The refactoring makes suppressions more flexible
and allow to suppress based on arbitrary number of stacks.
In particular it fixes:
https://code.google.com/p/thread-sanitizer/issues/detail?id=64
"Make it possible to suppress deadlock reports by any stack (not just first)"
llvm-svn: 209757
This way does not require a __sanitizer_cov_dump() call. That's
important on Android, where apps can be killed at arbitrary time.
We write raw PCs to disk instead of module offsets; we also write
memory layout to a separate file. This increases dump size by the
factor of 2 on 64-bit systems.
llvm-svn: 209653
Call it "libclang_rt.builtins-<arch>.a" to be consistent
with sanitizers/profile libraries naming. Modify Makefile
and CMake build systems and Clang driver accordingly.
Fixes PR19822.
llvm-svn: 209473
Generalize StackDepot and create a new specialized instance of it to
efficiently (i.e. without duplicating stack trace data) store the
origin history tree.
This reduces memory usage for chained origins roughly by an order of
magnitude.
Most importantly, this new design allows us to put two limits on
stored history data (exposed in MSAN_OPTIONS) that help avoid
exponential growth in used memory on certain workloads.
See comments in lib/msan/msan_origin.h for more details.
llvm-svn: 209284
This change also enables asm instrumentation in asan tests that was
accidentally disabled yearlier, and adds a sanity test for that.
Patch by Yuri Gorshenin.
llvm-svn: 209282
For Linux/x86-64, pointers passed to internal_syscall should be casted
to uptr first. Otherwise, they won't be properly extended to 64-bit for
x32.
Patch by H.J. Lu
llvm-svn: 209278
Summary:
Sandboxed code may now pass additional arguments to
__sanitizer_sandbox_on_notify() to force all coverage data to be dumped to a
single file (the default is one file per module). The user may supply a file or
socket to write to. The latter option can be used to broker out the file writing
functionality. If -1 is passed, we pre-open a file.
llvm-svn: 209121
Extend the function definition macros further to support COFF object emission.
The function definition in COFF includes the type and storage class in the
symbol definition context. This is needed to make the assembly routines
possible to be built for COFF environments (i.e. Windows).
llvm-svn: 209095
Rename the HIDDEN_DIRECTIVE macro to HIDDEN and give it a parameter providing
the name of the symbol to be given hidden visibility. This makes the macros
more amenable to COFF.
llvm-svn: 209094
Shared objects are hard. After this commit, we do the right thing when
profiling two separate shared objects that have been dlopen'd with
`RTLD_LOCAL`, when the main executable is *not* being profiled.
This mainly simplifies the writer logic.
- At initialization, determine the output filename and truncate the
file. Depending on whether shared objects can see each other, this
may happen multiple times.
- At exit, each executable writes its own profile in append mode.
<rdar://problem/16918688>
llvm-svn: 209053
These tests were XPASS-ing on Linux bots creating Mach-O, which makes
sense, since the real difference is the object format.
I'm hoping a short-term fix to get these tests passing on ELF is to
create two copies of the runtime -- one built with -fPIC, and one
without. A follow-up patch will change clang's driver to pick between
them depending on whether `-shared` is specified.
llvm-svn: 208947
Change the API of the instrumented profiling library to work with shared
objects.
- Most things are now declared hidden, so that each executable gets
its own copy.
- Initialization hooks up a linked list of writers.
- The raw format with shared objects that are profiled consists of a
concatenated series of profiles. llvm-profdata knows how to deal
with that since r208938.
<rdar://problem/16918688>
llvm-svn: 208940