Commit Graph

741 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Fangrui Song ac14f7b10c [lit] Delete empty lines at the end of lit.local.cfg NFC
llvm-svn: 363538
2019-06-17 09:51:07 +00:00
Cameron McInally c72fbe5dc1 [MSAN] Add unary FNeg visitor to the MemorySanitizer
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62909

llvm-svn: 362664
2019-06-05 22:37:05 +00:00
Evgeniy Stepanov 7f281b2c06 HWASan exception support.
Summary:
Adds a call to __hwasan_handle_vfork(SP) at each landingpad entry.

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

Reviewers: pcc

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

Tags: #sanitizers, #llvm

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

llvm-svn: 360959
2019-05-16 23:54:41 +00:00
Fangrui Song f4dfd63c74 [IR] Disallow llvm.global_ctors and llvm.global_dtors of the 2-field form in textual format
The 3-field form was introduced by D3499 in 2014 and the legacy 2-field
form was planned to be removed in LLVM 4.0

For the textual format, this patch migrates the existing 2-field form to
use the 3-field form and deletes the compatibility code.
test/Verifier/global-ctors-2.ll checks we have a friendly error message.

For bitcode, lib/IR/AutoUpgrade UpgradeGlobalVariables will upgrade the
2-field form (add i8* null as the third field).

Reviewed By: rnk, dexonsmith

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61547

llvm-svn: 360742
2019-05-15 02:35:32 +00:00
Leonard Chan 0cdd3b1d81 [NewPM] Port HWASan and Kernel HWASan
Port hardware assisted address sanitizer to new PM following the same guidelines as msan and tsan.

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

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

llvm-svn: 360707
2019-05-14 21:17:21 +00:00
Fangrui Song a400ca3f3d [SanitizerCoverage] Use different module ctor names for trace-pc-guard and inline-8bit-counters
Fixes the main issue in PR41693

When both modes are used, two functions are created:
`sancov.module_ctor`, `sancov.module_ctor.$LastUnique`, where
$LastUnique is the current LastUnique counter that may be different in
another module.

`sancov.module_ctor.$LastUnique` belongs to the comdat group of the same
name (due to the non-null third field of the ctor in llvm.global_ctors).

    COMDAT group section [    9] `.group' [sancov.module_ctor] contains 6 sections:
       [Index]    Name
       [   10]   .text.sancov.module_ctor
       [   11]   .rela.text.sancov.module_ctor
       [   12]   .text.sancov.module_ctor.6
       [   13]   .rela.text.sancov.module_ctor.6
       [   23]   .init_array.2
       [   24]   .rela.init_array.2

    # 2 problems:
    # 1) If sancov.module_ctor in this module is discarded, this group
    # has a relocation to a discarded section. ld.bfd and gold will
    # error. (Another issue: it is silently accepted by lld)
    # 2) The comdat group has an unstable name that may be different in
    # another translation unit. Even if the linker allows the dangling relocation
    # (with --noinhibit-exec), there will be many undesired .init_array entries
    COMDAT group section [   25] `.group' [sancov.module_ctor.6] contains 2 sections:
       [Index]    Name
       [   26]   .init_array.2
       [   27]   .rela.init_array.2

By using different module ctor names, the associated comdat group names
will also be different and thus stable across modules.

Reviewed By: morehouse, phosek

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61510

llvm-svn: 360107
2019-05-07 01:39:37 +00:00
Alexander Potapenko 06d00afa61 MSan: handle llvm.lifetime.start intrinsic
Summary:
When a variable goes into scope several times within a single function
or when two variables from different scopes share a stack slot it may
be incorrect to poison such scoped locals at the beginning of the
function.
In the former case it may lead to false negatives (see
https://github.com/google/sanitizers/issues/590), in the latter - to
incorrect reports (because only one origin remains on the stack).

If Clang emits lifetime intrinsics for such scoped variables we insert
code poisoning them after each call to llvm.lifetime.start().
If for a certain intrinsic we fail to find a corresponding alloca, we
fall back to poisoning allocas for the whole function, as it's now
impossible to tell which alloca was missed.

The new instrumentation may slow down hot loops containing local
variables with lifetime intrinsics, so we allow disabling it with
-mllvm -msan-handle-lifetime-intrinsics=false.

