Commit Graph

6 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jessica Clarke
42e892d96e
Use default rather than hard-coded 8 for maximum aggregate member alignment (#1378)
On CHERI, and thus Arm's Morello prototype, pointers are represented as
hardware capabilities. These capabilities are comprised of not just an
integer address, as is the representation for traditional pointers, but
also bounds, permissions and other metadata, plus a tag bit used as the
validity bit, which provides fine-grained spatial and referential safety
for C and C++ in hardware. This tag bit is not part of the data itself
and is instead kept on the side, flowing with the capability between
registers and the memory subsystem, and any attempt to amplify the
privilege of or corrupt a capability clears this tag (or, in some cases,
traps), rendering them impossible to forge; you can only create
capabilities that are (possibly trivial) subsets of existing ones.

When the capability is stored in memory, this tag bit needs to be
preserved, which is done through the use of tagged memory. Every
capability-sized word gains an additional non-addressable (from the
CPU's perspective; depending on the implementation the tag bits may be
stored in a small block of memory carved out of normal DRAM that the CPU
is blocked from accessing) bit. This means that capabilities can only be
stored to aligned locations; attempting to store them to unaligned
locations will trap with an alignment fault or, if you end up using a
memcpy call, will copy the raw bytes of the capability's representation
but lose the tag, so when it is eventually loaded back as a capability
and dereferenced it will fault.

Since, on 64-bit architectures, our capabilities, used to implement C
language pointers, are 128-bit quantities, this means they need 16-byte
alignment. Currently the various #pragma pack directives, used to work
around (extremely broken and bogus) code that includes jsoncpp in a
context where the maximum alignment has been overridden, hard-code 8 as
the maximum alignment to use, and so do not sufficiently align CHERI /
Morello capabilities on 64-bit architectures. On Windows x64, the
default is also not 8 but 16 (ARM64 is supposedly 8), so this is
slightly dodgy to do there too, but in practice likely not an issue so
long as you don't use any 128-bit types there.

Instead of hard-coding a width, use a directive that resets the packing
back to the default. Unfortunately, whilst GCC and Clang both accept
using #pragma pack(push, 0) as shorthand like for any non-zero value,
MSVC does not, so this needs to be two directives.
2022-01-12 16:27:16 -05:00
Chen
3beb37ea14
revert trailing comma in old Reader (#1126) 2020-02-13 13:25:08 -08:00
Jordan Bayles
9704cedb20 Issue 1100: Drop CPPTL support
CPPTL support is no longer relevant to JsonCpp, and can be removed from
the library. This patch removes all mentions of CPPTL, by removing all
definitions and code sections conditionally compiled only when JsonCpp
is used with CPPTL. Include guards are also renamed to not refer to
CPPTL where appropriate.
2019-11-14 09:38:11 -08:00
Jacob Bundgaard
1c8f7d8ae5 Run clang-format 2019-11-14 00:05:24 -06:00
Jacob Bundgaard
01db7b7430 Allow trailing comma in objects 2019-11-14 00:05:24 -06:00
Jordan Bayles
00b979f086
Issue #970: Rename features.h to json_features.h (#1024)
This patch fixes a build issue on CMake, presumably due to the new glibc
having a features.h include file. This patch renames our features.h file
to avoid a name collision.
2019-09-25 14:04:53 -07:00