Commit Graph

79 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Florian Mayer 0deedaa23f [hwasan] Prevent reordering of tag checks.
They were previously unconstrained, which allowed them to be reordered
before the shadow memory write.

Reviewed By: eugenis

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107901
2021-08-17 10:21:23 +01:00
Florian Mayer 66b4aafa2e [hwasan] Detect use after scope within function.
Reviewed By: vitalybuka

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105201
2021-08-02 11:34:12 +01:00
Florian Mayer b5b023638a Revert "[hwasan] Detect use after scope within function."
This reverts commit 84705ed913.
2021-07-30 22:32:04 +01:00
Florian Mayer 84705ed913 [hwasan] Detect use after scope within function.
Reviewed By: vitalybuka

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105201
2021-07-30 13:59:36 +01:00
Florian Mayer 96c63492cb [hwasan] Use stack safety analysis.
This avoids unnecessary instrumentation.

Reviewed By: eugenis, vitalybuka

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105703
2021-07-22 16:20:27 -07:00
Florian Mayer 789a4a2e5c Revert "[hwasan] Use stack safety analysis."
This reverts commit bde9415fef.
2021-07-22 12:16:16 +01:00
Florian Mayer bde9415fef [hwasan] Use stack safety analysis.
This avoids unnecessary instrumentation.

Reviewed By: eugenis, vitalybuka

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105703
2021-07-22 12:04:54 +01:00
Fangrui Song 7b78956224 [sanitizer] Place module_ctor/module_dtor in llvm.used
This removes an abuse of ELF linker behaviors while keeping Mach-O/COFF linker
behaviors unchanged.

ELF: when module_ctor is in a comdat, this patch removes reliance on a linker
abuse (an SHT_INIT_ARRAY in a section group retains the whole group) by using
SHF_GNU_RETAIN. No linker behavior difference when module_ctor is not in a comdat.

Mach-O: module_ctor gets `N_NO_DEAD_STRIP`. No linker behavior difference
because module_ctor is already referenced by a `S_MOD_INIT_FUNC_POINTERS`
section (GC root).

PE/COFF: no-op. SanitizerCoverage already appends module_ctor to `llvm.used`.
Other sanitizers: llvm.used for local linkage is not implemented in
`TargetLoweringObjectFileCOFF::emitLinkerDirectives` (once implemented or
switched to a non-local linkage, COFF can use module_ctor in comdat (i.e.
generalize ELF-specific rL301586)).

There is no object file size difference.

Reviewed By: vitalybuka

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106246
2021-07-21 14:03:26 -07:00
Florian Mayer 5f08219322 Revert "[hwasan] Use stack safety analysis."
This reverts commit e9c63ed10b.
2021-07-20 10:36:46 +01:00
Florian Mayer e9c63ed10b [hwasan] Use stack safety analysis.
This avoids unnecessary instrumentation.

Reviewed By: eugenis, vitalybuka

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105703
2021-07-20 10:06:35 +01:00
Florian Mayer 807d50100c Revert "[hwasan] Use stack safety analysis."
This reverts commit 12268fe14a.
2021-07-19 12:08:32 +01:00
Florian Mayer 12268fe14a [hwasan] Use stack safety analysis.
This avoids unnecessary instrumentation.

Reviewed By: eugenis, vitalybuka

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105703
2021-07-19 11:54:44 +01:00
Stephen Tozer 810e4c3c66 [DebugInfo] Correctly update dbg.values with duplicated location ops
This patch fixes code that incorrectly handled dbg.values with duplicate
location operands, i.e. !DIArgList(i32 %a, i32 %a). The errors in
question were caused by either applying an update to dbg.value multiple
times when the update is only valid once, or by updating the
DIExpression for only the first instance of a value that appears
multiple times.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105831
2021-07-14 11:17:24 +01:00
Stephen Tozer 14b62f7e2f [DebugInfo] CGP+HWasan: Handle dbg.values with duplicate location ops
This patch fixes an issue which occurred in CodeGenPrepare and
HWAddressSanitizer, which both at some point create a map of Old->New
instructions and update dbg.value uses of these. They did this by
iterating over the dbg.value's location operands, and if an instance of
the old instruction was found, replaceVariableLocationOp would be
called on that dbg.value. This would cause an error if the same operand
appeared multiple times as a location operand, as the first call to
replaceVariableLocationOp would update all uses of the old instruction,
invalidating the old iterator and eventually hitting an assertion.

