
>
>
> Time to go have a beer ;)
>
> Cheers,
> Rob
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> kaffe mailing list
> kaffe at kaffe.org
> http://kaffe.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/kaffe
More information about the kaffe
mailing list