Summary:
In the general case, we only need to check for root regions inside
the memory map returned by procmaps. However, on Darwin,
we also need to check inside mmap'd regions, which aren't returned
in the list of modules we get from procmaps.
This patch refactors memory region scanning on darwin to reduce
code duplication with the kernel alloc once page scan.
Reviewers: kubamracek, alekseyshl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32190
llvm-svn: 300760
Summary:
ProcessPlatformSpecificAllocations for linux leak sanitizer iterated over
memory chunks and ran two checks concurrently:
1) Ensured the pc was valid
2) Checked whether it was a linker allocation
All platforms will need the valid pc check, so it is moved out of the platform-
specific file. To prevent code and logic duplication, the linker allocation
check is moved as well, with the name of the linker supplied by the platform-specific
module. In cases where we don't need to check for linker allocations (ie Darwin),
this name will be a nullptr, and we'll only run the caller pc checks.
Reviewers: kubamracek, alekseyshl, kcc
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32130
llvm-svn: 300690
Summary:
On Darwin, we need to track thread and tid as separate values.
This patch splits out the implementation of the suspended threads list
to be OS-specific.
Reviewers: glider, kubamracek, kcc
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31474
llvm-svn: 300491
We seem to assume that OS-provided thread IDs are either uptr or int, neither of which is true on Darwin. This introduces a tid_t type, which holds a OS-provided thread ID (gettid on Linux, pthread_threadid_np on Darwin, pthread_self on FreeBSD).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31774
llvm-svn: 300473
Summary: This specifically addresses the Mach-O zero page, which we cannot read from.
Reviewers: kubamracek, samsonov, alekseyshl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32044
llvm-svn: 300456
Summary:
These checks appear linux-specific, disable them on darwin, at
least for now.
Reviewers: kubamracek, alekseyshl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32013
llvm-svn: 300248
Summary:
Lsan was using PTHREAD_CREATE_JOINABLE/PTHREAD_CREATE_DETACHED
as truthy values, which works on Linux, where the values are 0 and 1,
but this fails on OS X, where the values are 1 and 2.
Set PTHREAD_CREATE_DETACHED to the correct value for a given system.
Reviewers: kcc, glider, kubamracek, alekseyshl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31883
llvm-svn: 300221
Summary:
With D31555 commited, looks like basic LSan functionality
works on PPC64. Time to enable LSan there.
Reviewers: eugenis
Subscribers: nemanjai, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31995
llvm-svn: 300204
Summary:
Mimicks the existing tsan and asan implementations of
Darwin interception.
Reviewers: kubamracek, kcc, glider
Subscribers: llvm-commits, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31889
llvm-svn: 299979
Summary:
The routines for thread destruction in the thread registry require
the lsan thread index, which is stored in pthread tls on OS X.
This means that we need to make sure that the lsan tls isn't destroyed
until after the thread registry tls. This change ensures that we
don't delete the lsan tls until we've finished destroying the thread
in the registry, ensuring that the destructor for the lsan tls runs
after the destructor for the thread registry tls.
This patch also adds a check to ensure that the thread ID is valid before
returning it in GetThreadID(), to ensure that the above behavior
is working correctly.
Reviewers: dvyukov, kubamracek, kcc
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31884
llvm-svn: 299978
This patch addresses two issues:
* It turned out that suspended thread may have dtls->dtv_size == kDestroyedThread (-1)
and LSan wrongly assumes that DTV is available. This leads to SEGV when LSan tries to
iterate through DTV that is invalid.
* In some rare cases GetRegistersAndSP can fail with errno 3 (ESRCH). In this case LSan
assumes that the whole stack of a given thread is available. This is wrong because ESRCH
can indicate that suspended thread was destroyed and its stack was unmapped. This patch
properly handles ESRCH from GetRegistersAndSP in order to avoid invalid accesses to already
unpapped threads stack.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30818
llvm-svn: 299630
Summary:
Now that we have a platform-specific non-common lsan file, use
it to store non-common lsan data.
Reviewers: kubamracek
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31472
llvm-svn: 299032
Summary:
We currently don't have any platform specific darwin
lsan modules, don't force failure if they don't exist.
