2 title: "Stacked Borrows Implemented"
3 categories: internship rust
6 Three months ago, I proposed [Stacked Borrows]({% post_url
7 2018-08-07-stacked-borrows %}) as a model for defining what kinds of aliasing
8 are allowed in Rust, and the idea of a [validity invariant]({% post_url
9 2018-08-22-two-kinds-of-invariants %}) that has to be maintained by all code at
10 all times. Since then I have been busy implementing both of these, and
11 developed Stacked Borrows further in doing so. This post describes the latest
12 version of Stacked Borrows, and reports my findings from the implementation
13 phase: What worked, what did not, and what remains to be done. There will also
14 be an opportunity for you to help the effort!
18 What Stacked Borrows does is that it defines a semantics for Rust programs such
19 that some things about references always hold true for every valid execution
20 (meaning executions where no [undefined behavior]({% post_url
21 2017-07-14-undefined-behavior %}) occurred): `&mut` references are unique (we
22 can rely on no accesses by other functions happening to the memory they point
23 to), and `&` references are read-only (we can rely on no writes happening to the
24 memory they point to, unless there is an `UnsafeCell`). Usually we have the
25 borrow checker guarding us against such nefarious violations of reference type
26 guarantees, but alas, when we are writing unsafe code, the borrow checker cannot
27 help us. We have to define a set of rules that makes sense even for unsafe
30 I will try to explain at least parts of this model again in this post. The
31 explanation is not going to be the same as last time, not only because it
32 changed a bit, but also because I think I understand the model better myself
35 Ready? Let's get started. I hope you brought some time, because this is a
36 rather lengthy post. If you are not interested in a detailed description of
37 Stacked Borrows, you can skip most of this post and go right to [section 4]. If
38 you only want to know how to help, jump to [section 6].
40 ## 1 Enforcing Uniqueness
42 Let us first ignore the part about `&` references being read-only and focus on
43 uniqueness of mutable references. Namely, we want to define our model in a way
44 that calling the following function will trigger undefined behavior:
51 // Write through a pointer aliasing `y`
53 // Use `y` again, asserting it is still exclusive
58 We want this function to be disallowed because between two uses of `y`, there is
59 a use of another pointer for the same location, violating the fact that `y`
62 Notice that this function does not compile, the borrow checker won't allow it.
63 That's great! It is undefined behavior, after all. But the entire point of
64 this exercise is to explain *why* we have undefined behavior here *without*
65 referring to the borrow checker, because we want to have rules that also work
68 To be able to do this, we have to pretend our machine has two thing which real
69 CPUs do not have. This is an example of adding "shadow state" or "instrumented
70 state" to the "virtual machine" that we [use to specify Rust]({% post_url
71 2017-06-06-MIR-semantics %}). This is not an uncommon approach, often times
72 source languages make distinctions that do not appear in the actual hardware. A
74 [valgrind's memcheck](http://valgrind.org/docs/manual/mc-manual.html) which
75 keeps track of which memory is initialized to be able to detect memory errors:
76 During a normal execution, uninitialized memory looks just like all other
77 memory, but to figure out whether the program is violating C's memory rules, we
78 have to keep track of some extra state.
80 For stacked borrows, the extra state looks as follows:
82 1. For every pointer, we keep track of an extra "tag" that records when and how
83 this pointer was created.
84 2. For every location in memory, we keep track of a stack of tags, indicating
85 which tag a pointer must have to be allowed to access this location.
87 These exist separately, i.e., when a pointer is stored in memory, then we both
88 have a tag stored as part of this pointer value, and every byte occupied by the
89 pointer has a stack regulating access to this location. Remember,
90 [a byte is more than a `u8`]({% post_url 2018-07-24-pointers-and-bytes %}).
91 Also these two do not interact, i.e., when loading a pointer from memory, we
92 just load the tag that was stored as part of this pointer. The stack of a
93 location, and the tag of a pointer stored at some location, do not have any
96 In our example, there are two pointers (`x` and `y`) and one location of
97 interest (the one both of these pointers point to, initialized with `1u8`).
98 When we initially create `x`, it gets tagged `Uniq(0)` to indicate that it is a
99 unique reference, and the location's stack has `Uniq(0)` at its top to indicate
100 that this is the latest reference allowed to access said location. When we
101 create `y`, it gets a new tag, `Uniq(1)`, so that we can distinguish it from
102 `x`. We also push `Uniq(1)` onto the stack, indicating not only that `Uniq(1)`
103 is the latest reference allow to access, but also that it is "derived from"
104 `Uniq(0)`: The tags higher up in the stack are descendants of the ones further
107 So we have: `x` tagged `Uniq(0)`, `y` tagged `Uniq(1)`, and the stack contains
108 `[Uniq(0), Uniq(1)]`. (Top of the stack is on the right.)