Reviewers: eugenis, pcc

Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60617

llvm-svn: 359536
2019-04-30 08:35:14 +00:00
Hans Wennborg 6ae05777b8 Asan use-after-scope: don't poison allocas if there were untraced lifetime intrinsics in the function (PR41481)
If there are any intrinsics that cannot be traced back to an alloca, we
might have missed the start of a variable's scope, leading to false
error reports if the variable is poisoned at function entry. Instead, if
there are some intrinsics that can't be traced, fail safe and don't
poison the variables in that function.

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60686

llvm-svn: 358478
2019-04-16 07:54:20 +00:00
Erik Pilkington cb5c7bd9eb Fix a hang when lowering __builtin_dynamic_object_size
If the ObjectSizeOffsetEvaluator fails to fold the object size call, then it may
litter some unused instructions in the function. When done repeatably in
InstCombine, this results in an infinite loop. Fix this by tracking the set of
instructions that were inserted, then removing them on failure.

rdar://49172227

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60298

llvm-svn: 358146
2019-04-10 23:42:11 +00:00
Peter Collingbourne df57979ba7 hwasan: Enable -hwasan-allow-ifunc by default.
It's been on in Android for a while without causing problems, so it's time
to make it the default and remove the flag.

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

llvm-svn: 357960
2019-04-09 00:25:59 +00:00
Pierre Gousseau a833c2bd3e [asan] Add options -asan-detect-invalid-pointer-cmp and -asan-detect-invalid-pointer-sub options.
This is in preparation to a driver patch to add gcc 8's -fsanitize=pointer-compare and -fsanitize=pointer-subtract.
Disabled by default as this is still an experimental feature.

Reviewed By: morehouse, vitalybuka

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59220

llvm-svn: 357157
2019-03-28 10:51:24 +00:00
James Y Knight c0e6b8ac3a IR: Support parsing numeric block ids, and emit them in textual output.
Just as as llvm IR supports explicitly specifying numeric value ids
for instructions, and emits them by default in textual output, now do
the same for blocks.

This is a slightly incompatible change in the textual IR format.

Previously, llvm would parse numeric labels as string names. E.g.
  define void @f() {
    br label %"55"
  55:
    ret void
  }
defined a label *named* "55", even without needing to be quoted, while
the reference required quoting. Now, if you intend a block label which
looks like a value number to be a name, you must quote it in the
definition too (e.g. `"55":`).

Previously, llvm would print nameless blocks only as a comment, and
would omit it if there was no predecessor. This could cause confusion
for readers of the IR, just as unnamed instructions did prior to the
addition of "%5 = " syntax, back in 2008 (PR2480).

Now, it will always print a label for an unnamed block, with the
exception of the entry block. (IMO it may be better to print it for
the entry-block as well. However, that requires updating many more
tests.)

Thus, the following is supported, and is the canonical printing:
  define i32 @f(i32, i32) {
    %3 = add i32 %0, %1
    br label %4

  4:
    ret i32 %3
  }

New test cases covering this behavior are added, and other tests
updated as required.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58548

llvm-svn: 356789
2019-03-22 18:27:13 +00:00
Craig Topper 03e93f514a [SanitizerCoverage] Avoid splitting critical edges when destination is a basic block containing unreachable
This patch adds a new option to SplitAllCriticalEdges and uses it to avoid splitting critical edges when the destination basic block ends with unreachable. Otherwise if we split the critical edge, sanitizer coverage will instrument the new block that gets inserted for the split. But since this block itself shouldn't be reachable this is pointless. These basic blocks will stick around and generate assembly, but they don't end in sane control flow and might get placed at the end of the function. This makes it look like one function has code that flows into the next function.

This showed up while compiling the linux kernel with clang. The kernel has a tool called objtool that detected the code that appeared to flow from one function to the next. https://github.com/ClangBuiltLinux/linux/issues/351#issuecomment-461698884

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57982

llvm-svn: 355947
2019-03-12 18:20:25 +00:00
Evgeniy Stepanov aedec3f684 Remove ASan asm instrumentation.
Summary: It is incomplete and has no users AFAIK.

Reviewers: pcc, vitalybuka

Subscribers: srhines, kubamracek, mgorny, krytarowski, eraman, hiraditya, jdoerfert, #sanitizers, llvm-commits, thakis

Tags: #sanitizers, #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59154

llvm-svn: 355870
2019-03-11 21:50:10 +00:00
Nico Weber 885b790f89 Remove esan.
It hasn't seen active development in years, and it hasn't reached a
state where it was useful.

