1*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions# XNU Allocators best practices 2*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 3*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions## Introduction 4*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 5*aca3beaaSApple OSS DistributionsXNU proposes two ways to allocate memory: 6*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 7*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions- the VM subsystem that provides allocations at the granularity of pages (with 8*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions `kmem_alloc` and similar interfaces); 9*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions- the zone allocator subsystem (`<kern/zalloc.h>`) which is a slab-allocator of 10*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions objects of fixed size. 11*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 12*aca3beaaSApple OSS DistributionsIn addition to that, `<kern/kalloc.h>` provides a variable-size general purpose 13*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionsallocator implemented as a collection of zones of fixed size, and overflowing to 14*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions`kmem_alloc` for allocations larger than a few pages (32KB when this 15*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionsdocument was being written but this is subject to change/tuning in the future). 16*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 17*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 18*aca3beaaSApple OSS DistributionsThe Core Kernel allocators rely on the following headers: 19*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 20*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions- `<kern/zalloc.h>` and `<kern/kalloc.h>` for its API surface, which most 21*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions clients should find sufficient, 22*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions- `<kern/zalloc_internal.h>` for interfaces that need to be exported 23*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions for introspection and implementation purposes, and is not meant 24*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions for general consumption. 25*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 26*aca3beaaSApple OSS DistributionsThis document will present the best practices to allocate memory 27*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionsin the kernel, from a security perspective. 28*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 29*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions## Permanent allocations 30*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 31*aca3beaaSApple OSS DistributionsThe kernel sometimes needs to provide persistent allocations that depend on 32*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionsparameters that aren't compile time constants, but will not vary over time (NCPU 33*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionsis an obvious example here). 34*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 35*aca3beaaSApple OSS DistributionsThe zone subsystem provides a `zalloc_permanent*` family of functions that help 36*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionsallocating memory in such a fashion in a very compact way. 37*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 38*aca3beaaSApple OSS DistributionsUnlike the typical zone allocators, this allows for arbitrary sizes, in a 39*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionssimilar fashion to `kalloc`. These functions will never fail (if the allocation 40*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionsfails, the kernel will panic), and always return zeroed memory. Trying to free 41*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionsthese allocations results in a kernel panic. 42*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 43*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions## Allocation flags 44*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 45*aca3beaaSApple OSS DistributionsMost `zalloc` or `kalloc` functions take `zalloc_flags_t` typed flags. 46*aca3beaaSApple OSS DistributionsWhen flags are expected, exactly one of `Z_WAITOK`, `Z_NOWAIT` or `Z_NOPAGEWAIT` 47*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionsis to be passed: 48*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 49*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions- `Z_WAITOK` means that the zone allocator can wait and block, 50*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions- `Z_NOWAIT` can be used to require a fully non blocking behavior, which can be 51*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions used for allocations under spinlock and other preemption disabled contexts; 52*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions- `Z_NOPAGEWAIT` allows for the allocator to block (typically on mutexes), 53*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions but not to wait for available pages if there are none, this is only useful 54*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions for the buffer cache, and most client should either use `Z_NOWAIT` or `Z_WAITOK`. 55*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 56*aca3beaaSApple OSS DistributionsOther important flags: 57*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 58*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions- `Z_ZERO` if zeroed memory is expected (nowadays most of the allocations will 59*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions be zeroed regardless, but it's always clearer to specify it), note that it is 60*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions often more efficient than calling bzero as the allocator tends to maintain 61*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions freed memory as zeroed in the first place, 62*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions- `Z_NOFAIL` if the caller knows the allocation can't fail: allocations that are 63*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions made with `Z_WAITOK` from regular (non exhaustible) zones, or from `kalloc*` 64*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions interfaces with a size smaller than `KALLOC_SAFE_ALLOC_SIZE`, 65*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions will never fail (the kernel will instead panic if no memory can be found). 66*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions `Z_NOFAIL` can be used to denote that the caller knows about this. 67*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions If `Z_NOFAIL` is incorrectly used, then the zone allocator will panic at runtime. 