This has been fixed by no longer iterating over the dbg.value's location
operands directly, but by first collecting them into a set and then
iterating over that, ensuring that we never attempt to replace a
duplicated operand multiple times.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105129
2021-07-05 10:35:19 +01:00
Evgenii Stepanov 78f7e6d8d7 [hwasan] Respect llvm.asan.globals.
This enable no_sanitize C++ attribute to exclude globals from hwasan
testing, and automatically excludes other sanitizers' globals (such as
ubsan location descriptors).

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104825
2021-06-23 18:37:00 -07:00
Matt Morehouse b87894a1d2 [HWASan] Enable globals support for LAM.
Reviewed By: vitalybuka

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104265
2021-06-14 14:20:44 -07:00
Matt Morehouse 0867edfc64 [HWASan] Add basic stack tagging support for LAM.
Adds the basic instrumentation needed for stack tagging.

Currently does not support stack short granules or TLS stack histories,
since a different code path is followed for the callback instrumentation
we use.

We may simply wait to support these two features until we switch to
a custom calling convention.

Patch By: xiangzhangllvm, morehouse

Reviewed By: vitalybuka

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102901
2021-06-11 08:21:17 -07:00
Leonard Chan 314c049142 [compiler-rt][hwasan] Decouple use of the TLS global for getting the shadow base and using the frame record feature
This allows for using the frame record feature (which uses __hwasan_tls)
independently from however the user wants to access the shadow base, which
prior was only usable if shadow wasn't accessed through the TLS variable or ifuncs.

Frame recording can be explicitly set according to ShadowMapping::WithFrameRecord
in ShadowMapping::init. Currently, it is only enabled on Fuchsia and if TLS is
used, so this should mimic the old behavior.

Added an extra case to prologue.ll that covers this new case.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103841
2021-06-09 12:55:19 -07:00
Xiang1 Zhang 02f2d739e0 Revert "[HWASAN] Update the tag info for X86_64."
This reverts commit 81c18ce03c.
2021-05-20 13:12:59 +08:00
Xiang1 Zhang 81c18ce03c [HWASAN] Update the tag info for X86_64.
In LAM model X86_64 will use bits 57-62 (of 0-63) as HWASAN tag.
So here we make sure the tag shift position and tag mask is correct for x86-64.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102472
2021-05-20 11:22:12 +08:00
Fangrui Song 775a9483e5 [IR][sanitizer] Set nounwind on module ctor/dtor, additionally set uwtable if -fasynchronous-unwind-tables
On ELF targets, if a function has uwtable or personality, or does not have
nounwind (`needsUnwindTableEntry`), it marks that `.eh_frame` is needed in the module.

Then, a function gets `.eh_frame` if `needsUnwindTableEntry` or `-g[123]` is specified.
(i.e. If -g[123], every function gets `.eh_frame`.
This behavior is strange but that is the status quo on GCC and Clang.)

Let's take asan as an example. Other sanitizers are similar.
`asan.module_[cd]tor` has no attribute. `needsUnwindTableEntry` returns true,
so every function gets `.eh_frame` if `-g[123]` is specified.
This is the root cause that
`-fno-exceptions -fno-asynchronous-unwind-tables -g` produces .debug_frame
while
`-fno-exceptions -fno-asynchronous-unwind-tables -g -fsanitize=address` produces .eh_frame.

This patch

* sets the nounwind attribute on sanitizer module ctor/dtor.
* let Clang emit a module flag metadata "uwtable" for -fasynchronous-unwind-tables. If "uwtable" is set, sanitizer module ctor/dtor additionally get the uwtable attribute.

