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ABI for the Arm® Architecture Advisory Note – SP must be 8-byte aligned on entry to AAPCS-conforming functions

2021Q1

Date of Issue: 12th April 2021

This advisory note discusses a hitherto little noticed consequence of the ABI requirement for natural alignment for primitive data of size 1, 2, 4, and 8 bytes, and its implications for:

  • Low level exception-handling code running on:
    • A and R profiles of version 7 of the Arm architecture.
    • Versions of the Arm architecture earlier than version 7.
  • Code that might be entered directly through an Armv7M exception vector.
  • Tool chains that generate such code.

ABI for the Arm architecture, advisory note

Please check Application Binary Interface for the Arm® Architecture for the latest release of this document.

Please report defects in this specification to the issue tracker page on GitHub.

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The following support level definitions are used by the Arm ABI specifications:

Release
Arm considers this specification to have enough implementations, which have received sufficient testing, to verify that it is correct. The details of these criteria are dependent on the scale and complexity of the change over previous versions: small, simple changes might only require one implementation, but more complex changes require multiple independent implementations, which have been rigorously tested for cross-compatibility. Arm anticipates that future changes to this specification will be limited to typographical corrections, clarifications and compatible extensions.
Beta
Arm considers this specification to be complete, but existing implementations do not meet the requirements for confidence in its release quality. Arm may need to make incompatible changes if issues emerge from its implementation.
Alpha
The content of this specification is a draft, and Arm considers the likelihood of future incompatible changes to be significant.

All content in this document is at the Release quality level.

If there is no entry in the change history table for a release, there are no changes to the content of the document for that release.

Issue Date Change
0.01 28th February 2006 DRAFT for internal comment.
0.1 3rd March 2006 CONFIDENTIAL version for limited release.
1.0 20th March 2006 Open access version.
A 25th October 2007 Document renumbered (formerly GENC-007024 v1.0).
B 23rd October 2009 Updated the reference to the Arm ARM; reviewed use of terminology.
2018Q4 21st December 2018 Minor typographical fixes, updated links.
2021Q1 12th April 2021

This document refers to the following documents.

Ref Document number / External URL Title
AAPCS32   Procedure Call Standard for the Arm Architecture
Armv7ARM_M Arm DDI 0403E Arm DDI 0406: Arm Architecture Reference Manual Arm v7-A and Arm v7-R edition
Armv7ARM_AR Arm DDI 0406C Arm DDI 0403C: Armv7-M Architecture Reference Manual
Armv5ARM Arm DDI 0100E, ISBN 0 201 737191 The Arm Architecture Reference Manual, 2nd edition, edited by David Seal, published by Addison-Wesley.

This advisory note uses the following terms and abbreviations.

AAPCS
Procedure Call Standard for the Arm Architecture
ABI

Application Binary Interface:

  1. The specifications to which an executable must conform in order to execute in a specific execution environment. For example, the Linux ABI for the Arm Architecture.
  2. A particular aspect of the specifications to which independently produced relocatable files must conform in order to be statically linkable and executable. For example, the [CPPABI32], the [RTABI32], the [CLIBABI32].
Q-o-I
Quality of Implementation – a quality, behavior, functionality, or mechanism not required by this standard, but which might be provided by systems conforming to it. Q-o-I is often used to describe the tool-chain-specific means by which a standard requirement is met.

The Procedure Call Standard for the Arm Architecture [AAPCS32] requires primitive data types to be naturally aligned according to their sizes (for size = 1, 2, 4, 8 bytes). Doing otherwise creates more problems than it solves.

In return for preserving the natural alignment of data, conforming code is permitted to rely on that alignment. To support aligning data allocated on the stack, the stack pointer (SP) is required to be 8-byte aligned on entry to a conforming function. In practice this requirement is met if:

  • At each call site, the current size of the calling function’s stack frame is a multiple of 8 bytes.

    This places an obligation on compilers and assembly language programmers.

  • SP is a multiple of 8 when control first enters a program.

    This places an obligation on authors of low level OS, RTOS, and runtime library code to align SP at all points at which control first enters a body of (AAPCS-conforming) code.

In turn, this requires the value of SP to be aligned to 0 modulo 8:

  • By exception handlers, before calling AAPCS-conforming code.
  • By OS/RTOS/run-time system code, before giving control to an application.

The possible consequences of not aligning SP properly depend on the architecture version and the characteristics of the code (and, hence on the behavior of the code generator). Possible consequences include:

  • Alignment fault or UNPREDICTABLE behavior.
  • Application failure.

For architecture Armv5TE (in particular, for Intel XScale processors) and architecture Armv6 with CP15 register 1 A and U bits [Arm ARM, §G3.1, Unaligned access support] configured to emulate Armv5TE:

  • An LDRD or STRD using a stack address presumed by a code generator to be 0 modulo 8, but actually 4 modulo 8, could cause an Alignment Fault or show UNPREDICTABLE behavior.

This failure cannot occur in code generated for architectures earlier than Armv5TE (no LDRD or STRD) or on processors conforming to architecture Armv7 or later (which cannot cause an alignment fault when the effective address of an LDRD or STRD is 4 modulo 8).

An application failure might occur if SP is not 0 modulo 8 on entry to each AAPCS-conforming function and the program contains an interface such that:

  • Code on one side of the interface evaluates the presumed alignment of an 8-byte aligned, stack allocated datum at compile time.
  • Code on the other side of the interface evaluates the actual alignment of the datum at run time.