68*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 69*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions## Zones (`zalloc`) 70*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 71*aca3beaaSApple OSS DistributionsThe first blessed way to allocate memory in the kernel is by using zones. 72*aca3beaaSApple OSS DistributionsZones are mostly meant to be used in Core XNU and some "BSD" kexts. 73*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 74*aca3beaaSApple OSS DistributionsIt is generally recommended to create zones early and to store the `zone_t` 75*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionspointer in read-only memory (using `SECURITY_READ_ONLY_LATE` storage). 76*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 77*aca3beaaSApple OSS DistributionsZones are more feature-rich than `kalloc`, and some features can only be 78*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionsused when making a zone: 79*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 80*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions- the object type being allocated requires extremely strong segregation 81*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions from other types (typically `zone_require` will be used with this zone), 82*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions- the object type implements some form of security boundary and wants to adopt 83*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions the read-only allocator (See `ZC_READONLY`), 84*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions- the allocation must be per-cpu, 85*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions- ... 86*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 87*aca3beaaSApple OSS DistributionsIn the vast majority of cases however, using `kalloc_type` (or `IOMallocType`) 88*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionsis preferred. 89*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 90*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 91*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions## The Typed allocator 92*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 93*aca3beaaSApple OSS DistributionsIgnoring VM allocations (or wrappers like `IOMemoryDescriptor`), the only 94*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionsblessed way to allocate typed memory in XNU is using the typed allocator 95*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions`kalloc_type` or one of its variants (like IOKit's `IOMallocType`) and untyped 96*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionsmemory that doesn't contain pointers is using the data API `kalloc_data` or 97*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionsone of its variants (like IOKit's `IOMallocData`). However, this comes with 98*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionsadditional requirements. 99*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 100*aca3beaaSApple OSS DistributionsNote that at this time, those interfaces aren't exported to third parties, 101*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionsas its ABI has not yet converged. 102*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 103*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions### A word about types 104*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 105*aca3beaaSApple OSS DistributionsThe typed allocators assume that allocated types fit a very precise model. 106*aca3beaaSApple OSS DistributionsIf the allocations you perform do not fit the model, then your types 107*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionsmust be restructured to fit, for security reasons. 108*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 109*aca3beaaSApple OSS DistributionsA general theme will be the separation of data/primitive types from pointers, 110*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionsas attackers tend to use data/pointer overlaps to carry out their exploitations. 111*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 112*aca3beaaSApple OSS DistributionsThe typed allocators use compiler support to infer signatures 113*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionsof the types being allocated. Because some scalars actually represent 114*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionskernel pointers (like `vm_offset_t`,`vm_address_t`, `uintptr_t`, ...), 115*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionstypes or structure members can be decorated with `__kernel_ptr_semantics` 116*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionsto denote when a data-looking type is actually a pointer. 117*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 118*aca3beaaSApple OSS DistributionsDo note that `__kernel_data_semantics` and `__kernel_dual_semantics` 119*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionsare also provided but should typically rarely be used. 120*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 121*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions#### fixed-sized types 122*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 123*aca3beaaSApple OSS DistributionsThe first case is fixed size types, this is typically a `struct`, `union` 124*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionsor C++ `class`. Fixed-size types must follow certain rules: 125*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 126*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions- types should be small enough to fit in the zone allocator: 127*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions smaller than `KALLOC_SAFE_ALLOC_SIZE`. When this is not the case, 128*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions we have typically found that there is a large array of data, 129*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions or some buffer in that type, the solution is to outline this allocation. 130*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions- for union types, data/pointer overlaps should be avoided if possible. 131*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions when this isn't possible, a zone should be considered. 132*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 133*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions#### Variable-sized types 134*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 135*aca3beaaSApple OSS DistributionsThese come in two variants: arrays, and arrays prefixed with a header. 136*aca3beaaSApple OSS DistributionsAny other case must be reduced to those, by possibly making more allocations. 