The "uwtable" mechanism is generic: synthesized functions not cloned/specialized
from existing ones should consider `Function::createWithDefaultAttr` instead of
`Function::create` if they want to get some default attributes which
have more of module semantics.

Other candidates: "frame-pointer" (https://github.com/ClangBuiltLinux/linux/issues/955
https://github.com/ClangBuiltLinux/linux/issues/1238), dso_local, etc.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100251
2021-04-21 15:58:20 -07:00
Leonard Chan 36eaeaf728 [llvm][hwasan] Add Fuchsia shadow mapping configuration
Ensure that Fuchsia shadow memory starts at zero.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99380
2021-03-25 15:28:59 -07:00
Matt Morehouse 96a4167b4c [HWASan] Use page aliasing on x86_64.
Userspace page aliasing allows us to use middle pointer bits for tags
without untagging them before syscalls or accesses.  This should enable
easier experimentation with HWASan on x86_64 platforms.

Currently stack, global, and secondary heap tagging are unsupported.
Only primary heap allocations get tagged.

Note that aliasing mode will not work properly in the presence of
fork(), since heap memory will be shared between the parent and child
processes.  This mode is non-ideal; we expect Intel LAM to enable full
HWASan support on x86_64 in the future.

Reviewed By: vitalybuka, eugenis

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98875
2021-03-25 07:04:14 -07:00
Matt Morehouse c8ef98e5de Revert "[HWASan] Use page aliasing on x86_64."
This reverts commit 63f73c3eb9 due to
breakage on aarch64 without TBI.
2021-03-24 16:18:29 -07:00
Matt Morehouse 63f73c3eb9 [HWASan] Use page aliasing on x86_64.
Userspace page aliasing allows us to use middle pointer bits for tags
without untagging them before syscalls or accesses.  This should enable
easier experimentation with HWASan on x86_64 platforms.

Currently stack, global, and secondary heap tagging are unsupported.
Only primary heap allocations get tagged.

Note that aliasing mode will not work properly in the presence of
fork(), since heap memory will be shared between the parent and child
processes.  This mode is non-ideal; we expect Intel LAM to enable full
HWASan support on x86_64 in the future.

Reviewed By: vitalybuka, eugenis

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98875
2021-03-24 11:43:41 -07:00
Matt Morehouse 772851ca4e [HWASan] Disable stack, globals and force callbacks for x86_64.
Subsequent patches will implement page-aliasing mode for x86_64, which
will initially only work for the primary heap allocator.  We force
callback instrumentation to simplify the initial aliasing
implementation.

Reviewed By: vitalybuka, eugenis

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98069
2021-03-22 08:02:27 -07:00
Mircea Trofin c042aff886 [NFC] Disallow unused prefixes under llvm/test
This patch sets the default for llvm tests, with the exception of tests
under Reduce, because quite a few of them use 'FileCheck' as parameter
to a tool, and including a flag as that parameter would complicate
matters.

The rest of the patch undo-es the lit.local.cfg changes we progressively
introduced as temporary measure to avoid regressions under various
directories.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95111
2021-01-21 20:31:52 -08:00
Peter Collingbourne 3d049bce98 hwasan: Support for outlined checks in the Linux kernel.
Add support for match-all tags and GOT-free runtime calls, which
are both required for the kernel to be able to support outlined
checks. This requires extending the access info to let the backend
know when to enable these features. To make the code easier to maintain
introduce an enum with the bit field positions for the access info.

Allow outlined checks to be enabled with -mllvm
-hwasan-inline-all-checks=0. Kernels that contain runtime support for
outlined checks may pass this flag. Kernels lacking runtime support
will continue to link because they do not pass the flag. Old versions
of LLVM will ignore the flag and continue to use inline checks.

