This change adds a CMake rule to produce shared object versions of
libFuzzer (no-main). Like the static library versions, these shared
libraries have a copy of libc++ statically linked in. For i386 we don't
link with libc++ since i386 does not support mixing position-
independent and non-position-independent code in the same library.
Patch By: IanPudney
Reviewed By: morehouse
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84947
This quietly disabled use of zlib on Windows even when building with
-DLLVM_ENABLE_ZLIB=FORCE_ON.
> Rather than handling zlib handling manually, use find_package from CMake
> to find zlib properly. Use this to normalize the LLVM_ENABLE_ZLIB,
> HAVE_ZLIB, HAVE_ZLIB_H. Furthermore, require zlib if LLVM_ENABLE_ZLIB is
> set to YES, which requires the distributor to explicitly select whether
> zlib is enabled or not. This simplifies the CMake handling and usage in
> the rest of the tooling.
>
> This is a reland of abb0075 with all followup changes and fixes that
> should address issues that were reported in PR44780.
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79219
This reverts commit 10b1b4a231 and follow-ups
64d99cc6ab and
f9fec0447e.
* Add SystemZ to the list of supported architectures.
* XFAIL a few tests.
Coverage reporting is broken, and is not easy to fix (see comment in
coverage.test). Interaction with sanitizers needs to be investigated
more thoroughly, since they appear to reduce coverage in certain cases.
The usage pattern of Bundle variable assumes the machine is little
endian, which is not the case on SystemZ. Fix by converting Bundle to
little-endian when necessary.
These UBSan tests assert the absence of runtime errors via `count 0`,
which means "expect no output". This fails the test unnecessarily in
some environments (e.g., iOS simulator in our case). Alter the test to
be a bit more specific and "expect no error" instead of "expect no
output".
rdar://65503408
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85155
GlobalISel is the default ISel for aarch64 at -O0. Prior to D78465, GlobalISel
didn't have support for dealing with address-of-global lowerings, so it fell
back to SelectionDAGISel.
HWASan Globals require special handling, as they contain the pointer tag in the
top 16-bits, and are thus outside the code model. We need to generate a `movk`
in the instruction sequence with a G3 relocation to ensure the bits are
relocated properly. This is implemented in SelectionDAGISel, this patch does
the same for GlobalISel.
GlobalISel and SelectionDAGISel differ in their lowering sequence, so there are
differences in the final instruction sequence, explained in
`tagged-globals.ll`. Both of these implementations are correct, but GlobalISel
is slightly larger code size / slightly slower (by a couple of arithmetic
instructions). I don't see this as a problem for now as GlobalISel is only on
by default at `-O0`.
Reviewed By: aemerson, arsenm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82615
Extend the memop value profile buckets to be more flexible (could accommodate a
mix of individual values and ranges) and to cover more value ranges (from 11 to
22 buckets).
Disabled behind a flag (to be enabled separately) and the existing code to be
removed later.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81682
Currently, several InstrProf tests `FAIL` on Solaris (both sparc and x86):
Profile-i386 :: Posix/instrprof-visibility.cpp
Profile-i386 :: instrprof-merging.cpp
Profile-i386 :: instrprof-set-file-object-merging.c
Profile-i386 :: instrprof-set-file-object.c
On sparc there's also
Profile-sparc :: coverage_comments.cpp
The failure mode is always the same:
error: /var/llvm/local-amd64/projects/compiler-rt/test/profile/Profile-i386/Posix/Output/instrprof-visibility.cpp.tmp: Failed to load coverage: Malformed coverage data
The error is from `llvm/lib/ProfileData/Coverage/CoverageMappingReader.cpp`
(`loadBinaryFormat`), l.926:
InstrProfSymtab ProfileNames;
std::vector<SectionRef> NamesSectionRefs = *NamesSection;
if (NamesSectionRefs.size() != 1)
return make_error<CoverageMapError>(coveragemap_error::malformed);
where .size() is 2 instead.
Looking at the executable, I find (with `elfdump -c -N __llvm_prf_names`):
Section Header[15]: sh_name: __llvm_prf_names
sh_addr: 0x8053ca5 sh_flags: [ SHF_ALLOC ]
sh_size: 0x86 sh_type: [ SHT_PROGBITS ]
sh_offset: 0x3ca5 sh_entsize: 0
sh_link: 0 sh_info: 0
sh_addralign: 0x1
Section Header[31]: sh_name: __llvm_prf_names
sh_addr: 0x8069998 sh_flags: [ SHF_WRITE SHF_ALLOC ]
sh_size: 0 sh_type: [ SHT_PROGBITS ]
sh_offset: 0x9998 sh_entsize: 0
sh_link: 0 sh_info: 0
sh_addralign: 0x1
Unlike GNU `ld` (which primarily operates on section names) the Solaris
linker, following the ELF spirit, only merges input sections into an output
section if both section name and section flags match, so two separate
sections are maintained.
The read-write one comes from `lib/clang/12.0.0/lib/sunos/libclang_rt.profile-i386.a(InstrProfilingPlatformLinux.c.o)`
while the read-only one is generated by
`llvm/lib/Transforms/Instrumentation/InstrProfiling.cpp` (`InstrProfiling::emitNameData`)
at l.1004 where `isConstant = true`.
The easiest way to avoid the mismatch is to change the definition in
`compiler-rt/lib/profile/InstrProfilingPlatformLinux.c` to `const`.
This fixes all failures observed.
Tested on `amd64-pc-solaris2.11`, `sparcv9-sun-solaris2.11`, and
`x86_64-pc-linux-gnu`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85116
The root cause was fixed by 3d6f53018f.
The workaround added in 99ad956fda can be changed
to an assert now. (In case the fix regresses, there will be a heap-use-after-free.)
Otherwise we end up compiling in C++ mode and on FreeBSD
/usr/include/stdatomic.h is not compatible with C++ since it uses _Bool.
Reviewed By: guiand, eugenis, vitalybuka, emaste
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84510
See https://llvm.org/PR46862. This does not fix the underlying issue but at
least it allows me to run check-all again without having to disable
building compiler-rt.
Reviewed By: #sanitizers, vitalybuka
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84650
A recent change broke `ninja check-asan` on Darwin by causing an error
during linking of ASan unit tests [1].
Move the addition of `-ObjC` compiler flag outside of the new
`if(COMPILER_RT_STANDALONE_BUILD)` block. It doesn't add any global
flags (e.g, `${CMAKE_CXX_FLAGS}`) and the decision to add is based
solely on source paths (`${source_rpath}`).
[1] 8b2fcc42b8, https://reviews.llvm.org/D84466
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85057
`TARGET_OS_IOS` and `TARGET_OS_WATCH` are not mutually exclusive.
`SANITIZER_IOS` is defined for all embedded platforms. So the branch
for watchOS is never taken. We could fix this by switching the order
of the branches (but the reason for doing so is non-obvious). Instead,
lets use the Darwin-specific `TARGET_OS_*` macros which are mutually
exclusive.
We want the Go build to not use getauxval, as we must support glibc < 2.16 platforms.
Reviewed By: dvyukov
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84859
There are some files in compiler-rt that use UTF-8 characters in some of the
comments. This causes lint failures with some versions of Python. This patch
just makes the encoding explicit in the call to open.
InstrProfilingBuffer.c.o is generic code that must support compilation
into freestanding projects. This gets rid of its dependence on the
_getpagesize symbol from libc, shifting it to InstrProfilingFile.c.o.
This fixes a build failure seen in a firmware project.
rdar://66249701
Not matching the (real) variadic declaration makes the interceptor take garbage inputs on Darwin/AArch64.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84570
As requested in the review, this patch removes the additional conditions in
the `COMPILER_RT_HAS_VERSION_SCRIPT` tests.
Tested on `amd64-pc-solaris2.11` and `x86_64-pc-linux-gnu`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84559
Add a fallback for `sysctl kern.osproductversion` for XNU 17 (macOS
10.13) and below, which do not provide this property.
Unfortunately, this means we have to take the detour via Darwin kernel
version again (at least for the fallback).
Reviewed By: delcypher
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84892
for device simulators
This change separates out the iOS/tvOS/watchOS simulator slices from the "libclang_rt.<os>.a"
fat archive, by moving them out to their own "libclang_rt.<os>sim.a" static archive.