Reviewers: kubamracek
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31473
llvm-svn: 299031
Summary:
This prevents InternalAlloc from being called before the sanitizers
are fully initialized.
Reviewers: kubamracek, kcc
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31306
llvm-svn: 298947
Summary:
Now that __thread is no longer used for lsan on darwin, i386 builds
can be enabled.
Reviewers: kcc, kubamracek
Subscribers: danalbert, srhines, mgorny, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29995
llvm-svn: 298946
Having this function in common seems to trigger a lot of unrelated
test failures. Given that this isn't really common code anyway,
move this to a new linux-specific lsan file.
llvm-svn: 298878
Summary:
This patch allows us to move away from using __thread on darwin,
which is requiring for building lsan for darwin on ios version 7
and on iossim i386.
Reviewers: kubamracek, kcc
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31291
llvm-svn: 298848
Summary:
This patch is the first step towards allows us to move away from using
__thread for the allocator cache on darwin,
which is requiring for building lsan for darwin on ios version 7
and on iossim i386.
This will be followed by patches to move the function into OS-specific files.
Reviewers: kubamracek, kcc
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29994
llvm-svn: 298537
Summary:
This patch allows us to move away from using __thread on darwin,
which is requiring for building lsan for darwin on ios version 7
and on iossim i386.
Reviewers: kubamracek, kcc
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29994
llvm-svn: 298274
Summary:
This patch allows us to move away from using __thread on darwin,
which is requiring for building lsan for darwin on ios version 7
and on iossim i386.
Reviewers: kubamracek, kcc
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29994
llvm-svn: 298214
Summary:
This patch allows us to move away from using __thread on darwin,
which is requiring for building lsan for darwin on ios version 7
and on iossim i386.
Reviewers: kubamracek, kcc
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29994
llvm-svn: 296707
Summary:
This patch allows us to move away from using __thread on darwin,
which is requiring for building lsan for darwin on ios version 7
and on iossim i386.
Reviewers: kubamracek, kcc
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29994
llvm-svn: 295413
Summary:
__thread is not supported by all darwin versions and architectures,
use pthreads instead to allow for building darwin lsan on iossim.
Reviewers: kubamracek, kcc
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29993
llvm-svn: 295405
Summary:
Adds a new cmake flag 'COMPILER_RT_ENABLE_LSAN_OSX', which enables lsan
compilation and is turned off by default. Patches to fix build errors
when this flag is enabled will be uploaded soon.
This is part of an effort to port LSan to OS X, but LSan on OS X does not
currently work or pass tests currently.
Reviewers: kubamracek, kcc, glider, alekseyshl
Reviewed By: kubamracek
Subscribers: danalbert, srhines, mgorny, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29783
llvm-svn: 295012
Summary:
__thread is supported on Darwin, but is implemented dynamically via
function calls to __tls_get_addr. This causes two issues when combined
with leak sanitizer, due to malloc() interception.
- The dynamic loader calls malloc during the process of loading
the sanitizer dylib, while swapping a placeholder tlv_boostrap
function for __tls_get_addr. This will cause tlv_bootstrap to
be called in DisabledInThisThread() via the asan allocator.
- The first time __tls_get_addr is called, it allocates memory
for the thread-local object, during which it calls malloc(). This
call will be intercepted, leading to an infinite loop in the asan
allocator, in which the allocator calls DisabledInThisThread,
which calls tls_get_addr, which calls into the allocator again.
Reviewers: kcc, glider, kubamracek
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29786
llvm-svn: 294994
Summary:
This patch provides stubs for all of the lsan platform-specific
functions which need to be implemented for darwin. Currently
all of these functions are stubs, for the purpose of fixing
compilation.
Reviewers: kcc, glider, kubamracek
Subscribers: mgorny, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29784
llvm-svn: 294983
When dealing with GCD worker threads, TSan currently prints weird things like "created by thread T-1" and "[failed to restore the stack]" in reports. This patch avoids that and instead prints "Thread T3 (...) is a GCD worker thread".