The interface defined by the C library’s stdarg.h macros va_start and va_arg gives us a concrete example of how an application might fail.

  • The compiler evaluates the presumed alignment of a parameter value passed to a variadic function at compile time. This determines whether to insert an additional padding word before an 8-byte aligned parameter value. Parameter values beyond the fourth word are passed to the callee via the stack and a variadic callee often pushes earlier parameter values onto the stack (to support uniform treatment of va_list types).
  • Code generated by the va_arg macro evaluates the corresponding actual alignment at run time. This determines whether or not to skip a padding word preceding an 8-byte aligned parameter value.

A more cautious than usual implementation of va_start and va_arg can avoid this problem and operate correctly whether SP is 0 or 4 modulo 8 (§2.3.2.3).

In general, a compiler cannot detect whether similar code exists in an application. An application containing such code can fail if SP is not properly aligned.

As stated in The need to align SP to a multiple of 8 at conforming call sites, operating systems and other run-time environments must ensure that SP is a multiple of 8 before calling AAPCS-conforming code. Alternatively the system must ensure that:

  • The code it calls makes no use of 8-byte aligned, stack allocated data (see Safe option not to align SP).

    For example, an operating system might require that no 8-byte types be manipulated by exception handling code, and software development tools for that OS might support this proscription (Safe option not to align SP).

  • If the architecture is V5TE or V6 configured to give V5TE alignment behavior, the compiler used to build the code must not have generated LDRD/STRD in place of a pair of LDR/STR to consecutive locations.

This requirement extends to operating systems and run-time code for all architecture versions prior to Armv7 and to the A, R and M architecture profiles thereafter. Special considerations associated with Armv7M are discussed in Special considerations for Cortex-M based applications.

3.3.2.1   Option to align SP on entry to designated functions

To support legacy execution environments in which SP is not properly aligned, compilers should offer an option to generate code to align SP to a multiple of 8 on entry to designated functions.

The means by which a function might be designated for special treatment is a quality of implementation (Q-o-I). Plausible means include the use of pseudo storage class specifiers like __irq or __declspec(irq), or attributes like __attribute__((irq)), in a function’s declaration.

3.3.2.2   Safe option not to align SP

To support safely not using the SP alignment option, compilers should offer an option (Q-o-I) to:

  • Not generate LDRD/STRD.

  • Fault the use of 8-byte aligned, stack allocated data.

    (8-byte aligned parameters to variadic functions need not be faulted if the tool chain implements the repair described in Repair of va_start and va_arg).

  • Or, if that is too difficult, fault all uses of 8-byte data types.

A program that makes no us of LDRD/STRD cannot suffer the failure described in Alignment fault or UNPREDICTABLE behavior.

A program that makes no use of 8-byte aligned, stack allocated data cannot suffer the failure described in Application failure. And a program that makes no use 8-byte types certainly makes no use of 8-byte aligned, stack allocated data.

Assembly language programmers must, of course, certify the safety of their own code.

3.3.2.3   Repair of va_start and va_arg

To avoid injecting a fault into their users’ programs in execution environments that do not correctly align SP, software development tools should offer an option (Q-o-I) to repair the C library’s stdarg.h macros va_start and va_arg, as follows.

(We assume va_start expands to a call to the intrinsic function __va_start, and va_arg to a call to __va_arg. It is already very difficult – or impossible – to implement va_start and va_arg in a way that evaluates each argument only once – as required by the C standard – without the assistance of at least one intrinsic function).

__va_start should return a pointer value ap with bit[1] set if SP was 4 modulo 8 on entry to the containing function.

  • The function containing the call to __va_start has the variadic parameter list allocated in the stack frame.
  • Because arguments are guaranteed to be 4-byte aligned (by C’s argument promotion rules and the AAPCS requirement that SP be 4-byte aligned at all instants), bits[1:0] of ap are otherwise 0.
  • Coding the SP-misaligned case as 1 produces a __va_start compatible with an ordinary (not repaired) __va_arg in conforming environments in which SP is 0 modulo 8 at function entry.

If T is a data type requiring 8-byte alignment, __va_arg(ap, T) must increment the pointer it calculates by 4 bytes (to skip a padding word inserted at compile time) if:

(bit[1] of ap is 0 and bit[2] of ap is 1) or (bit[1] of ap is 1 and bit[2] of ap is 0).

Whatever the sort of T, __va_arg(ap, T) must clear bit 1 of the pointer it calculates before dereferencing it.

  • This implementation of __va_arg is compatible with an ordinary (not repaired) __va_start in conforming environments in which SP is 0 modulo 8 at function entry and bit 1 of ap is always 0.

Armv7M is unique in making it possible (absent the problem discussed in this advisory note) to attach an AAPCS-conforming function directly to an exception vector.

(Under previous architecture versions and other architecture strands, some ‘glue’ code is required between an exception vector and an AAPCS-conforming function. Usually, an OS, RTOS, or run-time system provides this code. Considerations relating to such systems were discussed in Operating systems and run-time environments).

Cortex-M3 is the first implementation of Armv7M.

  • Revision 0 of Cortex-M3 (CM3_r0) does not align SP to a multiple of 8 on entry to exceptions.

    Users of CM3_r0 must take appropriate precautions if the correctness of their software might depend on the alignment of stack-allocated data presumed by development tools to be 8-byte aligned.

  • Revision 1 of Cortex-M3 will offer a configurable option to align SP to a multiple of 8 on entry to exceptions.

  • A future revision of the M profile architecture will require SP to be 8-byte aligned on entry to exceptions.