Was Not Wasm Save

A hostile memory allocator to make WebAssembly applications more predictable.

Project README

WAS (not WASM)

A hostile memory allocator to make WebAssembly applications more predictable.

Blurb

The WebAssembly memory model doesn't offer any protection against buffer underflows/overflows.

As long as accesses are made within the bounds of the linear memory segments, no page faults will ever occur.

Besides facilitating heartbleed-class vulnerabilities, this memory model is also painful for application developers.

Where a native application may crash in the same context, out-of-bounds accesses in a WebAssembly application may cause silent memory corruption and subtle, tedious-to-debug bugs.

WAS (not WASM) is a simple memory allocator designed to catch memory issues in WebAssembly compilers and applications.

WAS (not WASM) makes the heap inaccessible, except for pages explicitly allocated by the application.

WAS (not WASM) makes static data read-only. Writing to a NULL pointer will fault.

WAS (not WASM) never reuses allocated pages after they are free()'d. Deallocated pages become inaccessible.

WAS (not WASM) fills newly allocated regions with junk.

WAS (not WASM) ensures that a guard page immediately follows every single allocation, so that a single-byte overflow will cause a fault.

WAS (not WASM) inserts a canary in partially allocated pages, and verifies that it hasn't been tampered with in order to detected underflows.

WAS (not WASM) detects double-free(), use-after-free(), invalid free().

WAS (not WASM) keeps track of the number of allocations, deallocations and total memory usage, so you can scream at how many of these WebAssembly applications do, and optimize yours accordingly.

WAS (not WASM) is not designed to be fast. It is designed to help you develop safer applications. Or eventually faster applications, by using unsafe constructions with more confidence.

WAS (not WASM) runs WASM code using Cranelift and Wasmer.

Installation

Install Rust, and use cargo:

cargo install

Usage

USAGE:
    was [FLAGS] [OPTIONS] --file <file>

FLAGS:
    -c, --canary-check-on-alloc
    -h, --help                     Prints help information
    -V, --version                  Prints version information

OPTIONS:
    -e, --entrypoint <entrypoint>     [default: main]
    -f, --file <file>
    -b, --heap-base <heap_base>       [default: 65536]

Example:

was -f app.wasm

The --canary-check-on-alloc option checks every single canary before every single allocation. This is slow, and will get slower as the number of allocation grows.

The --heap-base option sets how much data is already present on the heap before dynamic allocations are performed. This is typically used to store static data. When using AssemblyScript, the optimal value for the heap base is stored in the HEAP_BASE global.

Usage with AssemblyScript

WAS (not WASM) was originally made to work with AssemblyScript.

In order to do so, use the system allocator:

import 'allocator/system';

Optionally, in order to check canaries when the application terminates, call the terminate() function in your index.ts file:

declare function terminate(): void;

@global export function main(): void {
   ...
   terminate();
}

AssemblyScript stores static data at the beginning of the heap. The heap base after this static data is stored in the HEAP_BASE global.

A quick way to print it while using WAS (not WASM) is to temporarily add this to your application:

declare function debug_val(val: u32): void;

debug_val(HEAP_BASE);
Open Source Agenda is not affiliated with "Was Not Wasm" Project. README Source: jedisct1/was-not-wasm
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