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29103
llvm-svn: 293882
macOS
Summary:
In https://bugs.freebsd.org/215125 I was notified that some configure
scripts attempt to test for the Linux-specific `mallinfo` and `mallopt`
functions by compiling and linking small programs which references the
functions, and observing whether that results in errors.
FreeBSD and macOS do not have the `mallinfo` and `mallopt` functions, so
normally these tests would fail, but when sanitizers are enabled, they
incorrectly succeed, because the sanitizers define interceptors for
these functions. This also applies to some other malloc-related
functions, such as `memalign`, `pvalloc` and `cfree`.
Fix this by not intercepting `mallinfo`, `mallopt`, `memalign`,
`pvalloc` and `cfree` for FreeBSD and macOS, in all sanitizers.
Also delete the non-functional `cfree` wrapper for Windows, to fix the
test cases on that platform.
Reviewers: emaste, kcc, rnk
Subscribers: timurrrr, eugenis, hans, joerg, llvm-commits, kubamracek
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27654
llvm-svn: 293536
This reverts r293337, which breaks tests on Windows:
malloc-no-intercept-499eb7.o : error LNK2019: unresolved external symbol _mallinfo referenced in function _main
llvm-svn: 293346
Summary:
In https://bugs.freebsd.org/215125 I was notified that some configure
scripts attempt to test for the Linux-specific `mallinfo` and `mallopt`
functions by compiling and linking small programs which references the
functions, and observing whether that results in errors.
FreeBSD and macOS do not have the `mallinfo` and `mallopt` functions, so
normally these tests would fail, but when sanitizers are enabled, they
incorrectly succeed, because the sanitizers define interceptors for
these functions. This also applies to some other malloc-related
functions, such as `memalign`, `pvalloc` and `cfree`.
Fix this by not intercepting `mallinfo`, `mallopt`, `memalign`,
`pvalloc` and `cfree` for FreeBSD and macOS, in all sanitizers.
Reviewers: emaste, kcc
Subscribers: hans, joerg, llvm-commits, kubamracek
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27654
llvm-svn: 293337
Breaks tests on i686/Linux due to missing clang driver support:
error: unsupported option '-fsanitize=leak' for target 'i386-unknown-linux-gnu'
llvm-svn: 292844
People keep asking LSan to be available on 32 bit targets (e.g. https://github.com/google/sanitizers/issues/403)
despite the fact that false negative ratio might be huge (up to 85%). This happens for big real world applications
that may contain random binary data (e.g. browser), but for smaller apps situation is not so terrible and LSan still might be useful.
This patch adds initial support for x86 Linux (disabled by default), ARM32 is in TODO list.
We used this patch (well, ported to GCC) on our 32 bit mobile emulators and it worked pretty fine
thus I'm posting it here to initiate further discussion.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28609
llvm-svn: 292775
Summary:
Adds a few default implementations for weak
interface functions on platforms where weak hooks are not supported.
Reviewers: eugenis, samsonov, timurrrr
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28201
llvm-svn: 291313
Summary:
The lsan cmake configuration failed when targeting more
than one architecture, because it would attempt to create multiple
components with the same name. Ensure that only one lsan component
is ever created.
Reviewers: beanz, bogner
Subscribers: dberris, llvm-commits, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28151
llvm-svn: 291294
Summary:
In order to avoid starting a separate thread to return unused memory to
the system (the thread interferes with process startup on Android,
Zygota waits for all threads to exit before fork, but this thread never
exits), try to return it right after free.
Reviewers: eugenis
Subscribers: cryptoad, filcab, danalbert, kubabrecka, llvm-commits
Patch by Aleksey Shlyapnikov.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27003
llvm-svn: 288091
There is possible deadlock in dynamic ASan runtime when we dlopen() shared lib
which creates a thread at the global initialization stage. The scenario:
1) dlopen grabs a GI_pthread_mutex_lock in main thread.
2) main thread calls pthread_create, ASan intercepts it, calls real pthread_create
and waits for the second thread to be "fully initialized".
3) Newly created thread tries to access a thread local disable_counter in LSan
(to complete its "full initialization") and hangs in tls_get_addr_tail, because
it also tries to acquire GI_pthread_mutex_lock.
