xref: /xnu-11215.41.3/doc/primitives/string-handling.md (revision 33de042d024d46de5ff4e89f2471de6608e37fa4)
1*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions# String handling in xnu
2*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
3*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsxnu implements most POSIX C string functions, including the inherited subset of
4*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsstandard C string functions. Unfortunately, poor design choices have made many
5*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsof these functions, including the more modern `strl` functions, confusing or
6*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsunsafe. In addition, the advent of -fbounds-safety support in xnu is forcing
7*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionssome string handling practices to be revisited. This document explains the
8*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsfailings of POSIX C string functions, xnu's `strbuf` functions, and their
9*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsintersection with the -fbounds-safety C extension.
10*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
11*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions## The short-form guidance
12*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
13*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions* Use `strbuf*` when you have the length for all the strings;
14*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions* use `strl*` when you have the length of _one_ string, and the other is
15*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions  guaranteed to be NUL-terminated;
16*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions* use `str*` when you don't have the length for any of the strings, and they
17*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions  are all guaranteed to be NUL-terminated;
18*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions* stop using `strn*` functions.
19*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
20*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions## Replacing `strncmp`
21*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
22*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions`strncmp` is always wrong with -fbounds-safety, and it's unavailable as a
23*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsresult. Given `strcmp(first, secnd, n)`, you need to know the types of `first`
24*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsand `secnd` to pick a replacement. Choose according to this table:
25*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
26*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions| strncmp(first, secnd, n) | __null_terminated first   | __indexable first               |
27*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions| ------------------------ | ------------------------- | ------------------------------- |
28*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions| __null_terminated secnd  | n/a                       | strlcmp(first, secnd, n1)       |
29*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions| __indexable secnd        | strlcmp(secnd, first, n2) | strbufcmp(first, n1, secnd, n2) |
30*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
31*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsUsing `strncmp` with two NUL-terminated strings is uncommon and it has no
32*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsdirect replacement. The first person who needs to use -fbounds-safety in a file
33*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsthat does this might need to write the string function.
34*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
35*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsIf you try to use `strlcmp` and you get a diagnostic like this:
36*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
37*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions> passing 'const char *__indexable' to parameter of incompatible type
38*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions> 'const char *__null_terminated' is an unsafe operation ...
39*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
40*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsthen you might need to swap the two string arguments. `strlcmp` is sensitive to
41*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsthe argument order: just like for `strlcpy`, the indexable string goes first.
42*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
43*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions# The problems with string functions
44*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
45*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsPOSIX/BSD string handling functions come in many variants:
46*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
47*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions* `str` functions (strlen, strcat, etc), unsafe for writing;
48*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions* `strn` functions (strnlen, strncat, etc), unsafe for writing;
49*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions* `strl` functions (strlcpy, strlcat, etc), safe but easily misunderstood.
50*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
51*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions`str` functions for writing (`strcpy`, `strcat`, etc) are **all** unsafe
52*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsbecause they don't care about the bounds of the output buffer. Most or all of
53*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsthese functions have been deprecated or outright removed from xnu. You should
54*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsnever use `str` functions to write to strings. Functions that simply read
55*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsstrings (`strlen`, `strcmp`, `strchr`, etc) are generally found to be safe
56*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsbecause there is no confusion that their input must be NUL-terminated and there
57*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsis no danger of writing out of bounds (out of not writing at all).
58*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
59*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions`strn` functions for writing (`strncpy`, `strncat`, etc) are **all** unsafe.
60*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions`strncpy` doesn't NUL-terminate the output buffer, and `strncat` doesn't accept
61*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsa length for the output buffer. **All** new string buffers should include space
62*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsfor a NUL terminator. `strn` functions for reading (`strncmp`, `strnlen`) are
63*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions_generally_ safe, but `strncmp` can cause confusion over which string is bound
64*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsby the given size. In extreme cases, this can create information disclosure
65*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsbugs or stability issues.
66*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
67*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions`strl` functions, from OpenBSD, only come in writing variants, and they always
68*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsNUL-terminate their output. This makes the writing part safe. (xnu adds `strl`
69*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionscomparison functions, which do no writing and are also safe.) However, these
70*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsfunctions assume the output pointer is a buffer and the input is a NUL-
71*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsterminated string. Because of coexistence with `strn` functions that make no
72*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionssuch assumption, this mental model isn't entirely adopted by many users. For
73*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsinstance, the following code is buggy:
74*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
75*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions```c
76*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionschar output[4];
77*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionschar input[8] = "abcdefgh"; /* not NUL-terminated */
78*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsstrlcpy(output, input, sizeof(output));
79*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions```
80*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
81*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions`strlcpy` returns the length of the input string; in xnu's implementation,
82*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsliterally by calling `strlen(input)`. Even though only 3 characters are written
83*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsto `output` (plus a NUL), `input` is read until reaching a NUL character. This
84*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsis always a problem from the perspective of memory disclosures, and in some
85*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionscases, it can also lead to stability issues.