This allows us to build and to link with an arm64 device simulator slice for the simulators running
on Apple Silicons, and to distribute it in one archive alongside the Intel simulator slices.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84564
When attempting to build compiler-rt on a developer transition kit, the
build would fail due to `.S` files not being handled properly by the
Ninja generator. Rather than conditionalising on Xcode, conditionalise
to Darwin. Because we know that the system compiler is clang based, it
will always properly handle the pre-processing based on the extension.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84333
Adds the -fast-16-labels flag, which enables efficient instrumentation
for DFSan when the user needs <=16 labels. The instrumentation
eliminates most branches and most calls to __dfsan_union or
__dfsan_union_load.
Reviewed By: vitalybuka
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84371
-fno-lto is in SANITIZER_COMMON_CFLAGS but not here.
Don't use SANITIZER_COMMON_CFLAGS because of performance issues.
See https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=46838.
Fixes
$ ninja TScudoCUnitTest-i386-Test
on an LLVM build with -DLLVM_ENABLE_LTO=Thin.
check-scudo now passes.
Reviewed By: cryptoad
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84805
...which is set based on HAVE_RPC_XDR_H. At least Fedora 32 does not have a
/usr/include/rpc/xdr.h, so failed this test introduced with
<https://reviews.llvm.org/D83358> "[Sanitizers] Add interceptor for
xdrrec_create".
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84740
This adds the code to support calling mallopt and converting the
options to the internal Option enum.
Reviewed By: cryptoad
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84806
This patch marks compiler-rt/test/asan/TestCases/Linux/allocator_oom_test.cpp
unsupported on PowerPC 64bit-LE architecture since this test fails when run
on a machine with larger system memory.
Reviewed By: #powerpc, nemanjai
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84786
Summary:
Partners have requested the ability to configure more parts of Scudo
at runtime, notably the Secondary cache options (maximum number of
blocks cached, maximum size) as well as the TSD registry options
(the maximum number of TSDs in use).
This CL adds a few more Scudo specific `mallopt` parameters that are
passed down to the various subcomponents of the Combined allocator.
- `M_CACHE_COUNT_MAX`: sets the maximum number of Secondary cached items
- `M_CACHE_SIZE_MAX`: sets the maximum size of a cacheable item in the Secondary
- `M_TSDS_COUNT_MAX`: sets the maximum number of TSDs that can be used (Shared Registry only)
Regarding the TSDs maximum count, this is a one way option, only
allowing to increase the count.
In order to allow for this, I rearranged the code to have some `setOption`
member function to the relevant classes, using the `scudo::Option` class
enum to determine what is to be set.
This also fixes an issue where a static variable (`Ready`) was used in
templated functions without being set back to `false` every time.
Reviewers: pcc, eugenis, hctim, cferris
Subscribers: jfb, llvm-commits, #sanitizers
Tags: #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84667
Checking the OS version via `GetMacosAlignedVersion()` now works in
simulators [1]. Let's use it to simplify `DyldNeedsEnvVariable()`.
[1] 3fb0de8207
Reviewed By: delcypher
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81197
compiler-rt checks OS versions by querying the Darwin kernel version.
This is not necessarily correct inside the simulators if the simulator
runtime is not aligned with the host macOS. Let's instead check the
`SIMULATOR_RUNTIME_VERSION` env var.
rdar://63031937
Reviewed By: delcypher
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83977
In a build with -DLLVM_ENABLE_LTO=Thin:
$ ninja TSanitizer-x86_64-Test-Nolibc
[1/1] Generating Sanitizer-x86_64-Test-Nolibc
FAILED: projects/compiler-rt/lib/sanitizer_common/tests/Sanitizer-x86_64-Test-Nolibc
sanitizer_nolibc_test_main.x86_64.o: file not recognized: file format not recognized
because -flto=thin is getting passed to the clang_compile step.
For non-standalone builds, global compilation flags shouldn't be passed to compiler-rt tests, only the flags the test specifies.
Reviewed By: vitalybuka
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84466
Neither the Illumos `ld` nor the Solaris 11.3 one support the `--version-script` and
`z gnu-linker-script-compat` options, which breaks the `compiler-rt` build.
This patch checks for both options instead of hardcoding their use.
Tested on `amd-pc-solaris2.11` (all of Solaris 11.4, 11.3, and Illumos).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84559
make_unique is a C++14 feature, and this prevents us from building on
Ubuntu Trusty. While we do use a C++14 compatible toolchain for building
in general, we fall back to the system toolchain for building the
compiler-rt tests.
The reason is that those tests get cross-compiled for e.g. 32-bit and
64-bit x86, and while the toolchain provides libstdc++ in those
flavours, the resulting compiler-rt test binaries don't get RPATH set
and so won't start if they're linked with that toolchain.
We've tried linking the test binaries against libstdc++ statically, by
passing COMPILER_RT_TEST_COMPILER_CFLAGS=-static-libstdc++. That mostly
works, but some test targets append -lstdc++ to the compiler invocation.
So, after spending way too much time on this, let's just avoid C++14
here for now.
The commit 8372d50508 has been reverted
(eafeb8af34) because it broke asan
tests on green dragon buildbots.
The underlying issue has been fixed in 4dd5c2bee3.
This adds a new extern "C" function that serves the same purpose. This removes the need for external users to depend on internal headers in order to use this feature. It also standardizes the interface in a way that other fuzzing engines will be able to match.
Patch By: IanPudney
Reviewed By: kcc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84561
Summary: This patch disables implicit builtin knowledge about memcmp-like functions when compiling the program for fuzzing, i.e., when -fsanitize=fuzzer(-no-link) is given. This allows libFuzzer to always intercept memcmp-like functions as it effectively disables optimizing calls to such functions into different forms. This is done by adding a set of flags (-fno-builtin-memcmp and others) in the clang driver. Individual -fno-builtin-* flags previously used in several libFuzzer tests are now removed, as it is now done automatically in the clang driver.
The patch was once reverted in 8ef9e2bf35, as this patch was dependent on a reverted commit f78d9fceea. This reverted commit was recommitted in 831ae45e3d, so relanding this dependent patch too.
Reviewers: morehouse, hctim
Subscribers: cfe-commits, #sanitizers
Tags: #clang, #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83987
Summary:
Fix up a slight bug with the crash handler API, where we say that we
return the size of the collected trace (instead of the size of the trace
that's returned) when the return buffer is too small, and the result is
truncated.
Also, as a result, patch up a small uninitialized memory bug.
Reviewers: morehouse, eugenis
Reviewed By: eugenis
Subscribers: #sanitizers
Tags: #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84652
Summary:
On 32-b, the release algo loops multiple times over the freelist for a size
class, which lead to a decrease in performance when there were a lot of free
blocks.
This changes the release functions to loop only once over the freelist, at the
cost of using a little bit more memory for the release process: instead of
working on one region at a time, we pass the whole memory area covered by all
the regions for a given size class, and work on sub-areas of `RegionSize` in
this large area. For 64-b, we just have 1 sub-area encompassing the whole
region. Of course, not all the sub-areas within that large memory area will
belong to the class id we are working on, but those will just be left untouched
(which will not add to the RSS during the release process).
Reviewers: pcc, cferris, hctim, eugenis
Subscribers: llvm-commits, #sanitizers
Tags: #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83993
Summary: This patch disables (i) noasan-memcmp64.test on Windows as libFuzzer's interceptors are only supported on Linux for now, and (ii) bcmp.test as on Windows bcmp is not available in strings.h.
Reviewers: morehouse, hctim, kcc
Subscribers: #sanitizers
Tags: #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84536
If we define memcmp in an archive, bcmp should be defined as well (many libc
define bcmp/memcmp in one object file). Otherwise if the application calls bcmp
or strcmp which gets optimized to bcmp (SimplifyLibCalls), the undefined
reference may pull in an optimized bcmp/strcmp implementation (libc replacement)
later on the linker command line. If both libFuzzer's memcmp and the optimized
memcmp are strong => there will be a multiple definition error.
Rather than handling zlib handling manually, use find_package from CMake
to find zlib properly. Use this to normalize the LLVM_ENABLE_ZLIB,
HAVE_ZLIB, HAVE_ZLIB_H. Furthermore, require zlib if LLVM_ENABLE_ZLIB is
set to YES, which requires the distributor to explicitly select whether
zlib is enabled or not. This simplifies the CMake handling and usage in
the rest of the tooling.
This is a reland of abb0075 with all followup changes and fixes that
should address issues that were reported in PR44780.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79219
Summary: FuzzerInterceptors.cpp includes <sanitizer/common_interface_defs.h>, and this patch adds a missing include_directories to make sure the included file is found.
Reviewers: morehouse, hctim, dmajor
Subscribers: mgorny, #sanitizers
Tags: #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84474
This guarantees that we will detect a buffer overflow or underflow
that overwrites an adjacent block. This spatial guarantee is similar
to the temporal guarantee that we provide for immediate use-after-free.