110 When we use `y` to access the location, we make sure its tag is at the top of
111 the stack: Check, no problem here. When we use `x`, we do the same thing: Since
112 it is not at the top yet, we pop the stack until it is, which is easy. Now the
113 stack is just `[Uniq(0)]`. Now we use `y` again and... blast! Its tag is not
114 on the stack. We have undefined behavior.
116 In case you got lost, here is the source code with comments indicating the tags
117 and the stack of the one location that interests us:
121 let x = &mut 1u8; // tag: `Uniq(0)`
124 let y = &mut *x; // tag: `Uniq(1)`
125 // stack: [Uniq(0), Uniq(1)]
127 // Pop until `Uniq(1)`, the tag of `y`, is on top of the stack:
130 // stack: [Uniq(0), Uniq(1)]
132 // Pop until `Uniq(0)`, the tag of `x`, is on top of the stack:
137 // Pop until `Uniq(1)`, the tag of `y`, is on top of the stack:
138 // That is not possible, hence we have undefined behavior.
143 Well, actually having undefined behavior here is good news, since that's what we
144 wanted from the start! And since there is an implementation of the model in
145 [miri](https://github.com/solson/miri/), you can try this yourself: The amazing
146 @shepmaster has integrated miri into the playground, so you can
147 [put the example there](https://play.rust-lang.org/?version=stable&mode=debug&edition=2015&gist=d15868687f79072688a0d0dd1e053721)
148 (adjusting it slightly to circumvent the borrow checker), then select "Tools -
149 Miri" and it will complain (together with a rather unreadable backtrace, we sure
150 have to improve that one):
156 | ^^ Encountered reference with non-reactivatable tag: Borrow-to-reactivate Uniq(1245) does not exist on the stack
160 ## 2 Enabling Sharing
162 If we just had unique pointers, Rust would be a rather dull language. Lucky
163 enough, there are also two ways to have shared access to a location: Through
164 shared references (safely), and through raw pointers (unsafely). Moreover,
165 shared references *sometimes* (but not when they point to an `UnsafeCell`)
166 assert an additional guarantee: Their destination is read-only.
168 For example, we want the following code to be allowed -- not least because this
169 is actually safe code accepted by the borrow checker, so we better make sure
170 this is not undefined behavior:
175 // Create several shared references, and we can also still read from `x`
184 However, the following code is *not* okay:
190 // Create raw reference aliasing `y` and write through it
191 let z = x as *const u8 as *mut u8;
193 // Use `y` again, asserting it still points to the same value
199 [try this in miri](https://play.rust-lang.org/?version=stable&mode=debug&edition=2015&gist=1bc8c2f432941d02246fea0808e2e4f4),
200 you will see it complain:
206 | ^^ Location is not frozen long enough
210 How is it doing that, and what is a "frozen" location?
212 To explain this, we have to extend the "shadow state" of our "virtual machine" a
213 bit. First of all, we introduce a new kind of tag that a pointer can carry: A
214 *shared* tag. The following Rust type describes the possible tags of a pointer:
217 pub type Timestamp = u64;
220 Shr(Option<Timestamp>),
224 You can think of the timestamp as a unique ID, but as we will see, for shared
225 references, it is also important to be able to determine which of these IDs was
226 created first. The timestamp is optional in the shared tag because that tag is
227 also used by raw pointers, and for raw pointers, we are often not able to track
228 when and how they are created (for example, when raw pointers are converted to
231 We use a separate type for the items on our stack, because there we do not need
232 a timestamp for shared pointers:
235 pub enum BorStackItem {
241 And finally, a "borrow stack" consists of a stack of `BorStackItem`, together
242 with an indication of whether the stack (and the location it governs) is
243 currently *frozen*, meaning it may only be read, not written:
247 borrows: Vec<BorStackItem>, // used as a stack; never empty
248 frozen_since: Option<Timestamp>, // virtual frozen "item" on top of the stack
252 ### 2.1 Executing the Examples
254 Let us now look at what happens when we execute our two example programs. To
255 this end, I will embed comments in the source code. There is only one location
256 of interest here, so whenever I talk about a "stack", I am referring to the
257 stack of that location.
261 let x = &mut 1u8; // tag: `Uniq(0)`
262 // stack: [Uniq(0)]; not frozen
264 let y1 = &*x; // tag: `Shr(Some(1))`
265 // stack: [Uniq(0), Shr]; frozen since 1
267 // Access through `x`. We first check whether its tag `Uniq(0)` is in the
268 // stack (it is). Next, we make sure that either our item *or* `Shr` is on
269 // top *or* the location is frozen. The latter is the case, so we go on.
271 // stack: [Uniq(0), Shr]; frozen since 1
273 // This is not an access, but we still dereference `x`, so we do the same
274 // actions as on a read. Just like in the previous line, nothing happens.
275 let y2 = &*x; // tag: `Shr(Some(2))`
276 // stack: [Uniq(0), Shr]; frozen since 1
278 // Access through `y1`. Since the shared tag has a timestamp (1) and the type
279 // (`u8`) does not allow interior mutability (no `UnsafeCell`), we check that
280 // the location is frozen since (at least) that timestamp. It is.
282 // stack: [Uniq(0), Shr]; frozen since 1
284 // Same as with `y2`: The location is frozen at least since 2 (actually, it
285 // is frozen since 1), so we are good.
287 // stack: [Uniq(0), Shr]; frozen since 1
291 This example demonstrates a few new aspects. First of all, there are actually
292 two operations that perform tag-related checks in this model (so far):
293 Dereferencing a pointer (whether you have a `*`, also implicitly), and actual
294 memory accesses. Operations like `&*x` are an example of operations that
295 dereference a pointer without accessing memory. Secondly, *reading* through a
296 mutable reference is actually okay *even when that reference is not exclusive*.
297 It is only *writing* through a mutable reference that "re-asserts" its
298 exclusivity. I will come back to these points later, but let us first go
299 through another example.
303 let x = &mut 1u8; // tag: `Uniq(0)`
304 // stack: [Uniq(0)]; not frozen
306 let y = &*x; // tag: `Shr(Some(1))`
307 // stack: [Uniq(0), Shr]; frozen since 1
309 // The `x` here really is a `&*x`, but we have already seen above what
310 // happens: `Uniq(0)` must be in the stack, but we leave it unchanged.
311 let z = x as *const u8 as *mut u8; // tag irrelevant because raw
312 // stack: [Uniq(0), Shr]; frozen since 1
314 // A write access through a raw pointer: Unfreeze the location and make sure
315 // that `Shr` is at the top of the stack.
317 // stack: [Uniq(0), Shr]; not frozen
319 // Access through `y`. There is a timestamp in the `Shr` tag, and the type
320 // `u8` does not allow interior mutability, but the location is not frozen.
321 // This is undefined behavior.
326 ### 2.2 Dereferencing a Pointer
327 [section 2.2]: #22-dereferencing-a-pointer
329 As we have seen, we consider the tag of a pointer already when dereferencing it,
330 before any memory access happens. The operation on a dereference never mutates
331 the stack, but it performs some basic checks that might declare the program UB.
332 The reason for this is twofold: First of all, I think we should require some
333 basic validity for pointers that are dereferenced even when they do not access
334 memory. Secondly, there is the practical concern for the implementation in miri:
335 When we dereference a pointer, we are guaranteed to have type information
336 available (crucial for things that depend on the presence of an `UnsafeCell`),
337 whereas having type information on every memory access would be quite hard to
340 Notice that on a dereference, we have *both* a tag at the pointer *and* the type
341 of a pointer, and the two might not agree which we do not always want to rule
342 out (we might have raw or shared pointers with a unique tag, for example).
344 The following checks are done on every pointer dereference:
346 1. If this is a raw pointer, do nothing and reset the tag used for the access to
347 `Shr(None)`. Raw accesses are checked as little as possible.
348 2. If this is a unique reference and the tag is `Shr(Some(_))`, that's an error.
349 3. If the tag is `Uniq`, make sure there is a matching `Uniq` item with the same
350 ID on the stack of every location this reference points to (the size is
351 determine with `size_of_val`).
352 4. If the tag is `Shr(None)`, make sure that either the location is frozen or
353 else there is a `Shr` item on the stack of every location.
354 5. If the tag is `Shr(Some(t))`, then the check depends on whether a location is
355 inside an `UnsafeCell` or not, according to the type of the reference.
356 - Locations outside `UnsafeCell` must have `frozen_since` set to `t` or an
358 - `UnsafeCell` locations must either be frozen or else have a `Shr` item in
359 their stack (same check as if the tag had no timestamp).