With a separate kernel patch [1] I measured the code size of defconfig
+ tag-based KASAN, as well as boot time (i.e. time to init launch)
on a DragonBoard 845c with an Android arm64 GKI kernel. The results
are below:

         code size    boot time
before    92824064      6.18s
after     38822400      6.65s

[1] https://linux-review.googlesource.com/id/I1a30036c70ab3c3ee78d75ed9b87ef7cdc3fdb76

Depends on D90425

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90426
2020-10-30 14:25:40 -07:00
Peter Collingbourne 0930763b4b hwasan: Move fixed shadow behind opaque no-op cast as well.
This is a workaround for poor heuristics in the backend where we can
end up materializing the constant multiple times. This is particularly
bad when using outlined checks because we materialize it for every call
(because the backend considers it trivial to materialize).

As a result the field containing the shadow base value will always
be set so simplify the code taking that into account.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90425
2020-10-30 13:23:52 -07:00
Arthur Eubanks d419e34c4d [test][HWAsan] Fix kernel-inline.ll under NPM 2020-09-18 10:56:08 -07:00
Peter Collingbourne c201f27225 hwasan: Emit the globals note even when globals are uninstrumented.
This lets us support the scenario where a binary is linked from a mix
of object files with both instrumented and non-instrumented globals.
This is likely to occur on Android where the decision of whether to use
instrumented globals is based on the API level, which is user-facing.

Previously, in this scenario, it was possible for the comdat from
one of the object files with non-instrumented globals to be selected,
and since this comdat did not contain the note it would mean that the
note would be missing in the linked binary and the globals' shadow
memory would be left uninitialized, leading to a tag mismatch failure
at runtime when accessing one of the instrumented globals.

It is harmless to include the note when targeting a runtime that does
not support instrumenting globals because it will just be ignored.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85871
2020-08-13 16:33:22 -07:00
Peter Collingbourne cd40bd0a32 hwasan: Move .note.hwasan.globals note to hwasan.module_ctor comdat.
As of D70146 lld GCs comdats as a group and no longer considers notes in
comdats to be GC roots, so we need to move the note to a comdat with a GC root
section (.init_array) in order to prevent lld from discarding the note.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72936
2020-01-17 13:40:52 -08:00
Evgenii Stepanov dabd2622a8 hwasan: add tag_offset DWARF attribute to optimized debug info
Summary:
Support alloca-referencing dbg.value in hwasan instrumentation.
Update AsmPrinter to emit DW_AT_LLVM_tag_offset when location is in
loclist format.

Reviewers: pcc

Subscribers: srhines, aprantl, hiraditya, llvm-commits

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70753
2019-12-12 16:18:54 -08:00
David Spickett 91167e22ec [hwasan] Remove lazy thread-initialisation
This was an experiment made possible by a non-standard feature of the
Android dynamic loader.

It required introducing a flag to tell the compiler which ABI was being
targeted.
This flag is no longer needed, since the generated code now works for
both ABI's.

We leave that flag untouched for backwards compatibility. This also
means that if we need to distinguish between targeted ABI's again
we can do that without disturbing any existing workflows.

We leave a comment in the source code and mention in the help text to
explain this for any confused person reading the code in the future.

Patch by Matthew Malcomson

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69574
2019-11-04 10:58:46 +00:00
Peter Collingbourne c336557f02 hwasan: Compatibility fixes for short granules.
We can't use short granules with stack instrumentation when targeting older
API levels because the rest of the system won't understand the short granule
tags stored in shadow memory.

Moreover, we need to be able to let old binaries (which won't understand
short granule tags) run on a new system that supports short granule
tags. Such binaries will call the __hwasan_tag_mismatch function when their
outlined checks fail. We can compensate for the binary's lack of support
for short granules by implementing the short granule part of the check in
the __hwasan_tag_mismatch function. Unfortunately we can't do anything about
inline checks, but I don't believe that we can generate these by default on
aarch64, nor did we do so when the ABI was fixed.