Enabling odd/even tags involves a tradeoff between use-after-free
detection and buffer overflow detection. Odd/even tags make it more
likely for buffer overflows to be detected by increasing the size of
the guaranteed "red zone" around the allocation, but on the other
hand use-after-free is less likely to be detected because the tag
space for any particular chunk is cut in half. Therefore we introduce
a tuning setting to control whether odd/even tags are enabled.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84361
Rather than handling zlib handling manually, use find_package from CMake
to find zlib properly. Use this to normalize the LLVM_ENABLE_ZLIB,
HAVE_ZLIB, HAVE_ZLIB_H. Furthermore, require zlib if LLVM_ENABLE_ZLIB is
set to YES, which requires the distributor to explicitly select whether
zlib is enabled or not. This simplifies the CMake handling and usage in
the rest of the tooling.
This is a reland of abb0075 with all followup changes and fixes that
should address issues that were reported in PR44780.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79219
Support fast16labels in `dfsan_has_label`, and print an error for all
other API functions. For `dfsan_dump_labels` we return silently rather
than crashing since it is also called from the atexit handler where it
is undefined behavior to call exit() again.
Reviewed By: kcc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84215
Summary: libFuzzer's interceptor support added in 831ae45e3d currently only works on Linux. This patch disables the test cases added as part of that commit on non-Linux platforms.
Reviewers: morehouse, hctim
Subscribers: #sanitizers
Tags: #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84434
Summary: libFuzzer intercepts certain library functions such as memcmp/strcmp by defining weak hooks. Weak hooks, however, are called only when other runtimes such as ASan is linked. This patch defines libFuzzer's own interceptors, which is linked into the libFuzzer executable when other runtimes are not linked, i.e., when -fsanitize=fuzzer is given, but not others.
The patch once landed but was reverted in 8ef9e2bf35 due to an assertion failure caused by calling an intercepted function, strncmp, while initializing the interceptors in fuzzerInit(). This issue is now fixed by calling libFuzzer's own implementation of library functions (i.e., internal_*) when the fuzzer has not been initialized yet, instead of recursively calling fuzzerInit() again.
Reviewers: kcc, morehouse, hctim
Subscribers: #sanitizers, krytarowski, mgorny, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang, #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83494
A malloc implementation may return a pointer to some allocated space. It is
undefined for libclang_rt.profile- to access the object - which actually happens
in instrumentTargetValueImpl, where ValueCounters[CounterIndex] may access a
ValueProfNode (from another allocated object) and crashes when the code accesses
the object referenced by CurVNode->Next.
add_compile_options is more sensitive to its location in the file than add_definitions--it only takes effect for sources that are added after it. This updated patch ensures that the add_compile_options is done before adding any source files that depend on it.
Using add_definitions caused the flag to be passed to rc.exe on Windows and thus broke Windows builds.
Summary:
Support fast16labels in `dfsan_has_label`, and print an error for all
other API functions.
Reviewers: kcc, vitalybuka, pcc
Reviewed By: kcc
Subscribers: jfb, llvm-commits, #sanitizers
Tags: #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84215
This reverts commit 4a539faf74.
There is a __llvm_profile_instrument_range related crash in PGO-instrumented clang:
```
(gdb) bt
llvm::ConstantRange const&, llvm::APInt const&, unsigned int, bool) ()
llvm::ScalarEvolution::getRangeForAffineAR(llvm::SCEV const*, llvm::SCEV
const*, llvm::SCEV const*, unsigned int) ()
```
(The body of __llvm_profile_instrument_range is inlined, so we can only find__llvm_profile_instrument_target in the trace)
```
23│ 0x000055555dba0961 <+65>: nopw %cs:0x0(%rax,%rax,1)
24│ 0x000055555dba096b <+75>: nopl 0x0(%rax,%rax,1)
25│ 0x000055555dba0970 <+80>: mov %rsi,%rbx
26│ 0x000055555dba0973 <+83>: mov 0x8(%rsi),%rsi # %rsi=-1 -> SIGSEGV
27│ 0x000055555dba0977 <+87>: cmp %r15,(%rbx)
28│ 0x000055555dba097a <+90>: je 0x55555dba0a76 <__llvm_profile_instrument_target+342>
```
After lots of follow-up fixes, there are still problems, such as
-Wno-suggest-override getting passed to the Windows Resource Compiler
because it was added with add_definitions in the CMake file.
Rather than piling on another fix, let's revert so this can be re-landed
when there's a proper fix.
This reverts commit 21c0b4c1e8.
This reverts commit 81d68ad27b.
This reverts commit a361aa5249.
This reverts commit fa42b7cf29.
This reverts commit 955f87f947.
This reverts commit 8b16e45f66.
This reverts commit 308a127a38.
This reverts commit 274b6b0c7a.
This reverts commit 1c7037a2a5.
For now, xdrrec_create is only intercepted Linux as its signature
is different on Solaris.
The method of intercepting xdrrec_create isn't super ideal but I
couldn't think of a way around it: Using an AddrHashMap combined
with wrapping the userdata field.
We can't just allocate a handle on the heap in xdrrec_create and leave
it at that, since there'd be no way to free it later. This is because it
doesn't seem to be possible to access handle from the XDR struct, which
is the only argument to xdr_destroy.
On the other hand, the callbacks don't have a way to get at the
x_private field of XDR, which is what I chose for the HashMap key. So we
need to wrap the handle parameter of the callbacks. But we can't just
pass x_private as handle (as it hasn't been set yet). We can't put the
wrapper struct into the HashMap and pass its pointer as handle, as the
key we need (x_private again) hasn't been set yet.
So I allocate the wrapper struct on the heap, pass its pointer as
handle, and put it into the HashMap so xdr_destroy can find it later and
destroy it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83358
Otherwise if 'ld' is an older system LLD (FreeBSD; or if someone adds 'ld' to
point to an LLD from a different installation) which does not support the
current ModuleSummaryIndex::BitCodeSummaryVersion, the test will fail.
Add lit feature 'binutils_lto'. GNU ld is more common than GNU gold, so
we can just require 'is_binutils_lto_supported' to additionally support GNU ld.
Reviewed By: myhsu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84133
These calls are neither intercepted by compiler-rt nor is libatomic.a
naturally instrumented.
This patch uses the existing libcall mechanism to detect a call
to atomic_load or atomic_store, and instruments them much like
the preexisting instrumentation for atomics.
Calls to _load are modified to have at least Acquire ordering, and
calls to _store at least Release ordering. Because this needs to be
converted at runtime, msan injects a LUT (implemented as a vector
with extractelement).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83337
- there are additional fields for glob_t struct, thus size check is failing.
- to access old mman.h api based on caddr_t, _XOPEN_SOURCE needs to be not defined
thus we provide the prototype.
- prxmap_t constified.
Reviewers: ro, eugenis
Reviewed-By: ro
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84046
Summary:
It turns out the `CHECK(addr >= reinterpret_cast<upt>(info.dli_saddr)`
can fail because on armv7s on iOS 9.3 `dladdr()` returns
`info.dli_saddr` with an address larger than the address we provided.
We should avoid crashing here because crashing in the middle of reporting
an issue is very unhelpful. Instead we now try to compute a function offset
if the value we get back from `dladdr()` looks sane, otherwise we don't
set the function offset.
A test case is included. It's basically a slightly modified version of
the existing `test/sanitizer_common/TestCases/Darwin/symbolizer-function-offset-dladdr.cpp`
test case that doesn't run on iOS devices right now.
More details:
In the concrete scenario on armv7s `addr` is `0x2195c870` and the returned
`info.dli_saddr` is `0x2195c871`.
This what LLDB says when disassembling the code.
```
(lldb) dis -a 0x2195c870
libdyld.dylib`<redacted>:
0x2195c870 <+0>: nop
0x2195c872 <+2>: blx 0x2195c91c ; symbol stub for: exit
0x2195c876 <+6>: trap
```
The value returned by `dladdr()` doesn't make sense because it points
into the middle of a instruction.
There might also be other bugs lurking here because I noticed that the PCs we
gather during stackunwinding (before changing them with
`StackTrace::GetPreviousInstructionPc()`) look a little suspicious (e.g. the
PC stored for the frame with fail to symbolicate is 0x2195c873) as they don't
look properly aligned. This probably warrants further investigation in the future.
rdar://problem/65621511
Reviewers: kubamracek, yln
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, llvm-commits, #sanitizers
Tags: #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84262
This CL allows asan allocator in fuchsia to decommit shadow memory
for memory allocated using mmap.