The issue is reproducible on relative recent Glibc versions e.g. 2.23.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26028
llvm-svn: 285385
Summary:
LeakSanitizer does not work with ptrace but currently it
will print warnings (only under verbosity=1) and then proceed
to print tons of false reports.
This patch makes lsan fail hard under ptrace with a verbose message.
https://github.com/google/sanitizers/issues/728
Reviewers: eugenis, vitalybuka, aizatsky
Subscribers: kubabrecka, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25538
llvm-svn: 284171
Summary:
Window compiler is stricter for attributes location. This patch fixes a compilation error.
```
D:\src\llvm\llvm\projects\compiler-rt\lib\lsan\lsan_thread.cc(39): error C2144: syntax error: 'int' should be preceded by ';'
```
Reviewers: rnk, majnemer
Subscribers: majnemer, llvm-commits, chrisha, dberris
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24810
llvm-svn: 282254
This patch builds on LLVM r279776.
In this patch I've done some cleanup and abstracted three common steps runtime components have in their CMakeLists files, and added a fourth.
The three steps I abstract are:
(1) Add a top-level target (i.e asan, msan, ...)
(2) Set the target properties for sorting files in IDE generators
(3) Make the compiler-rt target depend on the top-level target
The new step is to check if a command named "runtime_register_component" is defined, and to call it with the component name.
The runtime_register_component command is defined in llvm/runtimes/CMakeLists.txt, and presently just adds the component to a list of sub-components, which later gets used to generate target mappings.
With this patch a new workflow for runtimes builds is supported. The new workflow when building runtimes from the LLVM runtimes directory is:
> cmake [...]
> ninja runtimes-configure
> ninja asan
The "runtimes-configure" target builds all the dependencies for configuring the runtimes projects, and runs CMake on the runtimes projects. Running the runtimes CMake generates a list of targets to bind into the top-level CMake so subsequent build invocations will have access to some of Compiler-RT's targets through the top-level build.
Note: This patch does exclude some top-level targets from compiler-rt libraries because they either don't install files (sanitizer_common), or don't have a cooresponding `check` target (stats).
llvm-svn: 279863
Summary:
This patch is a refactoring of the way cmake 'targets' are grouped.
It won't affect non-UI cmake-generators.
Clang/LLVM are using a structured way to group targets which ease
navigation through Visual Studio UI. The Compiler-RT projects
differ from the way Clang/LLVM are grouping targets.
This patch doesn't contain behavior changes.
Reviewers: kubabrecka, rnk
Subscribers: wang0109, llvm-commits, kubabrecka, chrisha
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21952
llvm-svn: 275111
Removing some preprocessor #if’s in favor of regular if’s. However, we need to declare empty stub functions to avoid linker errors.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20911
llvm-svn: 272047
There is no frame validity check in the slow unwinder like there is in the fast unwinder due to which lsan reports a leak even for heap allocated coroutine in the test swapcontext.cc. Since mips/linux uses slow unwindwer instead of fast unwinder, the test fails for mips/linux. Therefore adding the checks before unwinding fixes the test for mips/linux.
Reviewed by aizatsky.
Differential: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19961
llvm-svn: 269882
In short, CVE-2016-2143 will crash the machine if a process uses both >4TB
virtual addresses and fork(). ASan, TSan, and MSan will, by necessity, map
a sizable chunk of virtual address space, which is much larger than 4TB.
Even worse, sanitizers will always use fork() for llvm-symbolizer when a bug
is detected. Disable all three by aborting on process initialization if
the running kernel version is not known to contain a fix.
Unfortunately, there's no reliable way to detect the fix without crashing
the kernel. So, we rely on whitelisting - I've included a list of upstream
kernel versions that will work. In case someone uses a distribution kernel
or applied the fix themselves, an override switch is also included.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19576
llvm-svn: 267747
Summary: There is no frame validity check in the slow unwinder like there is in the fast unwinder due to which lsan reports a leak even for heap allocated coroutine in the test swapcontext.cc. Since mips/linux uses slow unwindwer instead of fast unwinder, the test fails for mips/linux. Therefore adding the checks before unwinding fixes the test for mips/linux.
