用于解释语言的符号执行引擎原型

Stefan Bucur, Johannes Kinder, George Candea
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引用次数: 41

摘要

符号执行已成功用于自动测试静态编译的代码。然而,越来越多的系统和应用程序是用像Python这样的动态解释语言编写的。构建一个新的符号执行引擎是一项巨大的工作,因此随着目标语言的发展,要使它保持最新。此外,模棱两可的语言规范导致它们在符号执行引擎中的实现可能与产品解释器在微妙的方面有所不同。我们通过翻转问题并使用解释器本身作为语言语义的规范来解决这些挑战。我们提供了一个食谱和工具(称为Chef),用于将普通解释器转换为声音和完整的符号执行引擎。Chef通过象征性地执行解释器的二进制文件来象征性地执行目标程序,同时利用有关程序高级结构的推断知识。使用Chef,我们在5个人天内开发了Python的符号执行引擎,在3个人天内开发了Lua的符号执行引擎。它们以一种近乎零成本的方式提供完整而忠实的语言特性覆盖,以跟上未来的语言版本。Chef生成的引擎比不使用Chef直接执行解释器的性能高出1000倍。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Prototyping symbolic execution engines for interpreted languages
Symbolic execution is being successfully used to automatically test statically compiled code. However, increasingly more systems and applications are written in dynamic interpreted languages like Python. Building a new symbolic execution engine is a monumental effort, and so is keeping it up-to-date as the target language evolves. Furthermore, ambiguous language specifications lead to their implementation in a symbolic execution engine potentially differing from the production interpreter in subtle ways. We address these challenges by flipping the problem and using the interpreter itself as a specification of the language semantics. We present a recipe and tool (called Chef) for turning a vanilla interpreter into a sound and complete symbolic execution engine. Chef symbolically executes the target program by symbolically executing the interpreter's binary while exploiting inferred knowledge about the program's high-level structure. Using Chef, we developed a symbolic execution engine for Python in 5 person-days and one for Lua in 3 person-days. They offer complete and faithful coverage of language features in a way that keeps up with future language versions at near-zero cost. Chef-produced engines are up to 1000 times more performant than if directly executing the interpreter symbolically without Chef.
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