Big allocations in asan end up being allocated via `mmap` and freed with
`munmap`. However, when that memory is freed, asan returns the
corresponding shadow memory back to the OS via a call to
`ReleaseMemoryPagesToOs`.
In fuchsia, `ReleaseMemoryPagesToOs` is a no-op: to be able to free
memory back to the OS, you have to hold a handle to the vmo you want to
modify, which is tricky at the ReleaseMemoryPagesToOs level as that
function is not exclusively used for shadow memory.
The function `__sanitizer_fill_shadow` fills a given shadow memory range
with a specific value, and if that value is 0 (unpoison) and the memory
range is bigger than a threshold parameter, it will decommit that memory
if it is all zeroes.
This CL modifies the `FlushUnneededASanShadowMemory` function in
`asan_poisoning.cpp` to add a call to `__sanitizer_fill_shadow` with
value and threshold = 0. This way, all the unneeded shadow memory gets
returned back to the OS.
A test for this behavior can be found in fxrev.dev/391974
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80355
Change-Id: Id6dd85693e78a222f0329d5b2201e0da753e01c0
... on systems where wait() isn't one of the declarations transitively included
via unistd.h (i.e. Darwin).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84207
Note: Resubmission with frame pointers force-enabled to fix builds with
-DCOMPILER_RT_BUILD_BUILTINS=False
Summary:
Splits the unwinder into a non-segv (for allocation/deallocation traces) and a
segv unwinder. This ensures that implementations can select an accurate, slower
unwinder in the segv handler (if they choose to use the GWP-ASan provided one).
This is important as fast frame-pointer unwinders (like the sanitizer unwinder)
don't like unwinding through signal handlers.
Reviewers: morehouse, cryptoad
Reviewed By: morehouse, cryptoad
Subscribers: cryptoad, mgorny, eugenis, pcc, #sanitizers
Tags: #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83994
Most of the code in compiler_rt is C code. However, clang_rt.profile
contains the InstrProfilingRuntime.cpp file, which builds as C++. This
means that including e.g. <stdint.h> will actually include libc++'s
<stdint.h> and then #include_next the system's <stdint.h>. However, if
the target we're building compiler-rt for isn't supported by libc++,
this will lead to a failure since libc++'s <stdint.h> includes <__config>,
which performs various checks.
Since the goal seems to *not* be including any header from the C++ Standard
Library in clang_rt.profile, using -nostdinc++ to ensure that doesn't
happen unknowingly seems to make sense.
rdar://65852694
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84205
It was causing tests to fail in -DCOMPILER_RT_BUILD_BUILTINS=OFF builds:
GwpAsan-Unittest :: ./GwpAsan-x86_64-Test/BacktraceGuardedPoolAllocator.DoubleFree
GwpAsan-Unittest :: ./GwpAsan-x86_64-Test/BacktraceGuardedPoolAllocator.UseAfterFree
see comment on the code review.
> Summary:
> Splits the unwinder into a non-segv (for allocation/deallocation traces) and a
> segv unwinder. This ensures that implementations can select an accurate, slower
> unwinder in the segv handler (if they choose to use the GWP-ASan provided one).
> This is important as fast frame-pointer unwinders (like the sanitizer unwinder)
> don't like unwinding through signal handlers.
>
> Reviewers: morehouse, cryptoad
>
> Reviewed By: morehouse, cryptoad
>
> Subscribers: cryptoad, mgorny, eugenis, pcc, #sanitizers
>
> Tags: #sanitizers
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83994
This reverts commit 502f0cc0e3.
This uses a special set of flags given to unittests to work around warnings raised by googletest and googlemock. This should bring the sanitizer bots back to green.
GCC r187297 (2012-05) introduced `__gcov_dump` and `__gcov_reset`.
`__gcov_flush = __gcov_dump + __gcov_reset`
The resolution to https://gcc.gnu.org/PR93623 ("No need to dump gcdas when forking" target GCC 11.0) removed the unuseful and undocumented __gcov_flush.
Close PR38064.
Reviewed By: calixte, serge-sans-paille
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83149
The incorrect symbol will cause linking failures for 32-bit targets:
clang_rt.fuzzer-i386.lib(FuzzerDriver.obj) : error LNK2001: unresolved external symbol __libfuzzer_is_present
Verified no longer fails to link with this change for 32-bit and still succeeds for 64-bit MSVC.
Reviewed By: vitalybuka
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83594
This is needed because macOS on Apple Silicon has some reserved pages inside the "regular" shadow memory location, and mapping over that location fails.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82912
Fix build failure in Fuchsia build from refactoring in
5d2be1a188
Guard the moved versions of ReserveShadowMemoryRange and ProtectGap
the same way they were in the asan code originally (not for Fuchsia or
RTEMS). Otherwise we end up with unsats as they invoke functions not
defined there.
Summary:
Splits the unwinder into a non-segv (for allocation/deallocation traces) and a
segv unwinder. This ensures that implementations can select an accurate, slower
unwinder in the segv handler (if they choose to use the GWP-ASan provided one).
This is important as fast frame-pointer unwinders (like the sanitizer unwinder)
don't like unwinding through signal handlers.
Reviewers: morehouse, cryptoad
Reviewed By: morehouse, cryptoad
Subscribers: cryptoad, mgorny, eugenis, pcc, #sanitizers
Tags: #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83994
This causes binaries linked with this runtime to crash on startup if
dlsym uses any of the intercepted functions. (For example, that happens
when using tcmalloc as the allocator: dlsym attempts to allocate memory
with malloc, and tcmalloc uses strncmp within its implementation.)
Also revert dependent commit "[libFuzzer] Disable implicit builtin knowledge about memcmp-like functions when -fsanitize=fuzzer-no-link is given."
This reverts commit f78d9fceea and 12d1124c49.
Similar to the reason behind moving __llvm_profile_filename into a
separate file[1]. When users try to use Full LTO with BFD linker to
generate IR level PGO profile, the __llvm_profile_raw_version variable,
which is used for marking instrumentation level, generated by frontend
would somehow conflict with the weak symbol provided by profiling
runtime.
In most of the cases, BFD linkers will pick profiling runtime's weak symbol
as the real definition and thus generate the incorrect instrumentation
level metadata in the final executables.
Moving __llvm_profile_raw_version into a separate file would make
linkers not seeing the weak symbol in the archive unless the frontend
doesn't generate one.
[1] https://reviews.llvm.org/D34797
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83967
Summary: This patch disables implicit builtin knowledge about memcmp-like functions when compiling the program for fuzzing, i.e., when -fsanitize=fuzzer(-no-link) is given. This allows libFuzzer to always intercept memcmp-like functions as it effectively disables optimizing calls to such functions into different forms. This is done by adding a set of flags (-fno-builtin-memcmp and others) in the clang driver. Individual -fno-builtin-* flags previously used in several libFuzzer tests are now removed, as it is now done automatically in the clang driver.
Reviewers: morehouse, hctim
Subscribers: cfe-commits, #sanitizers
Tags: #clang, #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83987
long double is a 64-bit double-precision type on:
- MSVC (32- and 64-bit x86)
- Android (32-bit x86)
long double is a 128-bit quad-precision type on x86_64 Android.
The assembly variants of the 80-bit builtins are correct, but some of
the builtins are implemented in C and require that long double be the
80-bit type passed via an x87 register.
Reviewed By: compnerd
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82153
Fix failure in Android bots from refactoring in
5d2be1a188 (https://crbug.com/1106482).
We need to make the UnmapFromTo available outside sanitizer_common for
calls from hwasan and asan linux handling. While here, remove
declaration of GetHighMemEnd which is no longer in sanitizer_common.
Summary: libFuzzer intercepts certain library functions such as memcmp/strcmp by defining weak hooks. Weak hooks, however, are called only when other runtimes such as ASan is linked. This patch defines libFuzzer's own interceptors, which is linked into the libFuzzer executable when other runtimes are not linked, i.e., when -fsanitize=fuzzer is given, but not others.
Reviewers: kcc, morehouse, hctim
Reviewed By: morehouse, hctim
Subscribers: krytarowski, mgorny, cfe-commits, #sanitizers
Tags: #clang, #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83494
Summary:
This refactors some common support related to shadow memory setup from
asan and hwasan into sanitizer_common. This should not only reduce code
duplication but also make these facilities available for new compiler-rt
uses (e.g. heap profiling).
In most cases the separate copies of the code were either identical, or
at least functionally identical. A few notes:
In ProtectGap, the asan version checked the address against an upper
bound (kZeroBaseMaxShadowStart, which is (2^18). I have created a copy
of kZeroBaseMaxShadowStart in hwasan_mapping.h, with the same value, as
it isn't clear why that code should not do the same check. If it
shouldn't, I can remove this and guard this check so that it only
happens for asan.