Reviewers: samsonov, earthdok, kcc
Subscribers: llvm-commits, mohit.bhakkad, jaydeep
Differential: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18690
llvm-svn: 266716
Summary:
This removes the hard limit on the number of loaded modules (used to be
16K), and makes it easier to use LoadedModules w/o causing a memory
leak: ListOfModules owns the modules, and makes sure to properly clean
them in destructor.
Remove filtering functionality that is only needed in one place (LSan).
Reviewers: aizatsky
Subscribers: llvm-commits, kcc
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17470
llvm-svn: 261554
Summary:
In some cases stack pointer register (SP) doesn't point into the thread
stack: e.g. if one is using swapcontext(). In this case LSan
conservatively tries to scan the whole thread stack for pointers.
However, thread stack (at least in glibc implementation) may also
include guard pages, causing LSan to crash when it's reading from them.
One of the solutions is to use a pthread_attr_getguardsize() to adjust
the calculated stack boundaries. However, here we're just using
IsAccessibleMemoryRange to skip guard pages and make the code (slightly)
less platform-specific.
Reviewers: kcc
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17116
llvm-svn: 260554
Summary:
This patch is provided in preparation for removing autoconf on 1/26. The proposal to remove autoconf on 1/26 was discussed on the llvm-dev thread here: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2016-January/093875.html
"I am the punishment of God... If [autoconf] had not committed great sins, God would not have sent a punishment like me upon [it]."
-Genghis Khan
Reviewers: chandlerc, grosbach, bob.wilson, zaks.anna, kubabrecka, samsonov, echristo
Subscribers: iains, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16473
llvm-svn: 258863
Thread stack/TLS may be stored by libpthread for future reuse after
thread destruction, and the linked list it's stored in doesn't
even hold valid pointers to the objects, the latter are calculated
by obscure pointer arithmetic.
With this change applied, LSan test suite passes with
"use_ld_allocations" flag defaulted to "false". It still requires more
testing to check if the default can be switched.
llvm-svn: 257975
This flag allows to disable old way of determining dynamic TLS by
filtering out allocations from dynamic linker. This will be eventually
superseded by __tls_get_addr interceptor (see r257785), after we:
1) Test it in several supported environments
2) Deal with existing problems (currently we can't find a pointer to
DTV which is calloc()-ed in pthread_create).
llvm-svn: 257789
Summary:
We have a way to keep track of allocated DTLS segments: let's use it
in LSan. Although this code is fragile and relies on glibc
implementation details, in some cases it proves to be better than
existing way of tracking DTLS in LSan: marking as "reachable" all
memory chunks allocated directly by "ld".
The plan is to eventually get rid of the latter, once we are sure
it's safe to remove.
Reviewers: kcc
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16164
llvm-svn: 257785
Summary:
Rather than having to add new "experimental" options each time someone wants to work on bringing a sanitizer to a new platform, this patch makes options for all of them.
The default values for the options are set by the platform checks that would have enabled them, but they can be overridden on or off.
Reviewers: kubabrecka, samsonov
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14846
llvm-svn: 255170
This patch makes ASAN for aarch64 use the same shadow offset for all
currently supported VMAs (39 and 42 bits). The shadow offset is the
same for 39-bit (36).
llvm-svn: 252497
This patch add support for leak sanitizer for aarch64. Similar to
MIPS it uses a SizeClassAllocator32 due VMA constraints (aarch64
currently supports 39 and 42-bit VMA).
It also fixes the android build issue.
llvm-svn: 250898
This patch add support for leak sanitizer for aarch64. Similar to
MIPS it uses a SizeClassAllocator32 due VMA constraints (aarch64
currently supports 39 and 42-bit VMA).
llvm-svn: 249337
- Trim spaces.
- Use nullptr in place of 0 for pointer variables.
- Use '!p' in place of 'p == 0' for null pointer checks.
- Add blank lines to separate function definitions.
- Add 'extern "C"' or 'namespace foo' comments after the appropriate
closing brackets
This is a continuation of work from 409b7b82. The focus here is on the
various sanitizers (not sanitizer_common, as before).
Patch by Eugene Zelenko!