137*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 138*aca3beaaSApple OSS DistributionsAn array is simply an allocation of several fixed-size types, 139*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionsand the rules of "fixed-sized types" above apply to them. 140*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 141*aca3beaaSApple OSS DistributionsThe following rules are expected when dealing with variable sized allocations: 142*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 143*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions- variable sized allocations should have a single owner and not be refcounted; 144*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions- under the header-prefixed form, if the header contains pointers, 145*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions then the array element type **must not** be only data. 146*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 147*aca3beaaSApple OSS DistributionsIf those rules can't be followed, then the allocation must be split with 148*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionsthe header becoming a fixed-sized type becoming the single owner 149*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionsof an array. 150*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 151*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions#### Untyped memory 152*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 153*aca3beaaSApple OSS DistributionsWhen allocating untyped memory with the data APIs ensure that it doesn't 154*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionscontain kernel pointers. If your untyped allocation contains kernel pointers 155*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionsconsider splitting the allocation into two: one part that is typed and contains 156*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionsthe kernel pointers and the second that is untyped and data-only. 157*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 158*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions### API surface 159*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 160*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions<table> 161*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <tr> 162*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <th>Interface</th> 163*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <th>API</th> 164*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <th>Notes</th> 165*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions </tr> 166*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <tr> 167*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <td>Data/Primitive types</td> 168*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <td> 169*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <p> 170*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <b>Core Kernel</b>:<br/> 171*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <tt>kalloc_data(size, flags)</tt><br/> 172*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <tt>krealloc_data(ptr, old_size, new_size, flags)</tt><br/> 173*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <tt>kfree_data(ptr, size)</tt><br/> 174*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <tt>kfree_data_addr(ptr)</tt> 175*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions </p> 176*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <p> 177*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <b>IOKit untyped variant (returns <tt>void *</tt>)</b>:<br/> 178*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <tt>IOMallocData(size)</tt><br/> 179*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <tt>IOMallocZeroData(size)</tt><br/> 180*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <tt>IOFreeData(ptr, size)</tt> 181*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions </p> 182*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <p> 183*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <b>IOKit typed variant (returns <tt>type_t *</tt>)</b>:<br/> 184*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <tt>IONewData(type_t, count)</tt><br/> 185*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <tt>IONewZeroData(type_t, count)</tt><br/> 186*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <tt>IODeleteData(ptr, type_t, count)</tt> 187*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions </p> 188*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions </td> 189*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <td>This should be used when the allocated type contains no kernel pointer only</td> 190*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions </tr> 191*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <tr> 192*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <td>Fixed-sized type</td> 193*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <td> 194*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <p> 195*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <b>Core Kernel</b>:<br/> 196*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <tt>kalloc_type(type_t, flags)</tt><br/> 197*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <tt>kfree_type(type_t, ptr)</tt> 198*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions </p> 199*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <p> 200*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <b>IOKit:</b><br/> 201*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <tt>IOMallocType(type_t)</tt><br/> 202*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <tt>IOFreeType(ptr, type_t)</tt> 203*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions </p> 204*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions </td> 205*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <td> 206*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <p> 207*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions Note that this is absolutely OK to use this variant 208*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions for data/primitive types, it will be redirected to <tt>kalloc_data</tt> 209*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions (or <tt>IOMallocData</tt>). 210*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions </p> 211*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions </td> 212*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions </tr> 213*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <tr> 214*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <td>Arrays of fixed-sized type</td> 215*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <td> 216*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <p> 217*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <b>Core Kernel</b>:<br/> 218*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <tt>kalloc_type(type_t, count, flags)</tt><br/> 219*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <tt>kfree_type(type_t, count, ptr)</tt> 220*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions </p> 221*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <p> 222*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <b>IOKit:</b><br/> 223*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <tt>IONew(type_t, count)</tt><br/> 224*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <tt>IONewZero(type_t, count)</tt><br/> 225*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <tt>IODelete(ptr, type_t, count)</tt> 226*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions </p> 227*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions </td> 228*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <td> 229*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <p> 230*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <tt>kalloc_type(type_t, ...)