In asan's InitializeShadowMemory, in the dynamic shadow case it was
setting __asan_shadow_memory_dynamic_address to 0 (which then sets both
macro SHADOW_OFFSET as well as macro kLowShadowBeg to 0) before calling
FindDynamicShadowStart(). AFAICT this is only needed because
FindDynamicShadowStart utilizes kHighShadowEnd to
get the shadow size, and kHighShadowEnd is a macro invoking
MEM_TO_SHADOW(kHighMemEnd) which in turn invokes:
(((kHighMemEnd) >> SHADOW_SCALE) + (SHADOW_OFFSET))
I.e. it computes the shadow space needed by kHighMemEnd (the shift), and
adds the offset. Since we only want the shadow space here, the earlier
setting of SHADOW_OFFSET to 0 via __asan_shadow_memory_dynamic_address
accomplishes this. In the hwasan version, it simply gets the shadow
space via "MemToShadowSize(kHighMemEnd)", where MemToShadowSize just
does the shift. I've simplified the asan handling to do the same
thing, and therefore was able to remove the setting of the SHADOW_OFFSET
via __asan_shadow_memory_dynamic_address to 0.
Reviewers: vitalybuka, kcc, eugenis
Subscribers: dberris, #sanitizers, llvm-commits, davidxl
Tags: #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83247
compiler-rt checks OS versions by querying the Darwin kernel version.
This is not necessarily correct inside the simulators if the simulator
runtime is not aligned with the host macOS. Let's instead check the
`SIMULATOR_RUNTIME_VERSION` env var.
Note that we still use the old code path as a fallback in case the
`SIMULATOR_RUNTIME_VERSION` environment variable isn't set.
rdar://63031937
Reviewers: delcypher
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79979
Summary:
Releasing smaller blocks is costly and only yields significant
results when there is a large percentage of free bytes for a given
size class (see numbers below).
This CL introduces a couple of additional checks for sizes lower
than 256. First we want to make sure that there is enough free bytes,
relatively to the amount of allocated bytes. We are looking at 8X% to
9X% (smaller blocks require higher percentage). We also want to make
sure there has been enough activity with the freelist to make it
worth the time, so we now check that the bytes pushed to the freelist
is at least 1/16th of the allocated bytes for those classes.
Additionally, we clear batches before destroying them now - this
could have prevented some releases to occur (class id 0 rarely
releases anyway).
Here are the numbers, for about 1M allocations in multiple threads:
Size: 16
85% freed -> 0% released
86% freed -> 0% released
87% freed -> 0% released
88% freed -> 0% released
89% freed -> 0% released
90% freed -> 0% released
91% freed -> 0% released
92% freed -> 0% released
93% freed -> 0% released
94% freed -> 0% released
95% freed -> 0% released
96% freed -> 0% released
97% freed -> 2% released
98% freed -> 7% released
99% freed -> 27% released
Size: 32
85% freed -> 0% released
86% freed -> 0% released
87% freed -> 0% released
88% freed -> 0% released
89% freed -> 0% released
90% freed -> 0% released
91% freed -> 0% released
92% freed -> 0% released
93% freed -> 0% released
94% freed -> 0% released
95% freed -> 1% released
96% freed -> 3% released
97% freed -> 7% released
98% freed -> 17% released
99% freed -> 41% released
Size: 48
85% freed -> 0% released
86% freed -> 0% released
87% freed -> 0% released
88% freed -> 0% released
89% freed -> 0% released
90% freed -> 0% released
91% freed -> 0% released
92% freed -> 0% released
93% freed -> 0% released
94% freed -> 1% released
95% freed -> 3% released
96% freed -> 7% released
97% freed -> 13% released
98% freed -> 27% released
99% freed -> 52% released
Size: 64
85% freed -> 0% released
86% freed -> 0% released
87% freed -> 0% released
88% freed -> 0% released
89% freed -> 0% released
90% freed -> 0% released
91% freed -> 0% released
92% freed -> 1% released
93% freed -> 2% released
94% freed -> 3% released
95% freed -> 6% released
96% freed -> 11% released
97% freed -> 20% released
98% freed -> 35% released
99% freed -> 59% released
Size: 80
85% freed -> 0% released
86% freed -> 0% released
87% freed -> 0% released
88% freed -> 0% released
89% freed -> 0% released
90% freed -> 1% released
91% freed -> 1% released
92% freed -> 2% released
93% freed -> 4% released
94% freed -> 6% released
95% freed -> 10% released
96% freed -> 17% released
97% freed -> 26% released
98% freed -> 41% released
99% freed -> 64% released
Size: 96
85% freed -> 0% released
86% freed -> 0% released
87% freed -> 0% released
88% freed -> 0% released
89% freed -> 1% released
90% freed -> 1% released
91% freed -> 3% released
92% freed -> 4% released
93% freed -> 6% released
94% freed -> 10% released
95% freed -> 14% released
96% freed -> 21% released
97% freed -> 31% released
98% freed -> 47% released
99% freed -> 68% released
Size: 112
85% freed -> 0% released
86% freed -> 1% released
87% freed -> 1% released
88% freed -> 2% released
89% freed -> 3% released
90% freed -> 4% released
91% freed -> 6% released
92% freed -> 8% released
93% freed -> 11% released
94% freed -> 16% released
95% freed -> 22% released
96% freed -> 30% released
97% freed -> 40% released
98% freed -> 55% released
99% freed -> 74% released
Size: 128
85% freed -> 0% released
86% freed -> 1% released
87% freed -> 1% released
88% freed -> 2% released
89% freed -> 3% released
90% freed -> 4% released
91% freed -> 6% released
92% freed -> 8% released
93% freed -> 11% released
94% freed -> 16% released
95% freed -> 22% released
96% freed -> 30% released
97% freed -> 40% released
98% freed -> 55% released
99% freed -> 74% released
Size: 144
85% freed -> 1% released
86% freed -> 2% released
87% freed -> 3% released
88% freed -> 4% released
89% freed -> 6% released
90% freed -> 7% released
91% freed -> 10% released
92% freed -> 13% released
93% freed -> 17% released
94% freed -> 22% released
95% freed -> 28% released
96% freed -> 37% released
97% freed -> 47% released
98% freed -> 61% released
99% freed -> 78% released
Size: 160
85% freed -> 1% released
86% freed -> 2% released
87% freed -> 3% released
88% freed -> 4% released
89% freed -> 5% released
90% freed -> 7% released
91% freed -> 10% released
92% freed -> 13% released
93% freed -> 17% released
94% freed -> 22% released
95% freed -> 28% released
96% freed -> 37% released
97% freed -> 47% released
98% freed -> 61% released
99% freed -> 78% released
Size: 176
85% freed -> 2% released
86% freed -> 3% released
87% freed -> 4% released
88% freed -> 6% released
89% freed -> 7% released
90% freed -> 9% released
91% freed -> 12% released
92% freed -> 15% released
93% freed -> 20% released
94% freed -> 25% released
95% freed -> 32% released
96% freed -> 40% released
97% freed -> 51% released
98% freed -> 64% released
99% freed -> 80% released
Size: 192
85% freed -> 4% released
86% freed -> 5% released
87% freed -> 6% released
88% freed -> 8% released
89% freed -> 10% released
90% freed -> 13% released
91% freed -> 16% released
92% freed -> 20% released
93% freed -> 24% released
94% freed -> 30% released
95% freed -> 37% released
96% freed -> 45% released
97% freed -> 55% released
98% freed -> 68% released
99% freed -> 82% released
Size: 224
85% freed -> 8% released
86% freed -> 10% released
87% freed -> 12% released
88% freed -> 14% released
89% freed -> 17% released
90% freed -> 20% released
91% freed -> 23% released
92% freed -> 28% released
93% freed -> 33% released
94% freed -> 39% released
95% freed -> 46% released
96% freed -> 53% released
97% freed -> 63% released
98% freed -> 73% released
99% freed -> 85% released
Size: 240
85% freed -> 8% released
86% freed -> 10% released
87% freed -> 12% released
88% freed -> 14% released
89% freed -> 17% released
90% freed -> 20% released
91% freed -> 23% released
92% freed -> 28% released
93% freed -> 33% released
94% freed -> 39% released
95% freed -> 46% released
96% freed -> 54% released
97% freed -> 63% released
98% freed -> 73% released
99% freed -> 85% released
Reviewers: cferris, pcc, hctim, eugenis
Subscribers: #sanitizers, llvm-commits
Tags: #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82031
This patch splits the handling of racy address and racy stack into separate
functions. If a race was already reported for the address, we can avoid the
cost for collecting the involved stacks.