Remove the code until someone is interested in working on it again.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59133

llvm-svn: 355862
2019-03-11 20:23:40 +00:00
Florian Hahn fd2d89f98b Fix invalid target triples in tests. (NFC)
llvm-svn: 355349
2019-03-04 23:37:41 +00:00
Evgeniy Stepanov 53d7c5cd44 [msan] Instrument x86 BMI intrinsics.
Summary:
They simply shuffle bits. MSan needs to do the same with shadow bits,
after making sure that the shuffle mask is fully initialized.

Reviewers: pcc, vitalybuka

Subscribers: hiraditya, #sanitizers, llvm-commits

Tags: #sanitizers, #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58858

llvm-svn: 355348
2019-03-04 22:58:20 +00:00
Reid Kleckner 701593f1db [sancov] Instrument reachable blocks that end in unreachable
Summary:
These sorts of blocks often contain calls to noreturn functions, like
longjmp, throw, or trap. If they don't end the program, they are
"interesting" from the perspective of sanitizer coverage, so we should
instrument them. This was discussed in https://reviews.llvm.org/D57982.

Reviewers: kcc, vitalybuka

Subscribers: llvm-commits, craig.topper, efriedma, morehouse, hiraditya

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58740

llvm-svn: 355152
2019-02-28 22:54:30 +00:00
Manman Ren 1829512dd3 Add a module pass for order file instrumentation
The basic idea of the pass is to use a circular buffer to log the execution ordering of the functions. We only log the function when it is first executed. We use a 8-byte hash to log the function symbol name.

In this pass, we add three global variables:
(1) an order file buffer: a circular buffer at its own llvm section.
(2) a bitmap for each module: one byte for each function to say if the function is already executed.
(3) a global index to the order file buffer.

At the function prologue, if the function has not been executed (by checking the bitmap), log the function hash, then atomically increase the index.

Differential Revision:  https://reviews.llvm.org/D57463

llvm-svn: 355133
2019-02-28 20:13:38 +00:00
Reid Kleckner 4fb3502bc9 [InstrProf] Use separate comdat group for data and counters
Summary:
I hadn't realized that instrumentation runs before inlining, so we can't
use the function as the comdat group. Doing so can create relocations
against discarded sections when references to discarded __profc_
variables are inlined into functions outside the function's comdat
group.

In the future, perhaps we should consider standardizing the comdat group
names that ELF and COFF use. It will save object file size, since
__profv_$sym won't appear in the symbol table again.

Reviewers: xur, vsk

Subscribers: eraman, hiraditya, cfe-commits, #sanitizers, llvm-commits

Tags: #clang, #sanitizers, #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58737

llvm-svn: 355044
2019-02-27 23:38:44 +00:00
Leonard Chan 436fb2bd82 [NewPM] Second attempt at porting ASan
This is the second attempt to port ASan to new PM after D52739. This takes the
initialization requried by ASan from the Module by moving it into a separate
class with it's own analysis that the new PM ASan can use.

Changes:
- Split AddressSanitizer into 2 passes: 1 for the instrumentation on the
  function, and 1 for the pass itself which creates an instance of the first
  during it's run. The same is done for AddressSanitizerModule.
- Add new PM AddressSanitizer and AddressSanitizerModule.
- Add legacy and new PM analyses for reading data needed to initialize ASan with.
- Removed DominatorTree dependency from ASan since it was unused.
- Move GlobalsMetadata and ShadowMapping out of anonymous namespace since the
  new PM analysis holds these 2 classes and will need to expose them.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56470

llvm-svn: 353985
2019-02-13 22:22:48 +00:00
Reid Kleckner 987d331fab [InstrProf] Implement static profdata registration
Summary:
The motivating use case is eliminating duplicate profile data registered
for the same inline function in two object files. Before this change,
users would observe multiple symbol definition errors with VC link, but
links with LLD would succeed.

Users (Mozilla) have reported that PGO works well with clang-cl and LLD,
but when using LLD without this static registration, we would get into a
"relocation against a discarded section" situation. I'm not sure what
happens in that situation, but I suspect that duplicate, unused profile
information was retained. If so, this change will reduce the size of
such binaries with LLD.