361 ### 2.3 Accessing Memory
362 [section 2.3]: #23-accessing-memory
364 On an actual memory access, we know the tag of the pointer that was used to
365 access (unless it was a raw pointer, in which case the tag we see is
366 `Shr(None)`), and we know whether we are reading from or writing to the current
367 location. We perform the following operations:
369 1. If the location is frozen and this is a read access, nothing happens. (even
370 if the tag is `Uniq`).
371 2. Unfreeze the location (set `frozen_since` to `None`).
372 3. Pop the stack until the top item matches the tag of the pointer.
373 - A `Uniq` item matches a `Uniq` tag with the same ID.
374 - A `Shr` item matches any `Shr` tag (with or without timestamp).
375 - When we are reading, a `Shr` item matches a `Uniq` tag.
377 If, popping the stack, we make it empty, then we have undefined behavior.
379 To understand these rules better, try going back through the three examples we
380 have seen so far and applying these rules for dereferencing pointers and
381 accessing memory to understand how they interact.
383 The only thing that is subtle and potentially surprising here is that we make a
384 `Uniq` tag match a `Shr` item and also accept `Uniq` reads on frozen locations.
385 This is required to make `demo1` work: Rust permits read accesses through
386 mutable references even when they are not currently actually unique. Our model
387 hence has to do the same.
389 ## 3 Retagging and Creating Raw Pointers
391 We have talked quite a bit about what happens when we *use* a pointer. It is
392 time we take a close look at *how pointers are created*. However, before we go
393 there, I would like us to consider one more example:
396 fn demo3(x: &mut u8) -> u8 {
402 The question is: Can we move the load of `x` to before the function call?
403 Remember that the entire point of Stacked Borrows is to enforce a certain
404 discipline when using references, in particular, to enforce uniqueness of
405 mutable references. So we should hope that the answer to that question is "yes"
406 (and that, in turns, is good because we might use it for optimizations).
407 Unfortunately, things are not so easy.
409 The uniqueness of mutable references entirely rests on the fact that the pointer
410 has a unique tag: If our tag is at the top of the stack (and the location is not
411 frozen), then any access with another tag will pop our item from the stack (or
412 cause undefined behavior). This is ensured by the memory access checks (and the
413 exception for matching `Uniq` tags with `Shr` items on reads does not affect
414 this property). Hence, if our tag is *still* on the stack after some other
415 accesses happened (and we know it is still on the stack every time we
416 dereference the pointer, as per the dereference checks described above), we know
417 that no access through a pointer with a different tag can have happened.
419 ### 3.1 Guaranteed Freshness
421 However, what if `some_function` has an exact copy of `x`? We got `x` from our
422 caller (whom we do not trust), maybe they used that same tag for another
423 reference (copied it with `transmute_copy` or so) and gave that to
424 `some_function`? There is a simple way we can circumvent this concern: Generate
425 a new tag for `x`. If *we* generate the tag (and we know generation never emits
426 the same tag twice, which is easy), we can be sure this tag is not used for any
427 other reference. So let us make this explicit by putting a `Retag` instruction
428 into the code where we generate new tags:
431 fn demo3(x: &mut u8) -> u8 {
438 These `Retag` instructions are inserted by the compiler pretty much any time
439 references are copied: At the beginning of every function, all inputs of
440 reference type get retagged. On every assignment, if the assigned value is of
441 reference type, it gets retagged. Moreover, we do this even when the reference
442 value is inside the field of a `struct` or `enum`, to make sure we really cover
443 all references. (This recursive descend is already implemented, but the
444 implementation has not landed yet.) However, we do *not* descend recursively
445 through references: Retagging a `&mut &mut u8` will only retag the *outer*
448 Retagging is the *only* operation that generates fresh tags. Taking a reference
449 simply forwards the tag of the pointer we are basing this reference on.
451 Here is our very first example with explicit retagging:
456 Retag(x); // tag of `x` gets changed to `Uniq(0)`
457 // stack: [Uniq(0)]; not frozen
460 Retag(x); // tag of `y` gets changed to `Uniq(1)`
461 // stack: [Uniq(0), Uniq(1)]; not frozen
463 // Check that `Uniq(1)` is on the stack, then pop to bring it to the top.
465 // stack: [Uniq(0), Uniq(1)]; not frozen
467 // Check that `Uniq(0)` is on the stack, then pop to bring it to the top.
