This program is tentative and subject to change.

Fri 25 Oct 2024 16:20 - 16:40 at San Gabriel - Memory Management and Analysis 2

The correctness of complex software depends on both the correctness of the source code, and the compilers that generate corresponding binary code. Compilers must do more than preserve the semantics of a single source file: they must ensure that generated binaries can be composed with other binaries to form a final executable. The compatibility of composition is ensured using an Application Binary Interface (ABI), which specifies details of calling conventions, exception handling, and so on. Unfortunately, there are no official ABIs for concurrent programs, and different atomics mappings, although correct in isolation, may induce bugs when composed. Indeed, mixing binaries generated by today’s compilers can lead to erroneous binaries.

We present mix testing: a new technique designed to find compiler bugs when the components of a C/C++ test are separately-compiled for multiple compatible architectures and then mixed together. We define a class of compiler bugs, coined mixing bugs, that arise when parts of a program are compiled separately using different mappings from C/C++ atomic operations to assembly sequences. To demonstrate the generality of mix testing, we have designed and implemented tool, atomic-mixer, which we have used: (a) to reproduce existing non-mixing bugs that state-of-the-art concurrency testing tools are limited to being able to find (showing that atomic-mixer at least meets the capabilities of these tools), and (b) to find four previously-unknown mixing bugs in LLVM and GCC, and one prospective mixing bug in mappings proposed for the Java Virtual Machine. Lastly, we have worked with engineers at Arm to specify, for the first time, an atomics ABI for Armv8, and have used atomic-mixer to validate the LLVM and GCC compilers against it.

This program is tentative and subject to change.

Fri 25 Oct

Displayed time zone: Pacific Time (US & Canada) change

16:00 - 17:40
Memory Management and Analysis 2OOPSLA 2024 at San Gabriel
16:00
20m
Talk
Mark--Scavenge: Waiting for Trash to Take Itself Out
OOPSLA 2024
Jonas Norlinder Uppsala University, Erik Österlund Oracle, David Black-Schaffer Uppsala University, Tobias Wrigstad Uppsala University
16:20
20m
Talk
Mix Testing: Specifying and Testing ABI Compatibility of C/C++ Atomics Implementations
OOPSLA 2024
Luke Geeson University College London, James Brotherston , Wilco Dijkstra Arm Ltd, Alastair F. Donaldson Imperial College London, Lee Smith Arm, Tyler Sorensen University of California at Santa Cruz, John Wickerson Imperial College London
16:40
20m
Talk
PROMPT: A Fast and Extensible Memory Profiling Framework
OOPSLA 2024
Ziyang Xu Princeton University, Yebin Chon Princeton University, Yian Su Northwestern University, Zujun Tan Princeton University, USA, Sotiris Apostolakis Google, Simone Campanoni Northwestern University, David I. August Princeton University
17:00
20m
Talk
Semantics of Remote Direct Memory Access: Operational and Declarative Models of RDMA on TSO Architectures
OOPSLA 2024
Guillaume Ambal , Brijesh Dongol University of Surrey, Haggai Eran NVIDIA, Vasileios Klimis Queen Mary University of London, Ori Lahav Tel Aviv University, Azalea Raad Imperial College London
17:20
20m
Talk
StarMalloc: Verifying a Modern, Hardened Memory Allocator
OOPSLA 2024
Antonin Reitz Inria, Aymeric Fromherz Inria, Jonathan Protzenko Microsoft Azure Research