Now, Windows uses static registration and is in line with all the other
platforms.

Reviewers: davidxl, wmi, inglorion, void, calixte

Subscribers: mgorny, krytarowski, eraman, fedor.sergeev, hiraditya, #sanitizers, dmajor, llvm-commits

Tags: #sanitizers, #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57929

llvm-svn: 353547
2019-02-08 19:03:50 +00:00
Julian Lettner 98b9f5b4b3 [Sanitizers] UBSan unreachable incompatible with Kernel ASan
Summary:
This is a follow up for https://reviews.llvm.org/D57278. The previous
revision should have also included Kernel ASan.

rdar://problem/40723397

Subscribers: cfe-commits

Tags: #clang

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57711

llvm-svn: 353120
2019-02-04 23:37:50 +00:00
Julian Lettner 29ac3a5b82 [SanitizerCoverage] Clang crashes if user declares `__sancov_lowest_stack` variable
Summary:
If the user declares or defines `__sancov_lowest_stack` with an
unexpected type, then `getOrInsertGlobal` inserts a bitcast and the
following cast fails:
```
Constant *SanCovLowestStackConstant =
       M.getOrInsertGlobal(SanCovLowestStackName, IntptrTy);
SanCovLowestStack = cast<GlobalVariable>(SanCovLowestStackConstant);
```

This variable is a SanitizerCoverage implementation detail and the user
should generally never have a need to access it, so we emit an error
now.

rdar://problem/44143130

Reviewers: morehouse

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57633

llvm-svn: 353100
2019-02-04 22:06:30 +00:00
Philip Pfaffe 0ee6a933ce [NewPM][MSan] Add Options Handling
Summary: This patch enables passing options to msan via the passes pipeline, e.e., -passes=msan<recover;kernel;track-origins=4>.

Reviewers: chandlerc, fedor.sergeev, leonardchan

Subscribers: hiraditya, bollu, llvm-commits

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57640

llvm-svn: 353090
2019-02-04 21:02:49 +00:00
Julian Lettner f82d8924ef [ASan] Do not instrument other runtime functions with `__asan_handle_no_return`
Summary:
Currently, ASan inserts a call to `__asan_handle_no_return` before every
`noreturn` function call/invoke. This is unnecessary for calls to other
runtime funtions. This patch changes ASan to skip instrumentation for
functions calls marked with `!nosanitize` metadata.

Reviewers: TODO

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57489

llvm-svn: 352948
2019-02-02 02:05:16 +00:00
Kostya Serebryany a78a44d480 [sanitizer-coverage] prune trace-cmp instrumentation for CMP isntructions that feed into the backedge branch. Instrumenting these CMP instructions is almost always useless (and harmful) for fuzzing
llvm-svn: 352818
2019-01-31 23:43:00 +00:00
Peter Collingbourne 1a8acfb768 hwasan: If we split the entry block, move static allocas back into the entry block.
Otherwise they are treated as dynamic allocas, which ends up increasing
code size significantly. This reduces size of Chromium base_unittests
by 2MB (6.7%).

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

llvm-svn: 352152
2019-01-25 02:08:46 +00:00
Julian Lettner b62e9dc46b Revert "[Sanitizers] UBSan unreachable incompatible with ASan in the presence of `noreturn` calls"
This reverts commit cea84ab93a.

llvm-svn: 352069
2019-01-24 18:04:21 +00:00
Julian Lettner cea84ab93a [Sanitizers] UBSan unreachable incompatible with ASan in the presence of `noreturn` calls
Summary:
UBSan wants to detect when unreachable code is actually reached, so it
adds instrumentation before every `unreachable` instruction. However,
the optimizer will remove code after calls to functions marked with
`noreturn`. To avoid this UBSan removes `noreturn` from both the call
instruction as well as from the function itself. Unfortunately, ASan
relies on this annotation to unpoison the stack by inserting calls to
`_asan_handle_no_return` before `noreturn` functions. This is important
for functions that do not return but access the the stack memory, e.g.,
unwinder functions *like* `longjmp` (`longjmp` itself is actually
"double-proofed" via its interceptor). The result is that when ASan and
UBSan are combined, the `noreturn` attributes are missing and ASan
cannot unpoison the stack, so it has false positives when stack
unwinding is used.