This patch also removes the race condition in storing the racy address / racy
stack. This race condition allowed all threads to report the race.
This patch changes the transitive suppression of reports. Previously
suppression could transitively chain memory location and racy stacks.
Now racy memory and racy stack are separate suppressions.
Commit again, now with fixed tests.
Reviewed by: dvyukov
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83625
Extend the memop value profile buckets to be more flexible (could accommodate a
mix of individual values and ranges) and to cover more value ranges (from 11 to
22 buckets).
Disabled behind a flag (to be enabled separately) and the existing code to be
removed later.
This patch splits the handling of racy address and racy stack into separate
functions. If a race was already reported for the address, we can avoid the
cost for collecting the involved stacks.
This patch also removes the race condition in storing the racy address / racy
stack. This race condition allowed all threads to report the race.
This patch changes the transitive suppression of reports. Previously
suppression could transitively chain memory location and racy stacks.
Now racy memory and racy stack are separate suppressions.
Reviewed by: dvyukov
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83625
Rather than handling zlib handling manually, use find_package from CMake
to find zlib properly. Use this to normalize the LLVM_ENABLE_ZLIB,
HAVE_ZLIB, HAVE_ZLIB_H. Furthermore, require zlib if LLVM_ENABLE_ZLIB is
set to YES, which requires the distributor to explicitly select whether
zlib is enabled or not. This simplifies the CMake handling and usage in
the rest of the tooling.
This is a reland of abb0075 with all followup changes and fixes that
should address issues that were reported in PR44780.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79219
Summary: This patch separates platform related macros in lib/fuzzer/FuzzerDefs.h into lib/fuzzer/FuzzerPlatform.h, and use FuzzerPlatform.h where necessary. This separation helps when compiling libFuzzer's interceptor module (under review); an unnecessary include of standard headers (such as string.h) may produce conflicts/ambiguation with the interceptor's declarations/definitions of library functions, which complicates interceptor implementation.
Reviewers: morehouse, hctim
Reviewed By: morehouse
Subscribers: krytarowski, #sanitizers
Tags: #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83805
I mistyped the ubsan objc_cast handler names on the first try.
Testing:
./bin/llvm-lit projects/compiler-rt/test/asan/X86_64HDarwinConfig/TestCases/Darwin/interface_symbols_darwin.cpp
A dozen 32-bit `AddressSanitizer` testcases FAIL on the latest beta of Solaris 11.4/x86, e.g.
`AddressSanitizer-i386-sunos :: TestCases/null_deref.cpp` produces
AddressSanitizer:DEADLYSIGNAL
=================================================================
==29274==ERROR: AddressSanitizer: stack-overflow on address 0x00000028 (pc 0x08135efd bp 0xfeffdfd8 sp 0x00000000 T0)
#0 0x8135efd in NullDeref(int*) /vol/llvm/src/llvm-project/dist/compiler-rt/test/asan/TestCases/null_deref.cpp:15:10
#1 0x8135ea6 in main /vol/llvm/src/llvm-project/dist/compiler-rt/test/asan/TestCases/null_deref.cpp:21:3
#2 0x8084b85 in _start (null_deref.cpp.tmp+0x8084b85)
SUMMARY: AddressSanitizer: stack-overflow /vol/llvm/src/llvm-project/dist/compiler-rt/test/asan/TestCases/null_deref.cpp:15:10 in NullDeref(int*)
==29274==ABORTING
instead of the expected
AddressSanitizer:DEADLYSIGNAL
=================================================================
==29276==ERROR: AddressSanitizer: SEGV on unknown address 0x00000028 (pc 0x08135f1f bp 0xfeffdf48 sp 0xfeffdf40 T0)
==29276==The signal is caused by a WRITE memory access.
==29276==Hint: address points to the zero page.
#0 0x8135f1f in NullDeref(int*) /vol/llvm/src/llvm-project/local/compiler-rt/test/asan/TestCases/null_deref.cpp:15:10
#1 0x8135efa in main /vol/llvm/src/llvm-project/local/compiler-rt/test/asan/TestCases/null_deref.cpp:21:3
#2 0x8084be5 in _start (null_deref.cpp.tmp+0x8084be5)
AddressSanitizer can not provide additional info.
SUMMARY: AddressSanitizer: SEGV /vol/llvm/src/llvm-project/local/compiler-rt/test/asan/TestCases/null_deref.cpp:15:10 in NullDeref(int*)
==29276==ABORTING
I managed to trace this to a change in `<sys/regset.h>`: previously the header would
primarily define the short register indices (like `UESP`). While they are required by the
i386 psABI, they are only required in `<ucontext.h>` and could previously leak into
unsuspecting user code, polluting the namespace and requiring elaborate workarounds
like that in `llvm/include/llvm/Support/Solaris/sys/regset.h`. The change fixed that by restricting
the definition of the short forms appropriately, at the same time defining all `REG_` prefixed
forms for compatiblity with other systems. This exposed a bug in `compiler-rt/lib/sanitizer_common/sanitizer_linux.cpp`, however:
Previously, the index for the user stack pointer would be hardcoded if `REG_ESP`
wasn't defined. Now with that definition present, it turned out that `REG_ESP` was the wrong index to use: the previous value 17 (and `REG_SP`) corresponds to `REG_UESP`
instead.
With that change, the failures are all gone.
Tested on `amd-pc-solaris2.11`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83664
The %arm_call_apsr expansion doesn't work when config.clang is a clang
driver defaulting to a non-ARM arch. Rather than fix it, replace
call_apsr.S with inline asm in call_apsr.h, which also resolves the
FIXME added in D31259.
Maybe the `__attribute__((noinline,pcs("aapcs")))` attributes are
unnecessary on the static functions, but I was unsure what liberty the
compiler had to insert instructions that modified the condition codes,
so it seemed helpful.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82147
For Android only, compiler-rt used detect_target_arch to select the
architecture to target. detect_target_arch was added in Sept 2014
(SVN r218605). At that time, compiler-rt selected the default arch
using ${LLVM_NATIVE_ARCH}, which seems to have been the host
architecture and therefore not suitable for cross-compilation.
The compiler-rt build system was refactored in Sept 2015 (SVN r247094
and SVN r247099) to use COMPILER_RT_DEFAULT_TARGET_TRIPLE to control
the target arch rather than LLVM_NATIVE_ARCH. This approach is simpler
and also works for Android cross-compilation, so remove the
detect_target_arch function.
Android targets i686, but compiler-rt seems to identify 32-bit x86 as
"i386". For Android, we were previously calling add_default_target_arch
with i386, and calling add_default_target_arch with i686 does not build
anything. i686 is not listed in builtin-config-ix.cmake,
ALL_BUILTIN_SUPPORTED_ARCH.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82148
Split filter_builtin_sources into two functions:
- filter_builtin_sources that removes generic files when an
arch-specific file is selected.
- darwin_filter_builtin_sources that implements the EXCLUDE/INCLUDE
lists (using the files in lib/builtins/Darwin-excludes).
darwin_filter_builtin_sources delegates to filter_builtin_sources.
Previously, lib/builtins/CMakeLists.txt had a number of calls to
filter_builtin_sources (with a confusing/broken use of the
`excluded_list` parameter), as well as a redundant arch-vs-generic
filtering for the non-Apple code path at the end of the file. Replace
all of this with a single call to filter_builtin_sources.
Remove i686_SOURCES. Previously, this list contained only the
arch-specific files common to 32-bit and 64-bit x86, which is a strange
set. Normally the ${ARCH}_SOURCES list contains everything needed for
the arch. "i686" isn't in ALL_BUILTIN_SUPPORTED_ARCH.
NFCI, but i686_SOURCES won't be defined, and the order of files in
${arch}_SOURCES lists will change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82151
Android 32-bit x86 uses a 64-bit long double.
Android 64-bit x86 uses a 128-bit quad-precision long double.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82152
Summary: Fixed an implicit definition warning by including <string.h>. Also fixed run-time assertions that the return value of strxfrm_l calls is less than the buffer size by increasing the size of the referenced buffer.
Reviewers: morehouse
Reviewed By: morehouse
Subscribers: dberris, #sanitizers
Tags: #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83593
This is exposed by https://reviews.llvm.org/D83486.
When the host is UTF8, we may get n >10, causing assert failure.
Increase the buffersize to support UTF-8 to C conversion.