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13225
llvm-svn: 248966
error: width of bit-field 'allocated' (8 bits) exceeds the width of
its type; value will be truncated to 1 bit [-Werror,-Wbitfield-width]
llvm-svn: 247840
Race deduplication code proved to be a performance bottleneck in the past if suppressions/annotations are used, or just some races left unaddressed. And we still get user complaints about this:
https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/thread-sanitizer/hB0WyiTI4e4
ReportRace already has several layers of caching for racy pcs/addresses to make deduplication faster. However, ReportRace still takes a global mutex (ThreadRegistry and ReportMutex) during deduplication and also calls mmap/munmap (which take process-wide semaphore in kernel), this makes deduplication non-scalable.
This patch moves race deduplication outside of global mutexes and also removes all mmap/munmap calls.
As the result, race_stress.cc with 100 threads and 10000 iterations become 30x faster:
before:
real 0m21.673s
user 0m5.932s
sys 0m34.885s
after:
real 0m0.720s
user 0m23.646s
sys 0m1.254s
http://reviews.llvm.org/D12554
llvm-svn: 246758
Summary: This refactoring moves much of the Apple-specific behavior into a function in AddCompilerRT. The next cleanup patch will remove more of the if(APPLE) checks in the outlying CMakeLists.
This patch adds a bunch of new functionality to add_compiler_rt_runtime so that the target names don't need to be reconstructed outside the call. It also updates some of the call sites to exercise the new functionality, but does not update all uses fully. Subsequent patches will further update call sites and move to using the new features.
Reviewers: filcab, bogner, kubabrecka, zaks.anna, glider, samsonov
Subscribers: beanz, rengolin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12292
llvm-svn: 245970
Previously we had to call __sanitizer_cov_dump() from tool-specific
callbacks - instead, let sanitizer_common library handle this in a
single place.
This is a re-application of r245770, with slightly different approach
taken.
llvm-svn: 245890
These changes break both autoconf Mac OS X buildbot (linker errors
due to wrong Makefiles) and CMake buildbot (safestack test failures).
llvm-svn: 245784
Previously we had to call __sanitizer_cov_dump() from tool-specific
callbacks - instead, let sanitizer_common library handle this in a single place.
llvm-svn: 245770
Summary:
Merge "exitcode" flag from ASan, LSan, TSan and "exit_code" from MSan
into one entity. Additionally, make sure sanitizer_common now uses the
value of common_flags()->exitcode when dying on error, so that this
flag will automatically work for other sanitizers (UBSan and DFSan) as
well.
User-visible changes:
* "exit_code" MSan runtime flag is now deprecated. If explicitly
specified, this flag will take precedence over "exitcode".
The users are encouraged to migrate to the new version.
* __asan_set_error_exit_code() and __msan_set_exit_code() functions
are removed. With few exceptions, we don't support changing runtime
flags during program execution - we can't make them thread-safe.
The users should use __sanitizer_set_death_callback()
that would call _exit() with proper exit code instead.
* Plugin tools (LSan and UBSan) now inherit the exit code of the parent
tool. In particular, this means that ASan would now crash the program
with exit code "1" instead of "23" if it detects leaks.
Reviewers: kcc, eugenis
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12120
llvm-svn: 245734
Summary: I've copy/pasted the LLVM_NOEXCEPT definition macro goo from LLVM's Compiler.h. Is there somewhere I should put this in Compiler RT? Is there a useful header to define/share things like this?
Reviewers: samsonov
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11780
llvm-svn: 244453
include_if_exists=/path/to/sanitizer/options reads flags from the
file if it is present. "%b" in the include file path (for both
variants of the flag) is replaced with the basename of the main
executable.
llvm-svn: 242853
Summary:
Use CMake's cmake_parse_arguments() instead.
It's called in a slightly different way, but supports all our use cases.
It's in CMake 2.8.8, which is our minimum supported version.
CMake 3.0 doc (roughly the same. No direct link to 2.8.8 doc):
http://www.cmake.org/cmake/help/v3.0/module/CMakeParseArguments.html?highlight=cmake_parse_arguments
Since I was already changing these calls, I changed ARCH and LIB into
ARCHS and LIBS to make it more clear that they're lists of arguments.