86*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
87*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions# Changes with -fbounds-safety
88*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
89*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsWhen enabling -fbounds-safety, character buffers and NUL-terminated strings are
90*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionstwo distinct types, and they do not implicitly convert to each other. This
91*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsprevents confusing the two in the way that is problematic with `strlcpy`, for
92*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsinstance. However, it creates new problems:
93*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
94*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions* What is the correct way to transform a character buffer into a NUL-terminated
95*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions  string?
96*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions* When -fbounds-safety flags that the use of a string function was improper,
97*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions  what is the solution?
98*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
99*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsThe most common use of character buffers is to build a string, and then this
100*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsstring is passed without bounds as a NUL-terminated string to downstream users.
101*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions-fbounds-safety and XNU enshrine this practice with the following additions:
102*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
103*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions* `tsnprintf`: like `snprintf`, but it returns a NUL-terminated string;
104*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions* `strbuf` functions, explicitly accepting character buffers and a distinct
105*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions  count for each:
106*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions  * `strbuflen(buffer, length)`: like `strnlen`;
107*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions  * `strbufcmp(a, alen, b, len)`: like `strcmp`;
108*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions  * `strbufcasecmp(a, alen, b, blen)`: like `strcasecmp`;
109*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions  * `strbufcpy(a, alen, b, blen)`: like `strlcpy` but returns `a` as a NUL-
110*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    terminated string;
111*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions  * `strbufcat(a, alen, b, blen)`: like `strlcat` but returns `a` as a NUL-
112*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    terminated string;
113*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions* `strl` (new) functions, accepting _one_ character buffer of a known size and
114*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions  _one_ NUL-terminated string:
115*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions  * `strlcmp(a, b, alen)`: like `strcmp`;
116*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions  * `strlcasecmp(a, b, alen)`: like `strcasecmp`.
117*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
118*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions`strbuf` functions additionally all have overloads accepting character arrays
119*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsin lieu of a pointer+length pair: `strbuflen(array)`, `strbufcmp(a, b)`,
120*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions`strbufcasecmp(a, b)`, `strbufcpy(a, b)`, `strbufcat(a, b)`.
121*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
122*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsIf the destination array of `strbufcpy` or `strbufcat` has a size of 0, they
123*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsreturn NULL without doing anything else. Otherwise, the destination is always
124*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsNUL-terminated and returned as a NUL-terminated string pointer.
125*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
126*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsWhile you are modifying a string, you should reference its data as some flavor
127*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsof indexable pointer, and only once you're done should you convert it to a
128*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsNUL-terminated string. NUL-terminated character pointers are generally not
129*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionssuitable for modifications as bounds are determined by contents. Overwriting
130*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsany NUL character found through a `__null_terminated` pointer access will result
131*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsin a trap. For instance:
132*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
133*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions```c
134*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsvoid my_string_consuming_func(const char *);
135*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
136*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions// lots of __unsafe!
137*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionschar *__null_terminated my_string = __unsafe_forge_null_terminated(
138*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions  kalloc_data(my_string_size, Z_WAITOK));
139*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsmemcpy(
140*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions  __unsafe_forge_bidi_indexable(void *, my_string, my_string_size),
141*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions  my_data,
142*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions  my_string_size);
143*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsmy_string_consuming_func(my_string);
144*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions```
145*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
146*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsThis code converts the string pointer to a NUL-terminated string too early,
147*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionswhile it's still being modified. Keeping my_string a `__null_terminated` pointer
148*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionswhile it's being modified leads to more forging, which has more chances of
149*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsintroducing errors, and is less ergonomic. Consider this instead:
150*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
151*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions```c
152*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsvoid my_string_consuming_func(const char *);
153*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
154*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionschar *my_buffer = kalloc_data(my_string_size, Z_WAITOK);
155*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsconst char *__null_terminated finished_string =
156*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions  strbufcpy(my_buffer, my_string_size, my_data, my_string_size);
157*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsmy_string_consuming_func(finished);
158*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions```
159*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
160*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsThis example has two views of the same data: `my_buffer` (through which the
161*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsstring is being modified) and `finished_string` (which is `const` and
162*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsNUL-terminated). Using `my_buffer` as an indexable pointer allows you to modify
163*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsit ergonomically, and importantly, without forging. You turn it into a
164*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsNUL-terminated string at the same time you turn it into a `const` reference,
165*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionssignalling that you're done making changes.
