Commit Graph

596 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Sam McCall cd209f1a37 [Support] Add path::user_config_directory for $XDG_CONFIG_HOME etc
Reviewers: hokein

Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83128
2020-07-06 12:20:55 +02:00
Ben Dunbobbin a27478e54f [Support][Windows] Prevent 2s delay when renaming a file that does not exist
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82542
2020-07-02 10:41:17 +01:00
Martin Storsjö cdbd299800 [Support] Fix building for mingw on a case sensitive file system
This fixes cross building on a case sensitive file system after
2e613d2ded. (The official Windows
SDKs don't have self-consistent casing and can't be used as such on
case sentisive file systems without case fixups, while mingw headers
consistently use lower case.)
2020-06-20 00:39:22 +03:00
Serge Pavlov 2e613d2ded [Support] Get process statistics in ExecuteAndWait and Wait
The functions sys::ExcecuteAndWait and sys::Wait now have additional
argument of type pointer to structure, which is filled with process
execution statistics upon process termination. These are total and user
execution times and peak memory consumption. By default this argument is
nullptr so existing users of these function must not change behavior.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78901
2020-06-17 13:39:59 +07:00
Serge Pavlov 8577595e03 Revert "[Support] Add file lock/unlock functions"
This reverts commit f51bc4fb60.
It broke the Solaris buildbots (Builder clang-solaris11-sparcv9 Build #5494
<http://lab.llvm.org:8014/builders/clang-solaris11-sparcv9/builds/54).
2020-06-03 15:40:12 +07:00
Serge Pavlov f51bc4fb60 [Support] Add file lock/unlock functions
New functions `lockFile`, `tryLockFile` and `unlockFile` implement
simple file locking. They lock or unlock entire file. This must be
enough to support simulataneous writes to log files in parallel builds.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78896
2020-06-03 12:22:45 +07:00
James Henderson 79e5ecfa7a On Windows, handle interrupt signals without crash message
For LLVM on *nix systems, the signal handlers are not run on signals
such as SIGINT due to CTRL-C. See sys::CleanupOnSignal. This makes
sense, as such signals are not really crashes. Prior to this change,
this wasn't the case on Windows, however. This patch changes the Windows
behaviour to be consistent with Linux, and adds testing that verifies
this.

The test uses llvm-symbolizer, but any tool with an interactive mode
would do the job.

Fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=45754.

Reviewed by: MaskRay, rnk, aganea

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79847
2020-05-21 13:27:10 +01:00
Reid Kleckner 75cbf6dc5c Re-land "Optimize path::remove_dots"
This reverts commit fb5fd74685.
Re-instates commit 53913a65b4

The fix is to trim off trailing separators, as in `/foo/bar/` and
produce `/foo/bar`. VFS tests rely on this. I added unit tests for
remove_dots.
2020-05-04 16:40:39 -07:00
Nico Weber fb5fd74685 Revert "Optimize path::remove_dots"
This reverts commit 53913a65b4.
Breaks VFSFromYAMLTest.DirectoryIterationSameDirMultipleEntries
in SupportTests on non-Windows.
2020-05-03 12:46:46 -04:00
Reid Kleckner 53913a65b4 Optimize path::remove_dots
LLD calls this on every source file string in every object file when
writing PDBs, so it is somewhat hot.

Avoid rewriting paths that do not contain path traversal components
(./..). Use find_first_not_of(separators) directly instead of using the
path iterators. The path component iterators appear to be slow, and
directly searching for slashes makes it easier to find double separators
that need to be canonicalized.

I discovered that the VFS relies on remote_dots to not canonicalize
early slashes (/foo or C:/foo) on Windows, so I had to leave that
behavior behind with unit tests for it. This is undesirable, but I claim
that my change is NFC.
2020-05-03 07:58:05 -07:00
Sam McCall 4e769e93b9 Reland "Add a facility to get system cache directory and use it in clangd"
This reverts commit faf2dce1dd.
2020-04-29 00:56:36 +02:00
Eric Christopher faf2dce1dd Temporarily revert "Add a facility to get system cache directory and use it in clangd"
This reverts commit ad38f4b371.

