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Free, publicly-accessible full text available September 8, 2026
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This paper proposes an automated method to check the cor- rectness of range analysis used in the Linux kernel’s eBPF verifier. We provide the specification of soundness for range analysis performed by the eBPF verifier. We automatically generate verification conditions that encode the operation of the eBPF verifier directly from the Linux kernel’s C source code and check it against our specification. When we discover instances where the eBPF verifier is unsound, we propose a method to generate an eBPF program that demonstrates the mismatch between the abstract and the concrete semantics. Our prototype automatically checks the soundness of 16 versions of the eBPF verifier in the Linux kernel versions ranging from 4.14 to 5.19. In this process, we have discovered new bugs in older versions and proved the soundness of range analysis in the latest version of the Linux kernel.more » « less
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Extended Berkeley Packet Filter (BPF) is a language and run-time system that allows non-superusers to extend the Linux and Windows operating systems by downloading user code into the kernel. To ensure that user code is safe to run in kernel context, BPF relies on a static analyzer that proves properties about the code, such as bounded memory access and the absence of operations that crash. The BPF static analyzer checks safety using abstract interpretation with several abstract domains. Among these, the domain of tnums (tristate numbers) is a key domain used to reason about the bitwise uncertainty in program values. This paper formally specifies the tnum abstract domain and its arithmetic operators. We provide the first proofs of soundness and optimality of the abstract arithmetic operators for tnum addition and subtraction used in the BPF analyzer. Further, we describe a novel sound algorithm for multiplication of tnums that is more precise and efficient (runs 33% faster on average) than the Linux kernel's algorithm. Our tnum multiplication is now merged in the Linux kernel.more » « less
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Posit is a recently proposed representation for approximating real numbers using a finite number of bits. In contrast to the floating point (FP) representation, posit provides variable precision with a fixed number of total bits (i.e., tapered accuracy). Posit can represent a set of numbers with higher precision than FP and has garnered significant interest in various domains. The posit ecosystem currently does not have a native general-purpose math library. This paper presents our results in developing a math library for posits using the CORDIC method. CORDIC is an iterative algorithm to approximate trigonometric functions by rotating a vector with different angles in each iteration. This paper proposes two extensions to the CORDIC algorithm to account for tapered accuracy with posits that improves precision: (1) fast-forwarding of iterations to start the CORDIC algorithm at a later iteration and (2) the use of a wide accumulator (i.e., the quire data type) to minimize precision loss with accumulation. Our results show that a 32-bit posit implementation of trigonometric functions with our extensions is more accurate than a 32-bit FP implementation.more » « less
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