Summary:
Using asm works fine for gnu11, but fails if the compiler uses C11.
Switch to the more consistent __asm__, since that is what the rest of
the source is using.
Reviewers: petarj
Reviewed By: petarj
Subscribers: llvm-commits, sdardis, arichardson, pirama
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35756
llvm-svn: 308922
We do this emitting a section for every function when LTO is used.
Fixes PR33888.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35809
llvm-svn: 308915
Summary:
scudo_utils.cpp.o from compiler-rt has one of the host compiler's builtin
include paths stored in the .debug_line section. So we need to do
sed 's,Phase1,Phase2,g` on the Phase2 object file so it matches Phase3.
Reviewers: hans
Reviewed By: hans
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34989
llvm-svn: 308912
atos is the default symbolizer on Apple's compiler for quite a few years now.
llvm-symbolizer is quite fragile on Darwin: for example, unless a .dSYM
file was explicitly generated symbolication would not work.
It is also very convenient when the behavior of LLVM open source
compiler matches to that of Apple's compiler on Apple's platform.
Furthermore, llvm-symbolizer is not installed on Apple's platform by
default, which leads to strange behavior during debugging: the test
might fail under lit (where it has llvm-symbolizer) but would run
properly when launched on the command line (where it does not, and atos
would be used).
Indeed, there's a downside: atos does not work properly with inlined
functions, hence the test change.
We do not think that this is a major problem, as users would often
compile with -O0 when debugging, and in any case it is preferable to
symbolizer not being able to symbolize.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35745
llvm-svn: 308908
Summary:
Warm-up the other 2 sizes used by the tests, which should get rid of a failure
on AArch64.
Reviewers: alekseyshl
Reviewed By: alekseyshl
Subscribers: aemerson, rengolin, llvm-commits, kristof.beyls
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35806
llvm-svn: 308907
These don't exactly assert the same thing anymore, and
allow empty live intervals with non-empty uses.
Removed in r308808 and r308813.
llvm-svn: 308906
This reapplies https://reviews.llvm.org/D35740 with a tweak to find
the section by name rather than type. Section types don't distinguish
between regular sections and their DWO counterparts.
llvm-svn: 308905
Mostly just to silence a warning about an unhandled case. There don't seem to
be any tests for this operator (at least that I could find).
llvm-svn: 308901
Summary:
`SUB_CHECK_TARGETS` contains all test targets in `SUB_COMPONENTS` when
we load `Components.cmake`. We don't need to add those targets
again and having duplicate targets will break the cmake policy CMP0002.
Reviewers: phosek
Subscribers: mgorny, llvm-commits, srhines, pirama
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35692
llvm-svn: 308900
Under Windows Itanium, we need to export virtual and non-virtual thunks
if the functions being thunked are exported. These thunks would
previously inherit their dllexport attribute from the declaration, but
r298330 changed declarations to not have dllexport attributes. We
therefore need to add the dllexport attribute to the definition
ourselves now. This is consistent with MinGW GCC's behavior.
This redoes r306770 but limits the logic to Itanium. MicrosoftCXXABI's
setThunkLinkage ensures that thunks aren't exported under that ABI, so
I'm handling this in ItaniumCXXABI's setThunkLinkage for symmetry.
We need to export these thunks because they can be referenced outside
the library they're defined in. For example, if a child class without a
key function inherits from a parent class with a key function, the
parent's thunks will only be defined in the library with the key
function, but the construction vtable for the parent in the child might
be emitted outside the library (since the child doesn't have a key
function), and it needs to reference the parent's thunks.
We don't need to mark these thunks as imported since any references to
them will occur in data, so the compiler can't generate the IAT load
sequence anyway. Instead, we rely on the linker generating import thunks
for the thunks.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34972
llvm-svn: 308899
C2017 update 3 produces a clang that crashes when compiling clang. Disabling
optimizations for StmtProfiler::VisitCXXOperatorCallExpr() makes the crash go
away.
Patch from Bruce Dawson <brucedawson@chromium.org>!
https://reviews.llvm.org/D35757
llvm-svn: 308897
This avoids excessive compile time. The case I'm looking at is
Function.cpp from an old version of LLVM that still had the giant memcmp
string matcher in it. Before r308322 this compiled in about 2 minutes,
after it, clang takes infinite* time to compile it. With this patch
we're at 5 min, which is still bad but this is a pathological case.