469 // stack: [Uniq(0)]; not frozen
471 // Check that `Uniq(1)` is on the stack -- it is not, hence UB.
476 For each reference, `Retag` does the following (we will slightly refine these
479 1. Compute a fresh tag, `Uniq(_)` for a mutable reference and `Shr(Some(_))` for
481 2. Perform the checks that would also happen when we dereference this reference.
482 3. Perform the actions that would also happen when an actual access happens
483 through this reference (for shared references a read access, for mutable
484 references a write access).
485 4. If the new tag is `Uniq`, push it onto the stack. (The location cannot be
486 frozen: `Uniq` tags are only created for mutable references, and we just
487 performed the actions of a write access to memory, which unfreezes
489 5. If the new tag is `Shr`:
490 - If the location is already frozen, we do nothing.
492 1. Push a `Shr` item to the stack.
493 2. If the location is outside of `UnsafeCell`, it gets frozen with the
494 timestamp of the new reference.
496 One high-level way to think about retagging is that it computes a fresh tag, and
497 then performs a reborrow of the old reference with the new tag.
499 ### 3.2 When Pointers Escape
501 Creating a shared reference is not the only way to share a location: We can also
502 create raw pointers, and if we are careful enough, use them to access a location
503 from different aliasing pointers. (Of course, "careful enough" is not very
504 precise, but the precise answer is the very model I am describing here.)
506 To account for this, we need one final ingredient in our model: A special
507 instruction that indicates that a reference was cast to a raw pointer, and may
508 thus be accessed from these raw pointers in a shared way. Consider the
509 [following example](https://play.rust-lang.org/?version=stable&mode=debug&edition=2015&gist=253868e96b7eba85ef28e1eabd557f66):
514 Retag(x); // tag of `x` gets changed to `Uniq(0)`
515 // stack: [Uniq(0)]; not frozen
517 // Make sure what `x` points to is accessible through raw pointers.
519 // stack: [Uniq(0), Shr]; not frozen
521 let y1 = x as *mut u8;
524 // All of these first dereference a raw pointer (no checks, tag gets
525 // ignored) and then perform a read or write access with `Shr(None)` as
526 // the tag, which is already the top of the stack so nothing changes.
532 // Writing to `x` again pops `Shr` off the stack, as per the rules for
535 // stack: [Uniq(0)]; not frozen
537 // Any further access through the raw pointers is undefined behavior, even
538 // reads: The write to `x` re-asserted that `x` is the unique reference for
540 let _val = unsafe { *y1 };
544 The behavior of `EscapeToRaw` is best described as "reborrowing for a raw
545 pointer": The steps are the same as for `Retag` above, except that the new
546 pointer's tag is `Shr(None)` and we do not freeze (i.e., we behave as if the
547 entire pointee was inside an `UnsafeCell`).
549 Knowing about both `Retag` and `EscapeToRaw`, you can now go back to `demo2` and
550 should be able to fully explain why the stack changes the way it does not that
553 ### 3.3 The Case of the Aliasing References
555 Everything I described so far was pretty much in working condition as of about a
556 week ago. However, there was one thorny problem that I only discovered fairly
557 late, and as usual it is best demonstrated by an example -- entirely in safe
562 let rc = &mut RefCell::new(23u8);
563 Retag(rc); // tag gets changed to `Uniq(0)`
564 // We will consider the stack of the location where `23` is stored; the
565 // `RefCell` bookkeeping counters are not of interest.
568 // Taking a shared reference shares the location but does not freeze, due
569 // to the `UnsafeCell`.
571 Retag(rc_shr); // tag gets changed to `Shr(Some(1))`
572 // stack: [Uniq(0), Shr]; not frozen
574 // Lots of stuff happens here but it does not matter for this example.
575 let mut bmut = rc_shr.borrow_mut();
577 // Obtain a mutable reference into the `RefCell`.
578 let mut_ref = &mut *bmut;
579 Retag(mut_ref); // tag gets changed to `Uniq(2)`
580 // stack: [Uniq(0), Shr, Uniq(2)]; not frozen
582 // And at the same time, a fresh shared reference to its outside!
583 // This counts as a read access through `rc`, so we have to pop until
584 // at least a `Shr` is at the top of the stack.
585 let shr_ref = &*rc; // tag gets changed to `Shr(Some(3))`
587 // stack: [Uniq(0), Shr]; not frozen
589 // Now using `mut_ref` is UB because its tag is no longer on the stack. But
590 // that is bad, because it is usable in safe code.