As it broke building the unittests:

.../sources/llvm-project/llvm/unittests/Support/Path.cpp:334:5: error: use of undeclared identifier 'set'
    set(Value);
    ^
1 error generated.
2020-04-28 15:49:46 -07:00
Vojtěch Štěpančík ad38f4b371 Add a facility to get system cache directory and use it in clangd
Summary:
This patch adds a function that is similar to `llvm::sys::path::home_directory`, but provides access to the system cache directory.

For Windows, that is %LOCALAPPDATA%, and applications should put their files under %LOCALAPPDATA%\Organization\Product\.

For *nixes, it adheres to the XDG Base Directory Specification, so it first looks at the XDG_CACHE_HOME environment variable and falls back to ~/.cache/.

Subsequently, the Clangd Index storage leverages this new API to put index files somewhere else than the users home directory.

Fixes https://github.com/clangd/clangd/issues/341

Reviewers: sammccall, chandlerc, Bigcheese

Reviewed By: sammccall

Subscribers: hiraditya, ilya-biryukov, MaskRay, jkorous, dexonsmith, arphaman, kadircet, ormris, usaxena95, cfe-commits, llvm-commits

Tags: #clang-tools-extra, #clang, #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78501
2020-04-28 23:18:31 +02:00
Sergej Jaskiewicz 5cef31074f Introduce llvm::sys::Process::getProcessId() and adopt it
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78022
2020-04-16 15:05:37 +03:00
Simon Tatham aab9e9de4d [Support,Windows] Tolerate failure of CryptGenRandom
Summary:
In `Unix/Process.inc`, we seed a random number generator from
`/dev/urandom` if possible, but if not, we're happy to fall back to
ordinary pseudorandom strategies, like the current time and PID.

The corresponding function on Windows calls `CryptGenRandom`, but it
//doesn't// have a fallback if that strategy fails. But `CryptGenRandom`
//can// fail, if a cryptography provider isn't properly initialized, or
occasionally (by our observation) simply intermittently.

If it's reasonable on Unix to implement traditional pseudorandom-number
seeding as a fallback, then it's surely reasonable to do the same on
Windows. So this patch adds a last-ditch use of ordinary rand(), using
much the same strategy as the Unix fallback code.

Reviewers: hans, sammccall

Reviewed By: hans

Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77553
2020-04-07 09:18:12 +01:00
Alexandre Ganea 09158252f7 [ThinLTO] Allow usage of all hardware threads in the system
Before this patch, it wasn't possible to extend the ThinLTO threads to all SMT/CMT threads in the system. Only one thread per core was allowed, instructed by usage of llvm::heavyweight_hardware_concurrency() in the ThinLTO code. Any number passed to the LLD flag /opt:lldltojobs=..., or any other ThinLTO-specific flag, was previously interpreted in the context of llvm::heavyweight_hardware_concurrency(), which means SMT disabled.

One can now say in LLD:
/opt:lldltojobs=0 -- Use one std::thread / hardware core in the system (no SMT). Default value if flag not specified.
/opt:lldltojobs=N -- Limit usage to N threads, regardless of usage of heavyweight_hardware_concurrency().
/opt:lldltojobs=all -- Use all hardware threads in the system. Equivalent to /opt:lldltojobs=$(nproc) on Linux and /opt:lldltojobs=%NUMBER_OF_PROCESSORS% on Windows. When an affinity mask is set for the process, threads will be created only for the cores selected by the mask.

When N > number-of-hardware-threads-in-the-system, the threads in the thread pool will be dispatched equally on all CPU sockets (tested only on Windows).
When N <= number-of-hardware-threads-on-a-CPU-socket, the threads will remain on the CPU socket where the process started (only on Windows).