Changes:
  # UBSan now adds the `expect_noreturn` attribute whenever it removes
    the `noreturn` attribute from a function
  # ASan additionally checks for the presence of this attribute

Generated code:
```
call void @__asan_handle_no_return    // Additionally inserted to avoid false positives
call void @longjmp
call void @__asan_handle_no_return
call void @__ubsan_handle_builtin_unreachable
unreachable
```

The second call to `__asan_handle_no_return` is redundant. This will be
cleaned up in a follow-up patch.

rdar://problem/40723397

Reviewers: delcypher, eugenis

Tags: #sanitizers

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56624

llvm-svn: 352003
2019-01-24 01:06:19 +00:00
Peter Collingbourne 020ce3f026 hwasan: Read shadow address from ifunc if we don't need a frame record.
This saves a cbz+cold call in the interceptor ABI, as well as a realign
in both ABIs, trading off a dcache entry against some branch predictor
entries and some code size.

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

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

llvm-svn: 351989
2019-01-23 22:39:11 +00:00
Peter Collingbourne 73078ecd38 hwasan: Move memory access checks into small outlined functions on aarch64.
Each hwasan check requires emitting a small piece of code like this:
https://clang.llvm.org/docs/HardwareAssistedAddressSanitizerDesign.html#memory-accesses

The problem with this is that these code blocks typically bloat code
size significantly.

An obvious solution is to outline these blocks of code. In fact, this
has already been implemented under the -hwasan-instrument-with-calls
flag. However, as currently implemented this has a number of problems:
- The functions use the same calling convention as regular C functions.
  This means that the backend must spill all temporary registers as
  required by the platform's C calling convention, even though the
  check only needs two registers on the hot path.
- The functions take the address to be checked in a fixed register,
  which increases register pressure.
Both of these factors can diminish the code size effect and increase
the performance hit of -hwasan-instrument-with-calls.

The solution that this patch implements is to involve the aarch64
backend in outlining the checks. An intrinsic and pseudo-instruction
are created to represent a hwasan check. The pseudo-instruction
is register allocated like any other instruction, and we allow the
register allocator to select almost any register for the address to
check. A particular combination of (register selection, type of check)
triggers the creation in the backend of a function to handle the check
for specifically that pair. The resulting functions are deduplicated by
the linker. The pseudo-instruction (really the function) is specified
to preserve all registers except for the registers that the AAPCS
specifies may be clobbered by a call.

To measure the code size and performance effect of this change, I
took a number of measurements using Chromium for Android on aarch64,
comparing a browser with inlined checks (the baseline) against a
browser with outlined checks.

Code size: Size of .text decreases from 243897420 to 171619972 bytes,
or a 30% decrease.

Performance: Using Chromium's blink_perf.layout microbenchmarks I
measured a median performance regression of 6.24%.

The fact that a perf/size tradeoff is evident here suggests that
we might want to make the new behaviour conditional on -Os/-Oz.
But for now I've enabled it unconditionally, my reasoning being that
hwasan users typically expect a relatively large perf hit, and ~6%
isn't really adding much. We may want to revisit this decision in
the future, though.

I also tried experimenting with varying the number of registers
selectable by the hwasan check pseudo-instruction (which would result
in fewer variants being created), on the hypothesis that creating
fewer variants of the function would expose another perf/size tradeoff
by reducing icache pressure from the check functions at the cost of
register pressure. Although I did observe a code size increase with
fewer registers, I did not observe a strong correlation between the
number of registers and the performance of the resulting browser on the
microbenchmarks, so I conclude that we might as well use ~all registers
to get the maximum code size improvement. My results are below:

Regs | .text size | Perf hit
-----+------------+---------
~all | 171619972  | 6.24%
  16 | 171765192  | 7.03%
   8 | 172917788  | 5.82%
   4 | 177054016  | 6.89%

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56954

llvm-svn: 351920
2019-01-23 02:20:10 +00:00
Philip Pfaffe 81101de585 [MSan] Apply the ctor creation scheme of TSan
Summary: To avoid adding an extern function to the global ctors list, apply the changes of D56538 also to MSan.