Reviewers: eugenis, samsonov, beanz
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10529
llvm-svn: 240120
This change makes cmake fail to even run on Darwin with errors
evaluating "$<TARGET_OBJECTS:RTInterception.x86_64>".
This reverts r239955
llvm-svn: 239985
Summary:
This change takes darwin-specific goop that was scattered around CMakeLists files and spread between add_compiler_rt_object_library and add_compiler_rt_darwin_object_library and moves it all under add_compiler_rt_object_library.
The goal of this is to try to push platform handling as low in the utility functions as possible.
Reviewers: rnk, samsonov
Reviewed By: rnk, samsonov
Subscribers: rnk, rsmith, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10250
llvm-svn: 239498
Summary:
Add an interface function which can be used to periodically trigger
leak detection in a long-running process.
NB: The meaning of the kIgnored tag has been changed to allow easy clean-up
between subsequent leak checks. Previously, this tag was applied to explicitly
ignored (i.e. with __lsan_disable() or __lsan_ignore_object()) chunks *and* any
chunks only reachable from those. With this change, it's only applied to
explicitly ignored chunks.
Reviewers: samsonov
Reviewed By: samsonov
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9159
llvm-svn: 235728
The patch is generated using clang-tidy misc-use-override check.
This command was used:
tools/clang/tools/extra/clang-tidy/tool/run-clang-tidy.py \
-checks='-*,misc-use-override' -header-filter='llvm|clang' -j=32 -fix \
-format
llvm-svn: 234680
Wrap the StopTheWorld call in a dl_iterate_phdr() callback. This ensures that no
other threads are holding the libdl lock, and we can safely reenter it in the
tracer thread.
llvm-svn: 230631
SuppressionContext is no longer a singleton, shared by all sanitizers,
but a regular class. Each of ASan, LSan, UBSan and TSan now have their
own SuppressionContext, which only parses suppressions specific to
that sanitizer.
"suppressions" flag is moved away from common flags into tool-specific
flags, so the user now may pass
ASAN_OPTIONS=suppressions=asan_supp.txt LSAN_OPIONS=suppressions=lsan_supp.txt
in a single invocation.
llvm-svn: 230026
They autotools build has a number of missing features, supports less
OS, architectures, build configurations, doesn't have any tests and
is hard to support in sync with CMake build.
llvm-svn: 229556
Summary:
LSan can be combined with a parent tool (for now it's only ASan).
Also, we allow LSAN_OPTIONS to override certain common flags. It means
we have to parse LSAN_OPTIONS early enough, before the rest of the
parent tool (including chunks of sanitizer_common) is initialized.
In future, we can use the same approach for UBSan, after we embed it
into ASan runtime in a similar way.
Test Plan: regression test suite
Reviewers: earthdok, eugenis
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7577
llvm-svn: 229519
By attaching an extra integer tag to heap origins, we are able
to distinguish between uninits
- created by heap allocation,
- created by heap deallocation (i.e. use-after-free),
- created by __msan_allocated_memory call,
- etc.
See https://code.google.com/p/memory-sanitizer/issues/detail?id=35.
llvm-svn: 226821
The new parser is a lot stricter about syntax, reports unrecognized
flags, and will make it easier to implemented some of the planned features.
llvm-svn: 226169
This mirrors r225239 to all the rest sanitizers:
ASan, DFSan, LSan, MSan, TSan, UBSan.
Now the runtime flag type, name, default value and
description is located in the single place in the
.inc file.
llvm-svn: 225327
Fix test failures by introducing CommonFlags::CopyFrom() to make sure
compiler doesn't insert memcpy() calls into runtime code.
Original commit message:
Protect CommonFlags singleton by adding const qualifier to
common_flags() accessor. The only ways to modify the flags are
SetCommonFlagsDefaults(), ParseCommonFlagsFromString() and
OverrideCommonFlags() functions, which are only supposed to be
called during initialization.
llvm-svn: 225088
We've got some internal users that either aren't compatible with this or
have found a bug with it. Either way, this is an isolated cleanup and so
I'm reverting it to un-block folks while we investigate. Alexey and
I will be working on fixing everything up so this can be re-committed
soon. Sorry for the noise and any inconvenience.
llvm-svn: 225079
This is a re-commit of r224838 + r224839, previously reverted in r224850.