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75153
2020-03-27 10:20:58 -04:00
Andrew Ng 328b72dd82 [Support] Fix clang warning in widenPath NFC
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76544
2020-03-23 18:59:55 +00:00
Andrew Ng e6f6c55121 [Support] Improve Windows widenPath and add support for long UNC paths
Check the path length limit against the length of the UTF-16 version of
the input rather than the UTF-8 equivalent, as the UTF-16 length may be
shorter. Move widenPath from the llvm::sys::path namespace in Path.h to
the llvm::sys::windows namespace in WindowsSupport.h. Only use the
reduced path length limit for create directory. Canonicalize using
sys::path::remove_dots().

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75372
2020-03-19 13:00:21 +00:00
Hans Wennborg 01f9abbb50 llvm-ar: Fix MinGW compilation
llvm-ar is using CompareStringOrdinal which is available
only starting with Windows Vista (WINVER 0x600).

Fix this by hoising WindowsSupport.h, which sets _WIN32_WINNT
to 0x0601, up to llvm/include/llvm/Support and use it in llvm-ar.

Patch by Cristian Adam!

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74599
2020-02-28 09:59:24 +01:00
Alexandre Ganea 8404aeb56a [Support] On Windows, ensure hardware_concurrency() extends to all CPU sockets and all NUMA groups
The goal of this patch is to maximize CPU utilization on multi-socket or high core count systems, so that parallel computations such as LLD/ThinLTO can use all hardware threads in the system. Before this patch, on Windows, a maximum of 64 hardware threads could be used at most, in some cases dispatched only on one CPU socket.

== Background ==
Windows doesn't have a flat cpu_set_t like Linux. Instead, it projects hardware CPUs (or NUMA nodes) to applications through a concept of "processor groups". A "processor" is the smallest unit of execution on a CPU, that is, an hyper-thread if SMT is active; a core otherwise. There's a limit of 32-bit processors on older 32-bit versions of Windows, which later was raised to 64-processors with 64-bit versions of Windows. This limit comes from the affinity mask, which historically is represented by the sizeof(void*). Consequently, the concept of "processor groups" was introduced for dealing with systems with more than 64 hyper-threads.

By default, the Windows OS assigns only one "processor group" to each starting application, in a round-robin manner. If the application wants to use more processors, it needs to programmatically enable it, by assigning threads to other "processor groups". This also means that affinity cannot cross "processor group" boundaries; one can only specify a "preferred" group on start-up, but the application is free to allocate more groups if it wants to.

This creates a peculiar situation, where newer CPUs like the AMD EPYC 7702P (64-cores, 128-hyperthreads) are projected by the OS as two (2) "processor groups". This means that by default, an application can only use half of the cores. This situation could only get worse in the years to come, as dies with more cores will appear on the market.

== The problem ==
The heavyweight_hardware_concurrency() API was introduced so that only *one hardware thread per core* was used. Once that API returns, that original intention is lost, only the number of threads is retained. Consider a situation, on Windows, where the system has 2 CPU sockets, 18 cores each, each core having 2 hyper-threads, for a total of 72 hyper-threads. Both heavyweight_hardware_concurrency() and hardware_concurrency() currently return 36, because on Windows they are simply wrappers over std:🧵:hardware_concurrency() -- which can only return processors from the current "processor group".

== The changes in this patch ==
To solve this situation, we capture (and retain) the initial intention until the point of usage, through a new ThreadPoolStrategy class. The number of threads to use is deferred as late as possible, until the moment where the std::threads are created (ThreadPool in the case of ThinLTO).

When using hardware_concurrency(), setting ThreadCount to 0 now means to use all the possible hardware CPU (SMT) threads. Providing a ThreadCount above to the maximum number of threads will have no effect, the maximum will be used instead.
The heavyweight_hardware_concurrency() is similar to hardware_concurrency(), except that only one thread per hardware *core* will be used.

When LLVM_ENABLE_THREADS is OFF, the threading APIs will always return 1, to ensure any caller loops will be exercised at least once.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71775
2020-02-14 10:24:22 -05:00
Reid Kleckner b074acb82f [Support] Don't modify the current EH context during stack unwinding
Copy it instead. Otherwise, key registers (such as RBP) may get zeroed
out by the stack unwinder.