A new function, __hwasan_tag_mismatch_v2, is introduced that lets code
targeting the new runtime avoid redoing the short granule check. Because tag
mismatches are rare this isn't important from a performance perspective; the
main benefit is that it introduces a symbol dependency that prevents binaries
targeting the new runtime from running on older (i.e. incompatible) runtimes.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68059

llvm-svn: 373035
2019-09-27 01:02:10 +00:00
Peter Collingbourne 21a1814417 hwasan: Untag unwound stack frames by wrapping personality functions.
One problem with untagging memory in landing pads is that it only works
correctly if the function that catches the exception is instrumented.
If the function is uninstrumented, we have no opportunity to untag the
memory.

To address this, replace landing pad instrumentation with personality function
wrapping. Each function with an instrumented stack has its personality function
replaced with a wrapper provided by the runtime. Functions that did not have
a personality function to begin with also get wrappers if they may be unwound
past. As the unwinder calls personality functions during stack unwinding,
the original personality function is called and the function's stack frame is
untagged by the wrapper if the personality function instructs the unwinder
to keep unwinding. If unwinding stops at a landing pad, the function is
still responsible for untagging its stack frame if it resumes unwinding.

The old landing pad mechanism is preserved for compatibility with old runtimes.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66377

llvm-svn: 369721
2019-08-23 01:28:44 +00:00
Peter Collingbourne 0930643ff6 hwasan: Instrument globals.
Globals are instrumented by adding a pointer tag to their symbol values
and emitting metadata into a special section that allows the runtime to tag
their memory when the library is loaded.

Due to order of initialization issues explained in more detail in the comments,
shadow initialization cannot happen during regular global initialization.
Instead, the location of the global section is marked using an ELF note,
and we require libc support for calling a function provided by the HWASAN
runtime when libraries are loaded and unloaded.

Based on ideas discussed with @evgeny777 in D56672.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65770

llvm-svn: 368102
2019-08-06 22:07:29 +00:00
Christudasan Devadasan 006cf8c03d Added address-space mangling for stack related intrinsics
Modified the following 3 intrinsics:
int_addressofreturnaddress,
int_frameaddress & int_sponentry.

Reviewed By: arsenm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64561

llvm-svn: 366679
2019-07-22 12:42:48 +00:00
Peter Collingbourne 3b82b92c6b hwasan: Initialize the pass only once.
This will let us instrument globals during initialization. This required
making the new PM pass a module pass, which should still provide access to
analyses via the ModuleAnalysisManager.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64843

llvm-svn: 366379
2019-07-17 21:45:19 +00:00
Peter Collingbourne e5c4b468f0 hwasan: Pad arrays with non-1 size correctly.
Spotted by eugenis.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64783

llvm-svn: 366171
2019-07-16 03:25:50 +00:00
Peter Collingbourne 1366262b74 hwasan: Improve precision of checks using short granule tags.
A short granule is a granule of size between 1 and `TG-1` bytes. The size
of a short granule is stored at the location in shadow memory where the
granule's tag is normally stored, while the granule's actual tag is stored
in the last byte of the granule. This means that in order to verify that a
pointer tag matches a memory tag, HWASAN must check for two possibilities:

* the pointer tag is equal to the memory tag in shadow memory, or
* the shadow memory tag is actually a short granule size, the value being loaded
  is in bounds of the granule and the pointer tag is equal to the last byte of
  the granule.

Pointer tags between 1 to `TG-1` are possible and are as likely as any other
tag. This means that these tags in memory have two interpretations: the full
tag interpretation (where the pointer tag is between 1 and `TG-1` and the
last byte of the granule is ordinary data) and the short tag interpretation
(where the pointer tag is stored in the granule).

When HWASAN detects an error near a memory tag between 1 and `TG-1`, it
will show both the memory tag and the last byte of the granule. Currently,
it is up to the user to disambiguate the two possibilities.

Because this functionality obsoletes the right aligned heap feature of
the HWASAN memory allocator (and because we can no longer easily test
it), the feature is removed.