Reviewed By: vitalybuka
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83719
Check that the implicit cast from `id` used to construct the element
variable in an ObjC for-in statement is valid.
This check is included as part of a new `objc-cast` sanitizer, outside
of the main 'undefined' group, as (IIUC) the behavior it's checking for
is not technically UB.
The check can be extended to cover other kinds of invalid casts in ObjC.
Partially addresses: rdar://12903059, rdar://9542496
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71491
These aren't used in compiler-rt, but I plan to make a similar
change to the equivalent code in Host.cpp where the mapping from
type/subtype is an unnecessary complication. Having the CPU strings
here will help keep the code somewhat synchronized.
Support macOS 11 in our runtime version checking code and update
`GetMacosAlignedVersionInternal()` accordingly. This follows the
implementation of `Triple::getMacOSXVersion()` in the Clang driver.
Reviewed By: delcypher
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82918
Summary:
This allows using lit substitutions in the `COMPILER_RT_EMULATOR` variable.
(For reference, the ability to expand substitutions recursively has been introduced in https://reviews.llvm.org/D76178.)
Reviewers: phosek, compnerd
Reviewed By: compnerd
Subscribers: dberris, #sanitizers
Tags: #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83489
Summary:
Right now the lit config builds up an environment that the tests will be run in. However, it does it from scratch instead of adding new variables to the parent process environment. This may (and does) result in strange behavior when running tests with an executor (i. e. with the `COMPILER_RT_EMULATOR` CMake variable set to something), since the executor may need some of the parent process's environment variables.
Here this is fixed.
Reviewers: compnerd, phosek
Reviewed By: compnerd
Subscribers: dberris, #sanitizers
Tags: #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83486
Summary:
These changes are necessary to support remote running compiler-rt tests
that were compiled on Windows.
Most of the code here has been copy-pasted from other lit configs.
Why do we remove the conversions to ASCII in the crt config?
We set the `universal_newlines` argument to `True` in `Popen` instead.
This is supported in both Python 2.7 and 3, is easier
(no need to do the `str(dir.decode('ascii'))` dance) and less
error prone.
Also, this is necessary because if the config is executed on Windows,
and `execute_external` is `True`, we take the branch
`if sys.platform in ['win32'] and execute_external`,
and if we use Python 3, then the `dir` variable is a byte-like object,
not str, but the ``replace method on byte-like objects requires its
arguments to also be byte-like objects, which is incompatible with
Python 2 etc etc.
It is a lot simpler to just work with strings in the first place, which
is achieved by setting `universal_newlines` to `True`. As far as
I understand, this way wasn't taken because of the need to support
Python <2.7, but this is not the case now.
Reviewers: compnerd, phosek, weimingz
Reviewed By: compnerd
Subscribers: dberris, #sanitizers
Tags: #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83485
This also allows intercepting these getprotoent functions on Linux as
well, since Linux exposes them.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82424
Summary:
28c91219c7 introduced an interceptor for `sigaltstack`. It turns out this
broke `setjmp` on i386 macOS. This is because the implementation of `setjmp` on
i386 macOS is written in assembly and makes the assumption that the call to
`sigaltstack` does not clobber any registers. Presumably that assumption was
made because it's a system call. In particular `setjmp` assumes that before
and after the call that `%ecx` will contain a pointer the `jmp_buf`. The
current interceptor breaks this assumption because it's written in C++ and
`%ecx` is not a callee-saved register. This could be fixed by writing a
trampoline interceptor to the existing interceptor in assembly that
ensures all the registers are preserved. However, this is a lot of work
for very little gain. Instead this patch just disables the interceptor
on i386 macOS.
For other Darwin architectures it currently appears to be safe to intercept
`sigaltstack` using the current implementation because:
* `setjmp` for x86_64 saves the pointer `jmp_buf` to the stack before calling `sigaltstack`.
* `setjmp` for armv7/arm64/arm64_32/arm64e appears to not call `sigaltstack` at all.
This patch should unbreak (once they are re-enabled) the following
tests:
```
AddressSanitizer-Unit :: ./Asan-i386-calls-Test/AddressSanitizer.LongJmpTest
AddressSanitizer-Unit :: ./Asan-i386-calls-Test/AddressSanitizer.SigLongJmpTest
AddressSanitizer-Unit :: ./Asan-i386-inline-Test/AddressSanitizer.LongJmpTest
AddressSanitizer-Unit :: ./Asan-i386-inline-Test/AddressSanitizer.SigLongJmpTest
AddressSanitizer-i386-darwin :: TestCases/longjmp.cpp
```
This patch introduces a `SANITIZER_I386` macro for convenience.
rdar://problem/62141412
Reviewers: kubamracek, yln, eugenis
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, #sanitizers, llvm-commits
Tags: #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82691
The Swift symbol name prefix has changed from `_T0` to `_$s` as
documented here [1]. This prevents Swift names from properly being
symbolicated when using the in-process LLVM symbolizer. The best way to
fix this seems to be to avoid the duplication of "Is this a Swift symbol
name?" here. We can simply remove this check as `swift_demangle`
already returns null for non-Swift names [2,3].
The check was included in the initial support for Swift name demangling
to avoid superfluous calls to `dlsym()` [4]. A subsequent commit
changed this logic to retrieve the `swift_demangle` function pointer
eagerly during sanitizer initialization, but did not remove the check
[5].
[1] https://github.com/apple/swift/blob/master/docs/ABI/Mangling.rst
[2] b5a8b518ea/include/swift/Demangling/Demangle.h (L643)
[3] b5a8b518ea/stdlib/public/runtime/Demangle.cpp (L656)
[4] https://reviews.llvm.org/D19135
[5] https://reviews.llvm.org/D20015
rdar://62753845
Reviewers: kubamracek, delcypher, dcoughlin, samsonov, thakis
Reviewed By: kubamracek
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81705
This test spawns 32 child processes which race to update counters on
shared memory pages. On some Apple-internal machines, two processes race
to perform an update in approximately 0.5% of the test runs, leading to
dropped counter updates. Deflake the test by using atomic increments.
Tested with:
```
$ for I in $(seq 1 1000); do echo ":: Test run $I..."; ./bin/llvm-lit projects/compiler-rt/test/profile/Profile-x86_64h/ContinuousSyncMode/online-merging.c -av || break; done
```
rdar://64956774
atexit registered functions run earlier so `__attribute__((destructor))`
annotated functions cannot be tracked.
Set a priority of 100 (compatible with GCC 7 onwards) to track
destructors and destructors whose priorities are greater than 100.
https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=7970
Reviewed By: calixte, marco-c
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82253
The builtins library name is special on Android:
* There is an "-android" suffix.
* For the compiler-rt i386 architecture, Android targets i686 (in the
triple and in the builtins library filename)
With this change, check-builtins works with Android.
Reviewed By: compnerd
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82149
This patch changes types of some integer function arguments or return values from `si_int` to the default `int` type to make it more compatible with `libgcc`.
The compiler-rt/lib/builtins/README.txt has a link to the [libgcc specification](http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gccint/Libgcc.html#Libgcc). This specification has an explicit note on `int`, `float` and other such types being just illustrations in some cases while the actual types are expressed with machine modes.
Such usage of always-32-bit-wide integer type may lead to issues on 16-bit platforms such as MSP430. Provided [libgcc2.h](https://gcc.gnu.org/git/?p=gcc.git;a=blob_plain;f=libgcc/libgcc2.h;hb=HEAD) can be used as a reference for all targets supported by the libgcc, this patch fixes some existing differences in helper declarations.
This patch is expected to not change behavior at all for targets with 32-bit `int` type.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81285
The `-fuse-ld=lld` check might succeed because there's a system lld,
but that lld may be out-of-date which would cause any tests that
attempt to use for LTO fail. This was observed on some of the bots.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81629
Some parts of existing codebase assume the default `int` type to be (at least) 32 bit wide. On 16 bit targets such as MSP430 this may cause Undefined Behavior or results being defined but incorrect.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81408
There are two different _generic_ lists of source files in the compiler-rt/lib/builtins/CMakeLists.txt. Now there is no simple way to not use the tf-variants of helpers at all.
Since there exists a separate `GENERIC_TF_SOURCES` list, it seems quite natural to move all float128-related helpers there. If it is not possible for some reason, it would be useful to have an explanation of that reason somewhere near the `GENERIC_TF_SOURCES` definition.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81282
Extend the memop value profile buckets to be more flexible (could accommodate a
mix of individual values and ranges) and to cover more value ranges (from 11 to
22 buckets).
