incubator-teaclave-sgx-sdk
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v2.0.0-preview: crate 'cpufeatures' failed detect 'target_env = "sgx"'
I built a demo to calc Sha256,but got Illegal instruction (core dumped)
.
The Sha256 comes from crate sha2.
cd samplecode/helloworld
BUILD_STD=cargo make
cd bin
./app
[+] Init Enclave Successful 2!
This is a normal world string passed into Enclave!
target_env = not sgx
Illegal instruction (core dumped)
After some research,I found crate cpufeatures
which sha2
's dependent library failed detect target_env = "sgx"
,
cpufeatures
uses cpuid
to check cpu features, then crash.
And I found the file x86_64-unknown-linux-sgx.json, assign env
the value gnu
, than's the problem, if I change env
value from gnu
to sgx
, it's ok.
[+] Init Enclave Successful 2!
This is a normal world string passed into Enclave!
target_env = sgx
This is a in-Enclave Rust string!
[+] ECall Success...
My question is
: should I keep sgx
value in x86_64-unknown-linux-sgx.json
?
This is my demo codes:
diff --git a/samplecode/helloworld/enclave/Cargo.toml b/samplecode/helloworld/enclave/Cargo.toml
index 40d61163..81b6301a 100644
--- a/samplecode/helloworld/enclave/Cargo.toml
+++ b/samplecode/helloworld/enclave/Cargo.toml
@@ -31,3 +31,7 @@ default = []
[target.'cfg(not(target_vendor = "teaclave"))'.dependencies]
sgx_types = { path = "../../../sgx_types" }
sgx_tstd = { path = "../../../sgx_tstd" }
+
+[dependencies]
+sha2 = "0.10.2"
+hex-literal = "0.3.4"
diff --git a/samplecode/helloworld/enclave/src/lib.rs b/samplecode/helloworld/enclave/src/lib.rs
index 5fd6daf4..66984701 100644
--- a/samplecode/helloworld/enclave/src/lib.rs
+++ b/samplecode/helloworld/enclave/src/lib.rs
@@ -29,6 +29,9 @@ use std::slice;
use std::string::String;
use std::vec::Vec;
+use hex_literal::hex;
+use sha2::{Digest, Sha256, Sha512};
+
/// # Safety
#[no_mangle]
pub unsafe extern "C" fn say_something(some_string: *const u8, some_len: usize) -> SgxStatus {
@@ -53,6 +56,28 @@ pub unsafe extern "C" fn say_something(some_string: *const u8, some_len: usize)
// Rust style convertion
hello_string += String::from_utf8(word_vec).expect("Invalid UTF-8").as_str();
+ let target_env = {
+ let mut s = String::new();
+
+ #[cfg(not(target_env = "sgx"))]
+ s.push_str("not sgx");
+
+ #[cfg(target_env = "sgx")]
+ s.push_str("sgx");
+
+ s
+ };
+ println!("target_env = {}", target_env);
+
+ let mut hasher = Sha256::new();
+ // write input message
+ hasher.update(b"hello world");
+ let result = hasher.finalize();
+ assert_eq!(
+ result[..],
+ hex!("b94d27b9934d3e08a52e52d7da7dabfac484efe37a5380ee9088f7ace2efcde9")[..]
+ );
+
// Ocall to normal world for output
println!("{}", &hello_string);
Thanks.
In your example, assigning the value of env
to sgx
dose work, but in some crates that depend on libc
, it may cause the detection target_env
to fail.
For the processing of the CPUID instruction, you can refer to the example code httpreq.
In your example, assigning the value of
env
tosgx
dose work, but in some crates that depend onlibc
, it may cause the detectiontarget_env
to fail. For the processing of the CPUID instruction, you can refer to the example code httpreq.
Retrieving "CPUID" information through ocalls without sanitizing checking could be dangerous, especially for crypto libraries. https://github.com/gramineproject/graphene/issues/966
but in some crates that depend on libc, it may cause the detection target_env to fail.
I see, seems no perfect solution for the problem, thanks for you reply