595 Notice how `mut_ref` and `shr_ref` alias! And yet, creating a shared reference
596 to the memory already covered by our unique `mut_ref` must not invalidate
597 `mut_ref`. If we follow the instructions above, when we retag `shr_ref` after
598 it got created, we have no choice but pop the item matching `mut_ref` off the
601 This made me realize that creating a shared reference has to be very weak when
602 on locations inside `UnsafeCell`. In fact, it is entirely equivalent to
603 `EscapeToRaw`: We just have to make sure some kind of shared access is possible,
604 but we have to accept that there might be active mutable references assuming
605 exclusive access to the same locations. That on its own is not enough, though.
607 I also added a new check to the retagging procedure: Before taking any action
608 (i.e., before step 3, which could pop items off the stack), we check if the
609 reborrow is redundant: If the new reference we want to create is already
610 dereferencable (because it item is already on the stack and, if applicable, the
611 stack is already frozen), *and* if the item that justifies this is moreover
612 "derived from" the item that corresponds to the old reference, then we just do
613 nothing. Here, "derived from" means "further up the stack". Basically, the
614 reborrow has already happened and the new reference is ready for use, and
615 (because of that "derived from" check), we know that using the new reference
616 will *not* pop the item corresponding to the old reference off the stack. In
617 that case, we avoid popping anything, to keep other references valid.
619 This rule applies in our example above when we create `shr_ref` from `mut_ref`.
620 There is already a `Shr` on the stack (so the new reference is dereferencable),
621 and the item matching the old reference (`Uniq(0)`) is below that `Shr` (so
622 after using the new reference, the old one remains dereferencable). Hence we do
623 nothing, keeping the `Uniq(2)` on the stack, such that the access through
624 `mut_ref` at the end remains valid.
626 This may sound like a weird rule, and it is. I would surely not have thought of
627 this if `RefCell` would not force our hands here. However, as we shall see in
628 [section 5], it also does not to break any of the important properties of the
629 model (mutable references being unique and shared references being read-only
630 except for `UnsafeCell`). Moreover, when pushing an item to the stack (at the
631 end of the retag action), we can be sure that the stack is not yet frozen: If it
632 was frozen, the reborrow would be redundant.
634 With this extension, the instructions for retagging and `EscapeToRaw` now look
637 1. Compute a fresh tag: `Uniq(_)` for a mutable reference, `Shr(Some(_))` for a
638 shared reference, `Shr(None)` if this is `EscapeToRaw`.
639 2. Perform the checks that would also happen when we dereference this reference.
640 Remember the position of the item matching the tag in the stack.
641 3. Redundancy check: If the new tag passes the checks performed on a
642 dereference, and if the item that makes this check succeed is *above* the one
643 we remembered in step 2 (where the "frozen" state is considered above every
644 item in the stack), then we stop. We are done for this location.
645 4. Perform the actions that would also happen when an actual access happens
646 through this reference (for shared references a read access, for mutable
647 references a write access).
648 Now the location cannot be frozen any more: If the fresh tag is `Uniq`, we
649 just unfroze, if the fresh tag is `Shr` and the location was already frozen
650 then the redundancy check (step 3) would have kicked in.
651 5. If the new tag is `Uniq`, push it onto the stack.
652 6. If the new tag is `Shr`, push a `Shr` item to the stack. Then, if the
653 location is outside of `UnsafeCell`, it gets frozen with the timestamp of the
656 The one thing I find slightly unsatisfying about the redundancy check is that it
657 seems to overlap a bit with the rule that on a *read* access, a `Shr` item
658 matches a `Uniq` tag. Both of these together enable the read-only use of
659 mutable references that have already been shared; I would prefer to have a
660 single condition enabling that instead of two working together.
662 ## 4 Differences to the Original Proposal
663 [section 4]: #4-differences-to-the-original-proposal
665 The key differences to the original proposal is that the check performed on a
666 dereference, and the check performed on an access, are not the same check. This
667 means there are more "moving parts" in the model, but it also means we do not
668 need a weird special exception for `demo1` any more like the original proposal
669 did. The main reason for this, however, is that on an access, we just do not
670 know if we are inside an `UnsafeCell` or not, so we cannot do all the checks we
671 would like to do. Accordingly, I also rearranged terminology a bit. There is
672 no longer one "reactivation" action, instead there is a "deref" check and an
673 "access" action, as described above in sections [2.2][section 2.2] and
676 Beyond that, I made the behavior of shared references and raw pointers more
677 uniform. This helped to fix test failures around `iter_mut` on slices, which
678 first creates a raw reference and then a shared reference: In the original
679 model, creating the shared reference invalidates previously created raw
680 pointers. As part of unifying the two, this happens no longer.