</tt> (resp. <tt>IONew(type_t, 1)</tt>) 231*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <b>isn't</b> equivalent to <tt>kalloc_type(type_t, 1, ...)</tt> 232*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions (resp. <tt>IOMallocType(type_t)</tt>). Mix-and-matching interfaces 233*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions will result in panics. 234*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions </p> 235*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <p> 236*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions Note that this is absolutely OK to use this variant 237*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions for data/primitive types, it will be redirected to <tt>kalloc_data</tt>. 238*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions </p> 239*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions </td> 240*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions </tr> 241*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <tr> 242*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <td>Header-prefixed arrays of fixed-sized type</td> 243*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <td> 244*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <p> 245*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <b>Core Kernel</b>:<br/> 246*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <tt>kalloc_type(hdr_type_t, type_t, count, flags)</tt><br/> 247*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <tt>kfree_type(hdr_type_t, type_t, count, ptr)</tt> 248*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions </p> 249*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <p> 250*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <b>IOKit:</b><br/> 251*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <tt>IONew(hdr_type_t, type_t, count)</tt><br/> 252*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <tt>IONewZero(hdr_type_t, type_t, count)</tt><br/> 253*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <tt>IODelete(ptr, hdr_type_t, type_t, count)</tt> 254*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions </p> 255*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions </td> 256*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <td> 257*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <p> 258*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions <tt>hdr_type_t</tt> can't contain a refcount, 259*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions and <tt>type_t</tt> can't be a primitive type. 260*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions </p> 261*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions </td> 262*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions </tr> 263*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions</table> 264*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 265*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions## C++ classes and operator new. 266*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 267*aca3beaaSApple OSS DistributionsThis section covers how typed allocators should be adopted to use 268*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions`operator new/delete` in C++. For C++ classes, the approach required 269*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionsdiffers based on whether the class inherits from `OSObject` or not. 270*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 271*aca3beaaSApple OSS DistributionsMost, if not all, C++ objects used in conjuction with IOKit APIs 272*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionsshould probably use OSObject as a base class. C++ operators 273*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionsand non-POD types should be used seldomly. 274*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 275*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions### `OSObject` subclasses 276*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 277*aca3beaaSApple OSS DistributionsAll subclasses of `OSObject` must declare and define one of IOKit's 278*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions`OSDeclare*` and `OSDefine*` macros. As part of those, an `operator new` and 279*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions`operator delete` are injected that force objects to enroll into `kalloc_type`. 280*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 281*aca3beaaSApple OSS DistributionsNote that idiomatic IOKit is supposed to use `OSTypeAlloc(Class)`. 282*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 283*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions### Other classes 284*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 285*aca3beaaSApple OSS DistributionsUnlike `OSObject` subclasses, regular C++ classes must adopt typed allocators 286*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionsmanually. If your struct or class is POD (Plain Old Data), then replacing usage of 287*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions`new/delete` (resp. `new[]/delete[]`) with `IOMallocType/IOFreeType` (resp. 288*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions`IONew/IODelete`) is safe. 289*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 290*aca3beaaSApple OSS DistributionsHowever, if you have non default structors, or members of your class/struct 291*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionshave non default structors, you will need to manually enroll it into `kalloc_type`. 292*aca3beaaSApple OSS DistributionsThis can be accomplished through one of the following approaches, and it lets you 293*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionsto continue to use C++'s new and delete keywords to allocate/deallocate instances. 294*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 295*aca3beaaSApple OSS DistributionsThe first approach is to subclass the IOTypedOperatorsMixin struct. This will 296*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionsadopt typed allocators for your class/struct by providing the appropriate 297*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionsimplementations for `operator new/delete`: 298*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 299*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions```cpp 300*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionsstruct Type : public IOTypedOperatorsMixin<Type> { 301*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions ... 