Reviewers: chandlerc, vitalybuka, fedor.sergeev, leonardchan

Subscribers: hiraditya, bollu, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56734

llvm-svn: 351322
2019-01-16 11:14:07 +00:00
Philip Pfaffe 685c76d7a3 [NewPM][TSan] Reiterate the TSan port
Summary:
Second iteration of D56433 which got reverted in rL350719. The problem
in the previous version was that we dropped the thunk calling the tsan init
function. The new version keeps the thunk which should appease dyld, but is not
actually OK wrt. the current semantics of function passes. Hence, add a
helper to insert the functions only on the first time. The helper
allows hooking into the insertion to be able to append them to the
global ctors list.

Reviewers: chandlerc, vitalybuka, fedor.sergeev, leonardchan

Subscribers: hiraditya, bollu, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56538

llvm-svn: 351314
2019-01-16 09:28:01 +00:00
Mandeep Singh Grang 436735c3fe [EH] Rename llvm.x86.seh.recoverfp intrinsic to llvm.eh.recoverfp
Summary:
Make recoverfp intrinsic target-independent so that it can be implemented for AArch64, etc.
Refer D53541 for the context. Clang counterpart D56748.

Reviewers: rnk, efriedma

Reviewed By: rnk, efriedma

Subscribers: javed.absar, kristof.beyls, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56747

llvm-svn: 351281
2019-01-16 00:37:13 +00:00
Matt Morehouse 19ff35c481 [SanitizerCoverage] Don't create comdat for interposable functions.
Summary:
Comdat groups override weak symbol behavior, allowing the linker to keep
the comdats for weak symbols in favor of comdats for strong symbols.

Fixes the issue described in:
https://bugs.chromium.org/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=918662

Reviewers: eugenis, pcc, rnk

Reviewed By: pcc, rnk

Subscribers: smeenai, rnk, bd1976llvm, hiraditya, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56516

llvm-svn: 351247
2019-01-15 21:21:01 +00:00
Jonathan Metzman e159a0dd1a [SanitizerCoverage][NFC] Use appendToUsed instead of include
Summary:
Use appendToUsed instead of include to ensure that
SanitizerCoverage's constructors are not stripped.

Also, use isOSBinFormatCOFF() to determine if target
binary format is COFF.

Reviewers: pcc

Reviewed By: pcc

Subscribers: hiraditya

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56369

llvm-svn: 351118
2019-01-14 21:02:02 +00:00
Florian Hahn 9697d2a764 Revert r350647: "[NewPM] Port tsan"
This patch breaks thread sanitizer on some macOS builders, e.g.
http://green.lab.llvm.org/green/job/clang-stage1-configure-RA/52725/

llvm-svn: 350719
2019-01-09 13:32:16 +00:00
Philip Pfaffe 82f995db75 [NewPM] Port tsan
A straightforward port of tsan to the new PM, following the same path
as D55647.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56433

llvm-svn: 350647
2019-01-08 19:21:57 +00:00
Evgeniy Stepanov 0184c53cbd Revert "Revert "[hwasan] Android: Switch from TLS_SLOT_TSAN(8) to TLS_SLOT_SANITIZER(6)""
This reapplies commit r348983.

llvm-svn: 350448
2019-01-05 00:44:58 +00:00
Peter Collingbourne 87f477b5e4 hwasan: Implement lazy thread initialization for the interceptor ABI.
The problem is similar to D55986 but for threads: a process with the
interceptor hwasan library loaded might have some threads started by
instrumented libraries and some by uninstrumented libraries, and we
need to be able to run instrumented code on the latter.

The solution is to perform per-thread initialization lazily. If a
function needs to access shadow memory or add itself to the per-thread
ring buffer its prologue checks to see whether the value in the
sanitizer TLS slot is null, and if so it calls __hwasan_thread_enter
and reloads from the TLS slot. The runtime does the same thing if it
needs to access this data structure.

This change means that the code generator needs to know whether we
are targeting the interceptor runtime, since we don't want to pay
the cost of lazy initialization when targeting a platform with native
hwasan support. A flag -fsanitize-hwaddress-abi={interceptor,platform}
has been introduced for selecting the runtime ABI to target. The
default ABI is set to interceptor since it's assumed that it will
be more common that users will be compiling application code than
platform code.

Because we can no longer assume that the TLS slot is initialized,
the pthread_create interceptor is no longer necessary, so it has
been removed.