681 (Coincidentally, I did not make this change with the intention of fixing
682 `iter_mut`. I did this change because I wanted to reduce the number of case
683 distinctions in the model. Then I realized the relevant test suddenly passed
684 even with the full model enabled, investigated what happened, and realized I
685 accidentally had had a great idea. :D )
687 The tag is now "typed" (`Uniq` vs `Shr`) to be able to support `transmute`
688 between references and shared pointers. Such `transmute` were an open question
689 in the original model and some people raised concerns about it in the ensuing
690 discussion. I invite all of you to come up with strange things you think you
691 should be able to `transmute` and throw them at miri so that we can see if your
692 use-cases are covered. :)
694 Creating a shared reference now always pushes a `Shr` item onto the stack, even
695 when there is no `UnsafeCell`. This means that starting with a mutable reference
696 `x`, `&*x as *const _ as *mut _` is pretty much equivalent to `x as *mut`. This
697 came up during the implementation because I realized that in `x as *const _` on
698 a mutable reference, `x` actually first gets coerced to shared reference, which
699 then gets cast to a raw pointer. This happens in `NonNull::from`, so if you
700 later write to that `NonNull`, you end up writing to a raw pointer that was
701 created from a shared reference. Originally I intended this to be strictly
702 illegal. This is writing to a shared reference after all, how dare you!
703 However, it turns out it's actually no big deal *if the shared reference does
704 not get used again later*. This is an access-based model after all, if a
705 reference never gets used again we do not care much about enforcing any
706 guarantees for it. (This is another example of a coincidental fix, where I had
707 a surprisingly passing test case and then investigated what happened.)
709 The redundancy check during retagging can be seen as refining a similar check
710 that the original model did whenever a new reference was created (where we
711 wouldn't change the state if the new borrow is already active).
713 Finally, the notion of "function barriers" from the original Stacked Borrows has
714 not been implemented yet. This is the next item on my todo list.
717 [section 5]: #5-key-properties
719 Let us look at the two key properties that I set out as design goals, and see
720 how the model guarantees that they hold true in all valid (UB-free) executions.
722 ### 5.1 Mutable References are Unique
724 The property I would like to establish here is that: After creating (retagging,
725 really) a `&mut`, if we then run some unknown code *that does not get passed the
726 reference* nor do we derive another reference from ours, and then we use the
727 reference again (reading or writing), we can be sure that this unknown code did
728 not access the memory behind our mutable reference at all (or we have UB). For
732 fn demo_mut_unique(our: &mut i32) -> i32 {
733 Retag(our); // So we can be sure the tag is unique
739 // We know this will return 5, and moreover if `unknown_code` does not panic
740 // we know we could do the write after calling `unknown_code` (because it
741 // cannot even read from `our`).
746 The proof sketch goes as follows: After retagging the reference, we know it is
747 at the top of the stack and the location is not frozen. (The "redundant
748 reborrow" rule does not apply because a fresh `Uniq` tag can never be
749 redundant.) For any access performed by the unknown code, we know that access
750 cannot use the tag of our reference because the tags are unique and not
751 forgeable. Hence if the unknown code accesses our locations, that would pop our
752 tag from the stack. When we use our reference again, we know it is on the
753 stack, and hence has not been popped off. Thus there cannot have been an access
754 from the unknown code.
756 Actually this theorem applies *any time* we have a reference whose tag we can be
757 sure has not been leaked to anyone else, and which points to locations which
758 have this tag at the top of the (unfrozen) stack. This is not just the case
759 immediately after retagging. We know our reference is at the top of the stack
760 after writing to it, so in the following example we know that `unknown_code_2`
764 fn demo_mut_advanced_unique(our: &mut u8) -> u8 {
765 Retag(our); // So we can be sure the tag is unique
767 unknown_code_1(&*our);
769 // This "re-asserts" uniqueness of the reference: After writing, we know
770 // our tag is at the top of the stack.
775 // We know this will return 5
780 ### 5.2 Shared References (without `UnsafeCell)` are Read-only
782 The key property of shared references is that: After creating (retagging,
783 really) a shared reference, if we then run some unknown code (it can even have
784 our reference if it wants), and then we use the reference again, we know that
785 the value pointed to by the reference has not been changed. For example:
788 fn demo_shr_frozen(our: &u8) -> u8 {
789 Retag(our); // So we can be sure the tag actually carries a timestamp
791 // See what's in there.