302*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions}; 303*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions``` 304*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 305*aca3beaaSApple OSS DistributionsAlternatively, if you cannot use the mixin approach, you can use the 306*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions`IOOverrideTypedOperators` macro to override `operator new/delete` 307*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionswithin your class/struct declaration: 308*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 309*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions```cpp 310*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionsstruct Type { 311*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions IOOverrideTypedOperators(Type); 312*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions ... 313*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions}; 314*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions``` 315*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 316*aca3beaaSApple OSS DistributionsFinally, if you need to decouple the declaration of the operators from 317*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionstheir implementation, you can use `IODeclareTypedOperators` paired with 318*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions`IODefineTypedOperators`, to declare the operators within your class/struct 319*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionsdeclaration and then provide their definition out of line: 320*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 321*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions```cpp 322*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions// declaration 323*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionsstruct Type { 324*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions IODeclareTypedOperators(Type); 325*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions ... 326*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions}; 327*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 328*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions// definition 329*aca3beaaSApple OSS DistributionsIODefineTypedOperators(Type) 330*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions``` 331*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 332*aca3beaaSApple OSS DistributionsWhen a class/struct adopts typed allocators through one of those approaches, 333*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionsall its subclasses must also explicitly adopt typed allocators. It is not 334*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionssufficient for a common parent within the class hierarchy to enroll, in order to 335*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionsautomatically provide the implementation of the operators for all of its children: 336*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionseach and every subclass in the class hierarchy must also explicitly do the same. 337*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 338*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions### The case of `operator new[]` 339*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 340*aca3beaaSApple OSS DistributionsThe ABI of `operator new[]` is unfortunate, as it denormalizes 341*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionsdata that we prefer to be known by the owning object 342*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions(the element sizes and array element count). 343*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 344*aca3beaaSApple OSS DistributionsIt also makes those allocations ripe for abuse in an adversarial 345*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionscontext as this denormalized information is at the begining 346*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionsof the structure, making it relatively easy to attack with 347*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionsout-of-bounds bugs. 348*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 349*aca3beaaSApple OSS DistributionsFor this reason, the default variants of the mixin and the macros 350*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionspresented above will delete the implementation of `operator new[]` 351*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionsfrom the class they are applied to. 352*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 353*aca3beaaSApple OSS DistributionsHowever, if those must be used, you can add adopt the typed 354*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionsallocators on your class by using the appropriate variant 355*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionswhich explicitly implements the support for array operators: 356*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions- `IOTypedOperatorsMixinSupportingArrayOperators` 357*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions- `IOOverrideTypedOperatorsSupportingArrayOperators` 358*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions- `IO{Declare, Define}TypedOperatorsSupportingArrayOperators` 359*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 360*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions### Scalar types 361*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 362*aca3beaaSApple OSS DistributionsThe only accepted ways of using `operator new/delete` and their variants are the ones 363*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionsdescribed above. You should never use the operators on scalar types. Instead, you 364*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionsshould use the appropriate typed allocator API based on the semantics of the memory 365*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionsbeing allocated (i.e. `IOMallocData` for data only buffers, and `IOMallocType`/`IONew` 366*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionsfor any other type). 367*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 368*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions### Wrapping C++ type allocation in container OSObjects 369*aca3beaaSApple OSS DistributionsThe blessed way of wrapping and passing a C++ type allocation for use in the 370*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionslibkern collection is using `OSValueObject`. Please do no use OSData for this 371*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributionspurpose as its backing store should not contain kernel pointers. 372*aca3beaaSApple OSS Distributions 373