Also update the documentation to cover both short granule tags and
outlined checks.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63908

llvm-svn: 365551
2019-07-09 20:22:36 +00:00
Peter Collingbourne 7108df964a hwasan: Remove the old frame descriptor mechanism.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63470

llvm-svn: 364665
2019-06-28 17:53:26 +00:00
Peter Collingbourne 5378afc02a hwasan: Use llvm.read_register intrinsic to read the PC on aarch64 instead of taking the function's address.
This shaves an instruction (and a GOT entry in PIC code) off prologues of
functions with stack variables.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63472

llvm-svn: 364608
2019-06-27 23:24:07 +00:00
Peter Collingbourne d57f7cc15e hwasan: Use bits [3..11) of the ring buffer entry address as the base stack tag.
This saves roughly 32 bytes of instructions per function with stack objects
and causes us to preserve enough information that we can recover the original
tags of all stack variables.

Now that stack tags are deterministic, we no longer need to pass
-hwasan-generate-tags-with-calls during check-hwasan. This also means that
the new stack tag generation mechanism is exercised by check-hwasan.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63360

llvm-svn: 363636
2019-06-17 23:39:51 +00:00
Peter Collingbourne fb9ce100d1 hwasan: Add a tag_offset DWARF attribute to instrumented stack variables.
The goal is to improve hwasan's error reporting for stack use-after-return by
recording enough information to allow the specific variable that was accessed
to be identified based on the pointer's tag. Currently we record the PC and
lower bits of SP for each stack frame we create (which will eventually be
enough to derive the base tag used by the stack frame) but that's not enough
to determine the specific tag for each variable, which is the stack frame's
base tag XOR a value (the "tag offset") that is unique for each variable in
a function.

In IR, the tag offset is most naturally represented as part of a location
expression on the llvm.dbg.declare instruction. However, the presence of the
tag offset in the variable's actual location expression is likely to confuse
debuggers which won't know about tag offsets, and moreover the tag offset
is not required for a debugger to determine the location of the variable on
the stack, so at the DWARF level it is represented as an attribute so that
it will be ignored by debuggers that don't know about it.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63119

llvm-svn: 363635
2019-06-17 23:39:41 +00:00
Evgeniy Stepanov 7f281b2c06 HWASan exception support.
Summary:
Adds a call to __hwasan_handle_vfork(SP) at each landingpad entry.

Reusing __hwasan_handle_vfork instead of introducing a new runtime call
in order to be ABI-compatible with old runtime library.

Reviewers: pcc

Subscribers: kubamracek, hiraditya, #sanitizers, llvm-commits

Tags: #sanitizers, #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61968

llvm-svn: 360959
2019-05-16 23:54:41 +00:00
Leonard Chan 0cdd3b1d81 [NewPM] Port HWASan and Kernel HWASan
Port hardware assisted address sanitizer to new PM following the same guidelines as msan and tsan.

Changes:
- Separate HWAddressSanitizer into a pass class and a sanitizer class.
- Create new PM wrapper pass for the sanitizer class.
- Use the getOrINsert pattern for some module level initialization declarations.
- Also enable kernel-kwasan in new PM
- Update llvm tests and add clang test.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61709

llvm-svn: 360707
2019-05-14 21:17:21 +00:00
Peter Collingbourne df57979ba7 hwasan: Enable -hwasan-allow-ifunc by default.
It's been on in Android for a while without causing problems, so it's time
to make it the default and remove the flag.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60355

llvm-svn: 357960
2019-04-09 00:25:59 +00:00
Peter Collingbourne 1a8acfb768 hwasan: If we split the entry block, move static allocas back into the entry block.
Otherwise they are treated as dynamic allocas, which ends up increasing
code size significantly. This reduces size of Chromium base_unittests
by 2MB (6.7%).

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57205

llvm-svn: 352152
2019-01-25 02:08:46 +00:00
Peter Collingbourne 020ce3f026 hwasan: Read shadow address from ifunc if we don't need a frame record.
This saves a cbz+cold call in the interceptor ABI, as well as a realign
in both ABIs, trading off a dcache entry against some branch predictor
entries and some code size.

Unfortunately the functionality is hidden behind a flag because ifunc is
known to be broken on static binaries on Android.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57084

llvm-svn: 351989
2019-01-23 22:39:11 +00:00