166*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
167*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsWith -fbounds-safety enabled, you should structure the final operation modifying
168*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsa character array such that you get a NUL-terminated view of it. For instance,
169*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsthis plain C code:
170*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
171*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions```c
172*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionschar thread_name[MAXTHREADNAMESIZE];
173*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions(void) snprintf(thread_name, sizeof(thread_name),
174*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions        "dlil_input_%s", ifp->if_xname);
175*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsthread_set_thread_name(inp->dlth_thread, thread_name);
176*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions```
177*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
178*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsbecomes:
179*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
180*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions```c
181*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionschar thread_name_buf[MAXTHREADNAMESIZE];
182*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsconst char *__null_terminated thread_name;
183*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsthread_name = tsnprintf(thread_name_buf, sizeof(thread_name_buf),
184*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions        "dlil_input_%s", ifp->if_xname);
185*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsthread_set_thread_name(inp->dlth_thread, thread_name);
186*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions```
187*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
188*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsAlthough `tsnprintf` and `strbuf` functions return a `__null_terminated`
189*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionspointer to you for convenience, not all use cases are resolved by calling
190*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions`tsnprintf` or `strbufcpy` once. As a quick reference, with -fbounds-safety
191*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsenabled, you can use `__unsafe_null_terminated_from_indexable(p_start, p_nul)`
192*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsto convert a character array to a `__null_terminated` string if you need to
193*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsperform more manipulations. (`p_start` is a pointer to the first character, and
194*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions`p_nul` is a pointer to the NUL character in that string.) For instance, if you
195*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsbuild a string with successive calls to `scnprintf`, you would use
196*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions`__unsafe_null_terminated_from_indexable` at the end of the sequence to get your
197*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsNUL-terminated string pointer.
198*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
199*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsOccasionally, you need to turn a NUL-terminated string back into "char buffer"
200*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions(usually to interoperate with copy APIs that need a pointer and a byte count).
201*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsWhen possible, it's advised to use APIs that copy NUL-terminated pointers (like
202*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions`strlcpy`). Otherwise, convert the NUL-terminated string to an indexable buffer
203*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsusing `__null_terminated_to_indexable` (if you don't need the NUL terminator to
204*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsbe in bounds of the result pointer) or `__unsafe_null_terminated_to_indexable`
205*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions(if you need it). Also keep in mind that in code which pervasively deals with
206*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsbuffers that have lengths and some of them happen to also be NUL-terminated
207*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsstrings, it could be simply more convenient to keep string buffers in some
208*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsflavor of indexable pointers instead of having conversions from and to
209*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsNUL-terminated strings.
210*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
211*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions# I have a choice between `strn*`, `strl*`, `strbuf*`. Which one do I use?
212*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
213*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsYou might come across cases where the same function in different families would
214*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsseem like they all do the trick. For instance:
215*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
216*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions```c
217*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsstruct foo {
218*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    char buf1[10];
219*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    char buf2[16];
220*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions};
221*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
222*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsvoid bar(struct foo *f) {
223*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    /* how do I test whether buf1 and buf2 contain the same string? */
224*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    if (strcmp(f->buf1, f->buf2) == 0) { /* ... */ }
225*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    if (strncmp(f->buf1, f->buf2, sizeof(f->buf1)) == 0) { /* ... */ }
226*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    if (strlcmp(f->buf1, f->buf2, sizeof(f->buf1)) == 0) { /* ... */ }
227*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions    if (strbufcmp(f->buf1, f->buf2) == 0) { /* ... */ }
228*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions}
229*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions```
230*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
231*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsWithout -fbounds-safety, these all work the same, but when you enable it,
232*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions`strbufcmp` could be the only one that builds. If you do not have the privilege
233*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsof -fbounds-safety to guide you to the best choice, as a rule of thumb, you
234*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsshould prefer APIs in the following order:
235*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
236*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions1. `strbuf*` APIs;
237*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions2. `strl*` APIs;
238*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions3. `str*` APIs.
239*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
240*33de042dSApple OSS DistributionsThat is, to implement `bar`, you have a choice of `strcmp`, `strncmp` and
241*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions`strbufcmp`, and you should prefer `strbufcmp`.
242*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions
243*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions`strn` functions are **never** recommended. You should use `strbuflen` over
244*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions`strnlen` (they do the same thing, but having a separate `strbuflen` function
245*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsmakes the guidance to avoid `strn` functions easier), and you should use
246*33de042dSApple OSS Distributions`strbufcmp`, `strlcmp` or even `strcmp` over `strncmp` (depending on whether
247*33de042dSApple OSS Distributionsyou know the length of each string, of just one, or of neither).
248