Test failures were likely (still can not reproduce) caused by two lit tests
using the same name for an intermediate build target.
llvm-svn: 224853
Summary:
Protect CommonFlags singleton by adding const qualifier to
common_flags() accessor. The only ways to modify the flags are
SetCommonFlagsDefaults(), ParseCommonFlagsFromString() and
OverrideCommonFlags() functions, which are only supposed to be
called during initialization.
Test Plan: regression test suite
Reviewers: kcc, eugenis, glider
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6741
llvm-svn: 224736
Add CommonFlags::SetDefaults() and CommonFlags::ParseFromString(),
so that this object can be easily tested. Enforce
that ParseCommonFlagsFromString() and SetCommonFlagsDefaults()
work only with singleton CommonFlags, shared across all sanitizer
runtimes.
llvm-svn: 224617
Summary:
Turn "allocator_may_return_null" common flag into an
Allocator::may_return_null bool flag. We want to make sure
that common flags are immutable after initialization. There
are cases when we want to change this flag in the allocator
at runtime: e.g. in unit tests and during ASan activation
on Android.
Test Plan: regression test suite, real-life applications
Reviewers: kcc, eugenis
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6623
llvm-svn: 224148
In the current scheme of things, the call to ThreadStart() in the child
thread is not synchronized with the parent thread. So, if a pointer is passed to
pthread_create, there may be a window of time during which this pointer will not
be discoverable by LSan. I.e. the pthread_create interceptor has already
returneed and thus the pointer is no longer on the parent stack, but we don't
yet know the location of the child stack. This has caused bogus leak reports
(see http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=21621/).
This patch makes the pthread_create interceptor wait until the child thread is
properly registered before returning.
llvm-svn: 223419
Return a linked list of AddressInfo objects, instead of using an array of
these objects as an output parameter. This simplifies the code in callers
of this function (especially TSan).
Fix a few memory leaks from internal allocator, when the returned
AddressInfo objects were not properly cleared.
llvm-svn: 223145
MSanDR is a dynamic instrumentation tool that can instrument the code
(prebuilt libraries and such) that could not be instrumented at compile time.
This code is unused (to the best of our knowledge) and unmaintained, and
starting to bit-rot.
llvm-svn: 222232
introduce a BufferedStackTrace class, which owns this array.
Summary:
This change splits __sanitizer::StackTrace class into a lightweight
__sanitizer::StackTrace, which doesn't own array of PCs, and BufferedStackTrace,
which owns it. This would allow us to simplify the interface of StackDepot,
and eventually merge __sanitizer::StackTrace with __tsan::StackTrace.
Test Plan: regression test suite.
Reviewers: kcc, dvyukov
Reviewed By: dvyukov
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5985
llvm-svn: 220635
* Detect Android toolchain target arch and set correct runtime library name.
* Merged a lot of Android and non-Android code paths.
* Android is only supported in standalone build of compiler-rt now.
* Linking lsan-common in ASan-Android (makes lsan annotations work).
* Relying on -fsanitize=address linker flag when building tests (again,
unification with non-Android path).
* Runtime library moved from lib/asan to lib/linux.
llvm-svn: 218605
We may as well just use Symbolizer::GetOrInit() in all the cases.
Don't call Symbolizer::Get() early in tools initialization: these days
it doesn't do any important setup work, and we may as well create the
symbolizer the first time it's actually needed.
llvm-svn: 217558
another sanitizer.
A user may run both LSan and LSan+ASan. It is weird to pass path to leak
suppression file (or other common sanitizer flags, like "verbosity") in
"LSAN_OPTIONS" in the first case and in "ASAN_OPTIONS" in the second case.
llvm-svn: 215949
Suppression context might be used in multiple sanitizers working
simultaneously (e.g. LSan and UBSan) and not knowing about each other.
llvm-svn: 214831
Convert TSan and LSan to the new interface. More changes will follow:
1) "suppressions" should become a common runtime flag.
2) Code for parsing suppressions file should be moved to SuppressionContext::Init().
llvm-svn: 214334