Fixes CrashRecoveryTest.DumpStackCleanup with MSVC in release builds.

Reviewed By: stella.stamenova

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73809
2020-01-31 17:04:01 -08:00
Benjamin Kramer 159709f04f [Support] Fix implicit std::string conversions on Win32. 2020-01-29 00:02:26 +01:00
Alexandre Ganea a1f16998f3 [Support] Optionally call signal handlers when a function wrapped by the the CrashRecoveryContext fails
This patch allows for handling a failure inside a CrashRecoveryContext in the same way as the global exception/signal handler. A failure will have the same side-effect, such as cleanup of temporarty file, printing callstack, calling relevant signal handlers, and finally returning an exception code. This is an optional feature, disabled by default.
This is a support patch for D69825.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70568
2020-01-11 15:27:07 -05:00
Bruno Ricci 2fe45e029d
[Support][NFC] Make some helper functions "static" in Memory.inc 2020-01-09 17:46:21 +00:00
Alexandre Ganea 75eacbf1a9 Fix issues reported by -Wrange-loop-analysis when building with latest Clang (trunk). NFC.
Fixes warning: loop variable 'E' of type 'const llvm::StringRef' creates a copy from type 'const llvm::StringRef' [-Wrange-loop-analysis]
2020-01-07 13:58:26 -05:00
Vedant Kumar 4624e83ce7 [Signal] Allow llvm clients to opt into one-shot SIGPIPE handling
Allow clients of the llvm library to opt-in to one-shot SIGPIPE
handling, instead of forcing them to undo llvm's SIGPIPE handler
registration (which is brittle).

The current behavior is preserved for all llvm-derived tools (except
lldb) by means of a default-`true` flag in the InitLLVM constructor.

This prevents "IO error" crashes in long-lived processes (lldb is the
motivating example) which both a) load llvm as a dynamic library and b)
*really* need to ignore SIGPIPE.

As llvm signal handlers can be installed when calling into libclang
(say, via RemoveFileOnSignal), thereby overriding a previous SIG_IGN for
SIGPIPE, there is no clean way to opt-out of "exit-on-SIGPIPE" in the
current model.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70277
2019-11-18 10:27:27 -08:00
Ilya Biryukov 3e54404c71 [Support] fix mingw-w64 build
Older versions of Mingw-w64 do not define _beginthreadex_proc_type,
so we replace it with `unsigned (__stdcall *ThreadFunc)(void *)`.

Fixes https://github.com/clangd/clangd/issues/188

Patch by lh123!

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69879
2019-11-06 15:18:58 +01:00
Vedant Kumar d0bd3fc88b Revert "Disable exit-on-SIGPIPE in lldb"
This reverts commit 32ce14e55e.

In post-commit review, Pavel pointed out that there's a simpler way to
ignore SIGPIPE in lldb that doesn't rely on llvm's handlers.
2019-10-24 13:19:49 -07:00
Sam McCall a9c3c176ad Reland "[Support] Add a way to run a function on a detached thread""
This reverts commit 7bc7fe6b78.
The immediate callers have been fixed to pass nullopt where appropriate.
2019-10-23 15:51:44 +02:00
Sam McCall 7bc7fe6b78 Revert "[Support] Add a way to run a function on a detached thread"
This reverts commit 40668abca4.
This causes clang tests to fail, as stacksize=0 is being explicitly passed and
is no longer a no-op.
2019-10-23 15:10:35 +02:00
Sam McCall 40668abca4 [Support] Add a way to run a function on a detached thread
This roughly mimics `std::thread(...).detach()` except it allows to
customize the stack size. Required for https://reviews.llvm.org/D50993.