Ideally, lazy initialization should only cost one instruction in the
hot path, but at present the call may cause us to spill arguments
to the stack, which means more instructions in the hot path (or
theoretically in the cold path if the spills are moved with shrink
wrapping). With an appropriately chosen calling convention for
the per-thread initialization function (TODO) the hot path should
always need just one instruction and the cold path should need two
instructions with no spilling required.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56038

llvm-svn: 350429
2019-01-04 19:27:04 +00:00
Philip Pfaffe b39a97c8f6 [NewPM] Port Msan
Summary:
Keeping msan a function pass requires replacing the module level initialization:
That means, don't define a ctor function which calls __msan_init, instead just
declare the init function at the first access, and add that to the global ctors
list.

Changes:
- Pull the actual sanitizer and the wrapper pass apart.
- Add a newpm msan pass. The function pass inserts calls to runtime
  library functions, for which it inserts declarations as necessary.
- Update tests.

Caveats:
- There is one test that I dropped, because it specifically tested the
  definition of the ctor.

Reviewers: chandlerc, fedor.sergeev, leonardchan, vitalybuka

Subscribers: sdardis, nemanjai, javed.absar, hiraditya, kbarton, bollu, atanasyan, jsji

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55647

llvm-svn: 350305
2019-01-03 13:42:44 +00:00
Alexander Potapenko cea4f83371 [MSan] Handle llvm.is.constant intrinsic
MSan used to report false positives in the case the argument of
llvm.is.constant intrinsic was uninitialized.
In fact checking this argument is unnecessary, as the intrinsic is only
used at compile time, and its value doesn't depend on the value of the
argument.

llvm-svn: 350173
2018-12-31 09:42:23 +00:00
Eugene Leviant 4dc3a3f746 [HWASAN] Instrument memorty intrinsics by default
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55926

llvm-svn: 350055
2018-12-24 16:02:48 +00:00
Simon Pilgrim 6199784c5a [X86] Change 'simple nonmem' intrinsic test to not use PADDSW
Those intrinsics will be autoupgraded soon to @llvm.sadd.sat generics (D55894), so to keep a x86-specific case I'm replacing it with @llvm.x86.sse2.pmulhu.w

llvm-svn: 349739
2018-12-20 10:54:59 +00:00
Alexander Potapenko 0e3b85a730 [MSan] Don't emit __msan_instrument_asm_load() calls
LLVM treats void* pointers passed to assembly routines as pointers to
sized types.
We used to emit calls to __msan_instrument_asm_load() for every such
void*, which sometimes led to false positives.
A less error-prone (and truly "conservative") approach is to unpoison
only assembly output arguments.

llvm-svn: 349734
2018-12-20 10:05:00 +00:00
Eugene Leviant 2d98eb1b2e [HWASAN] Add support for memory intrinsics
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55117

llvm-svn: 349728
2018-12-20 09:04:33 +00:00
Vitaly Buka 07a55f27dc [asan] Undo special treatment of linkonce_odr and weak_odr
Summary:
On non-Windows these are already removed by ShouldInstrumentGlobal.
On Window we will wait until we get actual issues with that.

Reviewers: pcc

Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55899

llvm-svn: 349707
2018-12-20 00:30:27 +00:00
Vitaly Buka d414e1bbb5 [asan] Prevent folding of globals with redzones
Summary:
ICF prevented by removing unnamed_addr and local_unnamed_addr for all sanitized
globals.
Also in general unnamed_addr is not valid here as address now is important for
ODR violation detector and redzone poisoning.

Before the patch ICF on globals caused:
1. false ODR reports when we register global on the same address more than once
2. globals buffer overflow if we fold variables of smaller type inside of large
type. Then the smaller one will poison redzone which overlaps with the larger one.

Reviewers: eugenis, pcc

Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55857

llvm-svn: 349706
2018-12-20 00:30:18 +00:00
Vitaly Buka 4e4920694c [asan] Restore ODR-violation detection on vtables
Summary:
unnamed_addr is still useful for detecting of ODR violations on vtables

Still unnamed_addr with lld and --icf=safe or --icf=all can trigger false
reports which can be avoided with --icf=none or by using private aliases
with -fsanitize-address-use-odr-indicator

Reviewers: eugenis

Reviewed By: eugenis

Subscribers: kubamracek, hiraditya, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55799

llvm-svn: 349555
2018-12-18 22:23:30 +00:00