The cut off at 20 uses was chosen by looking at other cut-offs in LLVM
for user scanning. It's probably too high, but does the job and is very
unlikely to regress anything.
Fixes PR33900.
* I'm impatient and aborted after 15 minutes, on the bug report it was
killed after 2h.
llvm-svn: 308891
Summary:
First, some context.
The main feedback we get about the quarantine is that it's too memory hungry.
A single MB of quarantine will have an impact of 3 to 4MB of PSS/RSS, and
things quickly get out of hand in terms of memory usage, and the quarantine
ends up disabled.
The main objective of the quarantine is to protect from use-after-free
exploitation by making it harder for an attacker to reallocate a controlled
chunk in place of the targeted freed chunk. This is achieved by not making it
available to the backend right away for reuse, but holding it a little while.
Historically, what has usually been the target of such attacks was objects,
where vtable pointers or other function pointers could constitute a valuable
targeti to replace. Those are usually on the smaller side. There is barely any
advantage in putting the quarantine several megabytes of RGB data or the like.
Now for the patch.
This patch introduces a new way the Quarantine behaves in Scudo. First of all,
the size of the Quarantine will be defined in KB instead of MB, then we
introduce a new option: the size up to which (lower than or equal to) a chunk
will be quarantined. This way, we only quarantine smaller chunks, and the size
of the quarantine remains manageable. It also prevents someone from triggering
a recycle by allocating something huge. We default to 512 bytes on 32-bit and
2048 bytes on 64-bit platforms.
In details, the patches includes the following:
- introduce `QuarantineSizeKb`, but honor `QuarantineSizeMb` if set to fall
back to the old behavior (meaning no threshold in that case);
`QuarantineSizeMb` is described as deprecated in the options descriptios;
documentation update will follow;
- introduce `QuarantineChunksUpToSize`, the new threshold value;
- update the `quarantine.cpp` test, and other tests using `QuarantineSizeMb`;
- remove `AllocatorOptions::copyTo`, it wasn't used;
- slightly change the logic around `quarantineOrDeallocateChunk` to accomodate
for the new logic; rename a couple of variables there as well;
Rewriting the tests, I found a somewhat annoying bug where non-default aligned
chunks would account for more than needed when placed in the quarantine due to
`<< MinAlignment` instead of `<< MinAlignmentLog`. This is fixed and tested for
now.
Reviewers: alekseyshl, kcc
Reviewed By: alekseyshl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35694
llvm-svn: 308884
Summary:
This fixes a regression exposed by r307795 and rL308725 in which the level of a
comment line between '} else {' and a preprocessor directive is incorrectly set
as the level of the '} else {' line. For example, this :
```
int f(int i) {
if (i) {
++i;
} else {
// comment
#ifdef A
--i;
#endif
}
}
```
was formatted as:
```
int f(int i) {
if (i) {
++i;
} else {
// comment
#ifdef A
--i;
#endif
}
}
```
Reviewers: djasper, klimek
Reviewed By: klimek
Subscribers: klimek, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35794
llvm-svn: 308882
Add support for -m(no-)extern-data when using -mgpopt in the driver. It is
enabled by default in the backend.
Reviewers: atanasyan, slthakur
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35550
llvm-svn: 308879
Propagates the GraphT template argument to the default value of
the AnalysisGraphTraitsT template argument. This allows to specialize
the DefaultAnalysisGraphTraits<AnalysisT,GraphT> for analysis with a
graph type different from the analysis type and it will automatically
get picked-up.
Note: This was probably the intended purpose and should not result in any
functional change.
llvm-svn: 308878
Read-only values (values defined before the SCoP) require special
handing with -polly-analyze-read-only-scalars=true (which is the
default). If active, each use of a value requires a read access.
When a copied value uses a read-only value, we must also ensure that
such a MemoryAccess is available or is created.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35764
llvm-svn: 308876
Summary:
- We were using `.count` in `StringRef`, which matches substrings.
- We may want to use this for equality as well.
- Generalise this, so allow regexes as a parameter to `polly-only-func`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35728
llvm-svn: 308875