I've decided against reusing the existing `llvm_execute_on_thread` because
it's not obvious what to do with the ownership of the passed
function/arguments:

1. If we pass possibly owning functions data to `llvm_execute_on_thread`,
   we'll lose the ability to pass small non-owning non-allocating functions
   for the joining case (as it's used now). Is it important enough?
2. If we use the non-owning interface in the new use case, we'll force
   clients to transfer ownership to the spawned thread manually, but
   similar code would still have to exist inside
   `llvm_execute_on_thread(_async)` anyway (as we can't just pass the same
   non-owning pointer to pthreads and Windows implementations, and would be
   forced to wrap it in some structure, and deal with its ownership.

Patch by Dmitry Kozhevnikov!

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51103
2019-10-23 12:48:38 +02:00
Reid Kleckner 90c64a3456 Move endian constant from Host.h to SwapByteOrder.h, prune include
Works on this dependency chain:
  ArrayRef.h ->
  Hashing.h -> --CUT--
  Host.h ->
  StringMap.h / StringRef.h

ArrayRef is very popular, but Host.h is rarely needed. Move the
IsBigEndianHost constant to SwapByteOrder.h. Clients of that header are
more likely to need it.

llvm-svn: 375316
2019-10-19 00:48:11 +00:00
Vedant Kumar 32ce14e55e Disable exit-on-SIGPIPE in lldb
Occasionally, during test teardown, LLDB writes to a closed pipe.
Sometimes the communication is inherently unreliable, so LLDB tries to
avoid being killed due to SIGPIPE (it calls `signal(SIGPIPE, SIG_IGN)`).
However, LLVM's default SIGPIPE behavior overrides LLDB's, causing it to
exit with IO_ERR.

Opt LLDB out of the default SIGPIPE behavior. I expect that this will
resolve some LLDB test suite flakiness (tests randomly failing with
IO_ERR) that we've seen since r344372.

rdar://55750240

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69148

llvm-svn: 375288
2019-10-18 21:05:30 +00:00
Hans Wennborg 91a5a2afe4 Win: handle \\?\UNC\ prefix in realPathFromHandle (PR43204)
After r361885, realPathFromHandle() ends up getting called on the working
directory on each Clang invocation. This unveiled that the code didn't work for
paths on network shares.

For example, if one maps the local dir c:\src\tmp to x:

  net use x: \\localhost\c$\tmp

and run e.g. "clang -c foo.cc" in x:\, realPathFromHandle will get
\\?\UNC\localhost\c$\src\tmp\ back from GetFinalPathNameByHandleW, and would
strip off the initial \\?\ prefix, ending up with a path that doesn't work.

This patch makes the prefix stripping a little smarter to handle this case.

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67166

llvm-svn: 371035
2019-09-05 09:07:05 +00:00
Pavel Labath 1b30ea2c50 [Support] Improve readNativeFile(Slice) interface
Summary:
There was a subtle, but pretty important difference between the Slice
and regular versions of this function. The Slice function was
zero-initializing the rest of the buffer when the read syscall returned
less bytes than expected, while the regular function did not.

This patch removes the inconsistency by making both functions *not*
zero-initialize the buffer. The zeroing code is moved to the
MemoryBuffer class, which is currently the only user of this code. This
makes the API more consistent, and the code shorter.

While in there, I also refactor the functions to return the number of
bytes through the regular return value (via Expected<size_t>) instead of
a separate by-ref argument.

Reviewers: aganea, rnk

Subscribers: kristina, Bigcheese, llvm-commits

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66471

llvm-svn: 369627
2019-08-22 08:13:30 +00:00
Pavel Labath 08c77b97c0 Filesystem/Windows: fix inconsistency in readNativeFileSlice API
Summary:
The windows version implementation of readNativeFileSlice, was trying to
match the POSIX behavior of not treating EOF as an error, but it was
only handling the case of reading from a pipe. Attempting to read past
the end of a regular file returns a slightly different error code, which
needs to be handled too. This patch adds ERROR_HANDLE_EOF to the list of
error codes to be treated as an end of file, and adds some unit tests
for the API.

