Skip to content

SRI-CSL/llvm2smt

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

llvm2smt

Experimental translation of LLVM (3.5ish) IR to SMT-LIB.

Overview

This tool, llvm2smt, parses a llvm bitcode file (in its human readable form) and translates it to a symbolic SMT-LIB representation.

Currently the resulting SMT-LIB file uses the theory of bitvectors and arrays (QF_ABV).

The goal is to support symbolic analyses, such as bounded model checking, using SMT solvers.

The tool is in its infancy and only translates the llvm IR as it appears. Any logical properties one might want to verify must be added by hand.

A Simple Example

The file test/shufflevector.ll includes two simple functions written by hand. The first function @lhs takes two integers, stores them in a two-element vector, shuffles the vector twice, then returns the first vector element.

; Function Attrs: nounwind ssp uwtable
define i32 @lhs(i32 %a, i32 %b) #0 {
  %1 = insertelement <2 x i32> undef, i32 %a, i32 0
  %2 = insertelement <2 x i32> %1, i32 %b, i32 1
  %3 = shufflevector <2 x i32> %2, <2 x i32> undef, <2 x i32> <i32 1, i32 0>
  %4 = shufflevector <2 x i32> %3, <2 x i32> undef, <2 x i32> <i32 1, i32 0>
  %5 = extractelement <2 x i32> %4, i32 0
  ret i32 %5
}

The second function @rhs does the same thing without the shuffles.

; Function Attrs: nounwind ssp uwtable
define i32 @rhs(i32 %a, i32 %b) #0 {
  %1 = insertelement <2 x i32> undef, i32 %a, i32 0
  %2 = insertelement <2 x i32> %1, i32 %b, i32 1
  %3 = extractelement <2 x i32> %2, i32 0
  ret i32 %3
}

We can show that these functions are equivalent by first translating the LLVM IR to SMT-LIB via:

> llvm2smt shufflevector.ll > shufflevector.smt

Function @rhs is translated to the following SMT-LIB statements, in SMT-LIB the character @ can be controversial so we replace it with _@.

;; Function: |_@rhs|
;; (i32 %a, i32 %b)
(declare-fun memory2 () Mem)
(define-fun rsp2 () (_ BitVec 64) (_ bv0 64))
(declare-fun |%a_@rhs| () (_ BitVec 32))
(declare-fun |%b_@rhs| () (_ BitVec 32))

;; BLOCK %0 with index 0 and rank = 1
;; Predecessors:
;; |_@rhs_block_0_entry_condition| 
(define-fun |_@rhs_block_0_entry_condition| () Bool true)
;; %1 = insertelement <2 x i32> undef, i32 %a, i32 0
(define-fun |%1_@rhs| () (Array (_ BitVec 1) (_ BitVec 32)) (store vzero_1_32 ((_ extract 0 0) (_ bv0 32)) |%a_@rhs|))
;; %2 = insertelement <2 x i32> %1, i32 %b, i32 1
(define-fun |%2_@rhs| () (Array (_ BitVec 1) (_ BitVec 32)) (store |%1_@rhs| ((_ extract 0 0) (_ bv1 32)) |%b_@rhs|))
;; %3 = extractelement <2 x i32> %2, i32 0
(define-fun |%3_@rhs| () (_ BitVec 32) (select |%2_@rhs| ((_ extract 0 0) (_ bv0 32))))
;; ret i32 %3
;; No backward arrows


(define-fun |_@rhs_result| () (_ BitVec 32) |%3_@rhs|)

The key points are:

  1. The function takes two input arguments denoted by |%a_@rhs| and |%b_@rhs|. Both are bitvectors of length 32.

  2. The return value of the function is denoted by _@rhs_result.

The other function is encoded similarly.

To check whether these two functions are equivalent, we add the following two SMT-LIB commands at the end of the file:

(assert (and (= |%a_@lhs| |%a_@rhs|) (= |%b_@lhs| |%b_@rhs|) (not (= |_@lhs_result| |_@rhs_result|))))
(check-sat)

This tests whether the functions @lhs and @rhs can produce different results when run of the same input.

We can then give the entire file to an SMT solver, such as yices-smt2, to conclude:

> yices-smt2 shufflevector.smt
unsat

As expected, the assertion is not satisfiable: if we give both functions the same input, they produce the same result.

Compilation

llvm2smt is written in OCaml. It is known to compile with OCaml 4.02.1 but other versions may work too. Standard OCaml tools are required including ocamllex, ocamlyacc, and ocamldep.

Installing OCaml is reasonably easy. Check the instructions at https://ocaml.org/docs/install.html.

Once you have OCaml, go to the ./src directory then type

> make

This will build two main executables:

  1. parse is based on Trevor Jim's parser for LLVM assembly language (.ll suffix). It can be used to check that our tool properly parses LLVM.

  2. llvm2smt is the main tool. It produces an SMT-LIB specification from a single .ll input.

Examples and tests for both are included in the ./examples, ./test, and ./bitcode directories. Check the Makefile for details.

On simple examples (i.e., one source file), you can generate bitvcode using clang -S -emit-llvm. For more complex builds, we typically use wllvm.

What we do

llvm2smt translates every basic block in the LLVM file into a sequence of SMT-LIB declarations and definitions. We use a global array to represent memory. For a 64 bit address space, this array has type

  (Array (_ BitVec 64) (_ BitVec 8)).

Read operations are encoded using SMT-LIB select and write operations are encoded using store. Each write operation produces a new memory state, denoted by a fresh SMT-LIB constant.

We also use a global variable to denote the stack pointer. It is used to encode the LLVM alloca operations (i.e., create local variables on the stack).

We use a bit-precise representation: i1 variables are represented as Boolean, all other integer types are converted to bitvectors of the appropriate size. For example, i32 variables are represented as bitvectors of length 32. We support all LLVM types except floating-point numbers. For LLVM vector types, we use SMT-LIB arrays. For example a register of type <2 x i32> is represented as an array of two bitvectors of length 32. The array itself is of type

(Array (_ BitVec 1) (_ BitVec 32)).

The SMT-LIB translation assumes that every basic block is executed at most once. In most cases, this means that we must unroll loops before the translation by using opt with the following command switches:

> opt -loop-rotate -loop-unroll -unroll-count=3 ...

(Try opt --help-list-hidden to see all the good things opt can do for you.)

What we don't do

We do not handle function calls. A work around is to force the compiler to inline the calls to all relevant functions. This can be done by annotating function declarations as follows:

static __attribute__ ((__always_inline__))  int my_function(int x) {
  ...
}

We do not handle floating-point types in LLVM since the QF_ABV logic that we use does not support include floating point operations. Our crude approach for now is to convert all floating-point constants to zero and all floating-point register to uninterpreted constants in the SMT-LIB translation.

In addition to call mentioned above, we do not handle the following LLVM instructions invoke, landingpad, resume, va_arg, indirectbr, cmpxchg, atomicrmw, fence, addrspacecast, extractvalue, and insertvalue. Some of these could be added but we have not encountered them in our C-code examples.

Acknowledgement:

Our code builds upon an OCaml-based parser for LLVM written by Trevor Jim:

https://github.com/tjim/smpcc/blob/master/compiler/

We diverged from this repository around February 2015.

About

Experimental translation of llvm to smt.

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages