You’re still hung up on a false choice between a well defined spec and instrumentation/tools that alter behavior while giving you something good in return. A defined behavior for C wouldn’t stop those tools from existing.
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The defined behavior can be trapping, which makes more sense in 2019 with software safety / security / robustness as such important issues. Hardware can and is being designed to make it efficient to catch these issues too. It can also just permit safety without using 'undefined'.
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That definition would make lots of real systems stop working, so that’s clearly the wrong direction for the spec. A good spec respects its customers.
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It does exist. Existing hardware has lots of safety features in hardware that are being actively used to catch these kinds of issues. More of those features are shipping over time. Intel CET and ARM MTE (which is like the existing SPARC ADI) are major examples of new features.
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There is nothing about Intel CET that requires UB from the language; as I said, the compiler/spec don't have to reveal how function calls work. In my C spec, a load/store would be said to either load/store or trap, depending on how the runtime/CPU did things. So ARM MTE is OK.
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So, it's okay to trap when indexing from one object to another and then dereferencing, or when constructing a non-derived pointer to an object in any other way and dereferencing it? That's what memory tagging will cause, since it aims to have the tags not match in those cases.
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For example, the baseline for malloc is to set random tags for each allocation, along with adjusting them to avoid matching values for adjacent allocations. The compiler can do the same for stack frames (or even variables). Only properly derived pointers will actually work.
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SPARC ADI is an existing implementation used in production systems for many years. It's used to protect stack frames too, not only memory / pointers from dynamic allocators like malloc. MTE isn't something new but rather ARM gaining an existing safety/security feature.