This issue was found while attempting to land D66224, which caused a bunch of
lldb tests to start failing on windows.

Reviewers: rnk, aganea

Subscribers: kristina, llvm-commits

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66344

llvm-svn: 369269
2019-08-19 15:40:49 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer 8d3a1523dd [Support] Base RWMutex on std::shared_timed_mutex (C++14)
This should have the same semantics. We use std::shared_mutex instead on
MSVC and C++17, std::shared_timed_mutex is less efficient than our
custom implementation on Windows, std::shared_mutex should be faster.

llvm-svn: 369018
2019-08-15 16:55:23 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer ea134f221f [Support] Base SmartMutex on std::recursive_mutex
- Remove support for non-recursive mutexes. This was unused.
- The std::recursive_mutex is now created/destroyed unconditionally.
  Locking is still only done if threading is enabled.
- Alias SmartScopedLock to std::lock_guard.

This should make no semantic difference on the existing APIs.

llvm-svn: 368158
2019-08-07 11:59:57 +00:00
Fangrui Song d9b948b6eb Rename F_{None,Text,Append} to OF_{None,Text,Append}. NFC
F_{None,Text,Append} are kept for compatibility since r334221.

llvm-svn: 367800
2019-08-05 05:43:48 +00:00
JF Bastien 748dac7389 Remove support for unsupported MSVC versions
Re-land r367727 with the #if fixed.

Reviewers: rnk, lebedev.ri

Subscribers: hiraditya, jkorous, dexonsmith, lebedev.ri, llvm-commits

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65662

llvm-svn: 367734
2019-08-02 23:09:01 +00:00
JF Bastien 21d01ea9b6 Revert "Remove support for unsupported MSVC versions"
Mismatched preprocessor, I'll fix in a follow-up.

llvm-svn: 367728
2019-08-02 22:02:25 +00:00
JF Bastien dc8af80c19 Remove support for unsupported MSVC versions
Reviewers: rnk, lebedev.ri

Subscribers: hiraditya, jkorous, dexonsmith, lebedev.ri, llvm-commits

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65662

llvm-svn: 367727
2019-08-02 21:52:35 +00:00
Jordan Rose be28cddeea Support for dumping current PrettyStackTrace on SIGINFO (Ctrl-T)
Support SIGINFO (and SIGUSR1 for POSIX purposes) to tell what
long-running jobs are doing, as inspired by BSD tools (including on
macOS), by dumping the current PrettyStackTrace.

This adds a new kind of signal handler for non-fatal "info" signals,
similar to the "interrupt" handler that already exists for SIGINT
(Ctrl-C). It then uses that handler to update a "generation count"
managed by the PrettyStackTrace infrastructure, which is then checked
whenever a PrettyStackTraceEntry is pushed or popped on each
thread. If the generation has changed---i.e. if the user has pressed
Ctrl-T---the stack trace is dumped, though unfortunately it can't
include the deepest entry because that one is currently being
constructed/destructed.

https://reviews.llvm.org/D63750

llvm-svn: 365911
2019-07-12 16:05:09 +00:00
Fangrui Song 6dc5962957 [llvm-objcopy] Don't change permissions of non-regular output files
There is currently an EPERM error when a regular user executes `llvm-objcopy a.o /dev/null`.
Worse, root can even change the mode bits of /dev/null.

Fix it by checking if the output file is special.

A new overload of llvm::sys::fs::setPermissions with FD as the parameter
is added. Users should provide `perm & ~umask` as the parameter if they
intend to respect umask.

The existing overload of llvm::sys::fs::setPermissions may be deleted if
we can find an implementation of fchmod() on Windows. fchmod() is
usually better than chmod() because it saves syscalls and can avoid race
condition.

Reviewed By: jakehehrlich, jhenderson

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64236

llvm-svn: 365753
2019-07-11 10:17:59 +00:00
Reid Kleckner cc418a3af4 [Support] Move llvm::MemoryBuffer to sys::fs::file_t
Summary:
On Windows, Posix integer file descriptors are a compatibility layer
over native file handles provided by the C runtime. There is a hard
limit on the maximum number of file descriptors that a process can open,
and the limit is 8192. LLD typically doesn't run into this limit because
it opens input files, maps them into memory, and then immediately closes
the file descriptor. This prevents it from running out of FDs.