796 // We know this will return `val`
801 The proof sketch goes as follows: After retagging the reference, we know the
802 location is frozen (this is the case even if the "redundant reborrow" rule
803 applies). If the unknown code does any write, we know this will unfreeze the
804 location. The location might get re-frozen, but only at the then-current
805 timestamp. When we do our read after coming back from the unknown code, this
806 checks that the location is frozen *at least* since the timestamp given in its
807 tag, so if the location is unfrozen or got re-frozen by the unknown code, the
808 check would fail. Thus the unknown code cannot have written to the location.
810 One interesting observation here for both of these proofs is that all we rely on
811 when the unknown code is executed are the actions performed on every memory
812 access. The additional checks that happen when a pointer is dereferenced only
813 matter in *our* code, not in the foreign code. This indicates that we could see
814 the checks on pointer dereference as another "shadow state operation" next to
815 `Retag` and `EscapeToRaw`, and then these three operations plus the actions on
816 memory accesses are all that there is to Stacked Borrows. This is difficult to
817 implement in miri because dereferences can happen any time a path is evaluated,
818 but it is nevertheless interesting and might be useful in a "lower-level MIR"
819 that does not permit dereferences in paths.
821 ## 6 Evaluation, and How You Can Help
822 [section 6]: #6-evaluation-and-how-you-can-help
824 I have implemented both the validity invariant and the model as described above
825 in miri. This [uncovered](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/54908) two
826 [issues](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/54957) in the standard
827 library, but both were related to validity invariants, not Stacked Borrows.
828 With these exceptions, the model passes the entire test suite. There were some
829 more test failures in earlier versions (as mentioned in [section 4]), but the
830 final model accepts all the code covered by miri's test suite. Moreover I wrote
831 a bunch of compile-fail tests to make sure the model catches various violations
832 of the key properties it should ensure.
834 However, miri's test suite is tiny, and I have but one brain to come up with
835 counterexamples! In fact I am quite a bit worried because I literally came up
836 with `demo_refcell` less than two weeks ago, so what else might I have missed?
837 This where you come in. Please test this model! Come up with something funny
838 you think should work (I am thinking about funny `transmute` in particular,
839 using type punning through unions or raw pointers if you prefer that), or maybe
840 you have some crate that has some unsafe code and a test suite (you do have a
841 test suite, right?) that might run under miri.
843 The easiest way to try the model is the
844 [playground](https://play.rust-lang.org/): Type the code, select "Tools - Miri",
845 and you'll see what it does.
847 For things that are too long for the playground, you have to install miri on
848 your own computer. miri depends on rustc nightly and has to be updated
849 regularly to keep working, so it is not currently on crates.io. Installation
850 instructions for miri are provided
851 [in the README](https://github.com/solson/miri/#running-miri). Please let me
852 know if you are having trouble with anything. You can report issues, comment on
853 this post or find me in chat (as of recently, I am partial to Zulip where we
855 [unsafe code guidelines stream](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/136281-wg-unsafe-code-guidelines)).
857 With miri installed, you can `cargo miri` a project with a binary to run it in
858 miri. Dependencies should be fully supported, so you can use any crate you
859 like. It is not unlikely, however, that you will run into issues because miri
860 does not support some operation. In that case please search the
861 [issue tracker](https://github.com/solson/miri/issues) and report the issue if
862 it is new. We cannot support everything, but we might be able to do something
865 Unfortunately, `cargo miri test` is currently broken; if you want to help with
866 that [here are some details](https://github.com/solson/miri/issues/479).
867 Moreover, wouldn't it be nice if we could run the entire libcore, liballoc and
868 libstd test suite in miri? There are tons of interesting cases of Rust's core
869 data structures being exercise there, and the comparatively tiny miri test suite
870 has already helped to find two soundness bugs, so there are probably more. Once
871 `cargo miri test` works again, it would be great to find a way to run it on the
872 standard library test suites, and set up something so that this happens
873 automatically on a regular basis (so that we notice regressions).
875 As you can see, there is more than enough work for everyone. Don't be shy! I
876 have a mere three weeks left on this internship, after which I will have to
877 significantly reduce my Rust activities in favor of finishing my PhD. I won't
878 disappear entirely though, don't worry -- I will still be able to mentor you if
879 you want to help with any of the above tasks. :)