Modeling Dynamic (De)Allocations of Local Memory for Translation Validation

March 08, 2024 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› Proc. ACM Program. Lang.

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Authors Abhishek Rose, Sorav Bansal arXiv ID 2403.05302 Category cs.PL: Programming Languages Citations 1 Venue Proc. ACM Program. Lang. Last Checked 4 months ago
Abstract
End-to-End Translation Validation is the problem of verifying the executable code generated by a compiler against the corresponding input source code for a single compilation. This becomes particularly hard in the presence of dynamically-allocated local memory where addresses of local memory may be observed by the program. In the context of validating the translation of a C procedure to executable code, a validator needs to tackle constant-length local arrays, address-taken local variables, address-taken formal parameters, variable-length local arrays, procedure-call arguments (including variadic arguments), and the alloca() operator. We provide an execution model, a definition of refinement, and an algorithm to soundly convert a refinement check into first-order logic queries that an off-the-shelf SMT solver can handle efficiently. In our experiments, we perform blackbox translation validation of C procedures (with up to 100+ SLOC), involving these local memory allocation constructs, against their corresponding assembly implementations (with up to 200+ instructions) generated by an optimizing compiler with complex loop and vectorizing transformations.
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