For various reasons, I'd like to open handles to every input file and
keep them open during linking. That requires migrating MemoryBuffer over
to taking open native file handles instead of integer FDs.

Reviewers: aganea, Bigcheese

Reviewed By: aganea

Subscribers: smeenai, silvas, mehdi_amini, hiraditya, steven_wu, dexonsmith, dang, llvm-commits, zturner

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63453

llvm-svn: 365588
2019-07-10 00:34:13 +00:00
Alex Brachet 3b715d67dd [Support] Add fs::getUmask() function and change fs::setPermissions
Summary: This patch changes fs::setPermissions to optionally set permissions while respecting the umask. It also adds the function fs::getUmask() which returns the current umask.

Reviewers: jhenderson, rupprecht, aprantl, lhames

Reviewed By: jhenderson, rupprecht

Subscribers: sanaanajjar231288, hiraditya, llvm-commits

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63583

llvm-svn: 364621
2019-06-28 03:21:00 +00:00
Lang Hames 93d2bdda6b [Support] Renamed member 'Size' to 'AllocatedSize' in MemoryBlock and OwningMemoryBlock.
Rename member 'Size' to 'AllocatedSize' in order to provide a hint that the
allocated size may be different than the requested size. Comments are added to
clarify this point.  Updated the InMemoryBuffer in FileOutputBuffer.cpp to track
the requested buffer size.

Patch by Machiel van Hooren. Thanks Machiel!

https://reviews.llvm.org/D61599

llvm-svn: 361195
2019-05-20 20:53:05 +00:00
Lang Hames e4b4ab6d26 [Support] Add error handling to sys::Process::getPageSize().
This patch changes the return type of sys::Process::getPageSize to
Expected<unsigned> to account for the fact that the underlying syscalls used to
obtain the page size may fail (see below).

For clients who use the page size as an optimization only this patch adds a new
method, getPageSizeEstimate, which calls through to getPageSize but discards
any error returned and substitues a "reasonable" page size estimate estimate
instead. All existing LLVM clients are updated to call getPageSizeEstimate
rather than getPageSize.

On Unix, sys::Process::getPageSize is implemented in terms of getpagesize or
sysconf, depending on which macros are set. The sysconf call is documented to
return -1 on failure. On Darwin getpagesize is implemented in terms of sysconf
and may also fail (though the manpage documentation does not mention this).
These failures have been observed in practice when highly restrictive sandbox
permissions have been applied. Without this patch, the result is that
getPageSize returns -1, which wreaks havoc on any subsequent code that was
assuming a sane page size value.

<rdar://problem/41654857>

Reviewers: dblaikie, echristo

Subscribers: kristina, llvm-commits

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59107

llvm-svn: 360221
2019-05-08 02:11:07 +00:00
Kadir Cetinkaya 8fdc5abffe [llvm][Support] Provide interface to set thread priorities
Summary:
We have a multi-platform thread priority setting function(last piece
landed with D58683), I wanted to make this available to all llvm community,
there seem to be other users of such functionality with portability fixmes:
lib/Support/CrashRecoveryContext.cpp
tools/clang/tools/libclang/CIndex.cpp

Reviewers: gribozavr, ioeric

Subscribers: krytarowski, jfb, kristina, llvm-commits

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59130

llvm-svn: 358494
2019-04-16 14:32:43 +00:00
Andrew Ng 2fc69abf5b [Support] MemoryBlock size should reflect the requested size
This patch mirrors the change made to the Unix equivalent in
r351916. This in turn fixes bugs related to the use of FileOutputBuffer
to output to "-", i.e. stdout, on Windows.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59663

llvm-svn: 357058
2019-03-27 10:26:21 +00:00