Disabled behind a flag (to be enabled separately) and the existing code to be
removed later.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81682
Summary:
Currently, there is no way to let the `InternalSymbolizer` implemented
functions know if inline frames should be symbolized. This patch updates
the function `__sanitizer_symbolize_code` to include a parameter for
this ASAN option and toggle between LLVM symbolization functions when
appropriate.
Fixes the following two failing tests when internal symbolization is
enabled:
```
SanitizerCommon-*-x86_64-Linux :: print-stack-trace.cpp
SanitizerCommon-*-x86_64-Linux :: symbolize_pc_inline.cpp
```
Reviewers: vitalybuka, kcc, filcab
Reviewed By: vitalybuka
Subscribers: #sanitizers
Tags: #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79280
Summary: As the parent process would return 0 independent of whether the child succeeded, assertions in the child would be ignored.
Reviewers: eugenis
Reviewed By: eugenis
Subscribers: #sanitizers
Tags: #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82400
We need to set the cpu_vendor to a non-zero value to indicate
that we already called __cpu_indicator_init once.
This should only happen on a 386 or 486 CPU.
Keep deprecated -fsanitize-coverage-{white,black}list as aliases for compatibility for now.
Reviewed By: echristo
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82244
At this point in this code:
- COMPILER_RT_DEFAULT_TARGET_TRIPLE is "i686-linux-android"
- arch is "i386"
The get_compiler_rt_target function currently turns that into:
i686-android-linux-android
The ${COMPILER_RT_OS_SUFFIX} is "-android" and redundant, so stop
adding it.
The get_compiler_rt_target() function is used for the
LLVM_ENABLE_PER_TARGET_RUNTIME_DIR mode that isn't normally used with
Android.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82150
Summary:
When enabling some malloc debug features on Android, multiple 32 bit
regions become exhausted, and the allocations fail. Allow allocations
to keep trying each bigger class in the Primary until it finds a fit.
In addition, some Android tests running on 32 bit fail sometimes due
to a running out of space in two regions, and then fail the allocation.
Reviewers: cryptoad
Reviewed By: cryptoad
Subscribers: #sanitizers, llvm-commits
Tags: #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82070
Summary:
Add a flag to omit the xray_fn_idx to cut size overhead and relocations
roughly in half at the cost of reduced performance for single function
patching. Minor additions to compiler-rt support per-function patching
without the index.
Reviewers: dberris, MaskRay, johnislarry
Subscribers: hiraditya, arphaman, cfe-commits, #sanitizers, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang, #sanitizers, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81995
Summary: we use the alias attribute, similar to what is done for ELF.
Reviewers: ZarkoCA, jasonliu, hubert.reinterpretcast, sfertile
Reviewed By: jasonliu
Subscribers: dberris, aheejin, mstorsjo, #sanitizers
Tags: #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81120
Summary:
Before unwinding the stack, `__asan_handle_no_return` is supposed to
unpoison the entire stack - that is, remove the entries in the shadow
memory corresponding to stack (e.g. redzone markers around variables).
This does not work correctly if `__asan_handle_no_return` is called from
the alternate stack used in signal handlers, because the stack top is
read from a cache, which yields the default stack top instead of the
signal alternate stack top.
It is also possible to jump between the default stack and the signal
alternate stack. Therefore, __asan_handle_no_return needs to unpoison
both.
Reviewers: vitalybuka, kubamracek, kcc, eugenis
Reviewed By: vitalybuka
Subscribers: phosek, #sanitizers
Tags: #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76986
Summary: This adds a customization point to support unpoisoning of signal alternate stacks on POSIX.
Reviewers: vitalybuka
Reviewed By: vitalybuka
Subscribers: #sanitizers
Tags: #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81577
Summary:
Normally, the Origin is passed over TLS, which seems like it introduces unnecessary overhead. It's in the (extremely) cold path though, so the only overhead is in code size.
But with eager-checks, calls to __msan_warning functions are extremely common, so this becomes a useful optimization.
This can save ~5% code size.
Reviewers: eugenis, vitalybuka
Reviewed By: eugenis, vitalybuka
Subscribers: hiraditya, #sanitizers, llvm-commits
Tags: #sanitizers, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81700
Brand index was a feature some Pentium III and Pentium 4 CPUs.
It provided an index into a software lookup table to provide a
brand name for the CPU. This is separate from the family/model.
It's unclear to me why this index being non-zero was used to
block checking family/model. None of the CPUs that had a non-zero
brand index are supported by __builtin_cpu_is or target
multi-versioning so this should have no real effect.
Summary:
The `execute_external` global variable is defined in [`lit.common.cfg.py`](fcfb3170a7/compiler-rt/test/lit.common.cfg.py (L18-L27)) and used here (on lines 23 and 39). However, this variable is not visible in configs that are loaded independently.
Explicitly assign it to the correct value to avoid `NameError`.
Reviewers: compnerd, phosek
Reviewed By: compnerd, phosek
Subscribers: dberris, #sanitizers
Tags: #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79892
Summary: Refactor the current global header iteration to be callback-based, and add a feature that reports the size of the global variable during reporting. This allows binaries without symbols to still report the size of the global variable, which is always available in the HWASan globals PT_NOTE metadata.
Reviewers: eugenis, pcc
Reviewed By: pcc
Subscribers: mgorny, llvm-commits, #sanitizers
Tags: #sanitizers, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80599
Having the input dumped on failure seems like a better
default: I debugged FileCheck tests for a while without knowing
about this option, which really helps to understand failures.
Remove `-dump-input-on-failure` and the environment variable
FILECHECK_DUMP_INPUT_ON_FAILURE which are now obsolete.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81422
The !associated metadata may be attached to a global object declaration
with a single argument that references another global object. This
metadata prevents discarding of the global object in linker GC unless
the referenced object is also discarded.
Furthermore, when a function symbol is discarded by the linker, setting
up !associated metadata allows linker to discard counters, data and
values associated with that function symbol. This is not possible today
because there's metadata to guide the linker. This approach is also used
by other instrumentations like sanitizers.
Note that !associated metadata is only supported by ELF, it does not have
any effect on non-ELF targets.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76802
The !associated metadata may be attached to a global object declaration
with a single argument that references another global object. This
metadata prevents discarding of the global object in linker GC unless
the referenced object is also discarded.
Furthermore, when a function symbol is discarded by the linker, setting
up !associated metadata allows linker to discard counters, data and
values associated with that function symbol. This is not possible today
because there's metadata to guide the linker. This approach is also used
by other instrumentations like sanitizers.
Note that !associated metadata is only supported by ELF, it does not have
any effect on non-ELF targets.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76802
This flag suppresses TSan FPs on Darwin. I removed this flag
prematurely and have been dealing with the fallout ever since.
This commit puts back the flag, reverting 7d1085cb [1].
[1] https://reviews.llvm.org/D55075
It seems that after dc52ce424b, all big-endian problems have been fixed.
01899bb4e4 seems to have fixed XFAIL: * of
profile/instrprof-gcov-__gcov_flush-terminate.test
This essentially reverts commit 5a9b792d72 and
93d5ae3af1.
global-ctor.ll no longer checks what it intended to check
(@_GLOBAL__sub_I_global-ctor.ll needs a !dbg to work).
Rewrite it.
gcov 3.4 and gcov 4.2 use the same format, thus we can lower the version
requirement to 3.4
Summary: Non-zero malloc fill is causing way too many hard to debug issues.
Reviewers: kcc, pcc, hctim
Subscribers: #sanitizers, llvm-commits
Tags: #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81284
Summary:
As explained in https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=46208,
symbolization on Windows after inlining and around
lambdas/std::functions doesn't work very well. Under the new pass
manager, there is inlining at -O1.
use-after-scope-capture.cpp checks that the symbolization points to the
line containing "return x;", but the combination of
Windows/inlining/lambdas makes the symbolization point to the line
"f = [&x]() {".
Mark the lambda as noinline since this test is not a test for
symbolization.
Reviewers: hans, dblaikie, vitalybuka
Subscribers: #sanitizers
Tags: #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81193
Use a struct to represent numerical versions instead of encoding release
names in an enumeration. This avoids the need to extend the enumeration
every time there is a new release.
Rename `GetMacosVersion() -> GetMacosAlignedVersion()` to better reflect
how this is used on non-MacOS platforms.
Reviewed By: delcypher
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79970
Provides an assembly implementation of muldi3 for RISC-V, to solve bug 43388.
Since the implementation is the same as for mulsi3, that code was moved to
`riscv/int_mul_impl.inc` and is now reused by both `mulsi3.S` and `muldi3.S`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80465
Remove it from target-specific scope which corresponds
to sanitizer_linux.cpp where it lives in the same macro
scope.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80864