This is a follow up to r282152.
A more extensive testing on real apps revealed a subtle bug in r282152.
The revision made shadow mapping non-linear even within a single
user region. But there are lots of code in runtime that processes
memory ranges and assumes that mapping is linear. For example,
region memory access handling simply increments shadow address
to advance to the next shadow cell group. Similarly, DontNeedShadowFor,
java memory mover, search of heap memory block header, etc
make similar assumptions.
To trigger the bug user range would need to cross 0x008000000000 boundary.
This was observed for a module data section.
Make shadow mapping linear within a single user range again.
Add a startup CHECK for linearity.
llvm-svn: 282405
Don't xor user address with kAppMemXor in meta mapping.
The only purpose of kAppMemXor is to raise shadow for ~0 user addresses,
so that they don't map to ~0 (which would cause overlap between
user memory and shadow).
For meta mapping we explicitly add kMetaShadowBeg offset,
so we don't need to additionally raise meta shadow.
llvm-svn: 282403
In ShadowToMem we call MemToShadow potentially for incorrect addresses.
So DCHECK(IsAppMem(p)) can fire in debug mode.
Fix this by swapping range and MemToShadow checks.
llvm-svn: 282157
4.1+ Linux kernels map pie binaries at 0x55:
https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=d1fd836dcf00d2028c700c7e44d2c23404062c90
Currently tsan does not support app memory at 0x55 (https://github.com/google/sanitizers/issues/503).
Older kernels also map pie binaries at 0x55 when ASLR is disables (most notably under gdb).
This change extends tsan mapping for linux/x86_64 to cover 0x554-0x568 app range and fixes both 4.1+ kernels and gdb.
This required to slightly shrink low and high app ranges and move heap. The mapping become even more non-linear, since now we xor lower bits. Now even a continuous app range maps to split, intermixed shadow ranges. This breaks ShadowToMemImpl as it assumes linear mapping at least within a continuous app range (however it turned out to be already broken at least on arm64/42-bit vma as uncovered by r281970). So also change ShadowToMemImpl to hopefully a more robust implementation that does not assume a linear mapping.
llvm-svn: 282152
The definitions in sanitizer_common may conflict with definitions from system headers because:
The runtime includes the system headers after the project headers (as per LLVM coding guidelines).
lib/sanitizer_common/sanitizer_internal_defs.h pollutes the namespace of everything defined after it, which is all/most of the sanitizer .h and .cc files and the included system headers with: using namespace __sanitizer; // NOLINT
This patch solves the problem by introducing the namespace only within the sanitizer namespaces as proposed by Dmitry.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D21947
llvm-svn: 281657
This patch adds a wrapper for call_once, which uses an already-compiled helper __call_once with an atomic release which is invisible to TSan. To avoid false positives, the interceptor performs an explicit atomic release in the callback wrapper.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24188
llvm-svn: 280920
This patch builds on LLVM r279776.
In this patch I've done some cleanup and abstracted three common steps runtime components have in their CMakeLists files, and added a fourth.
The three steps I abstract are:
(1) Add a top-level target (i.e asan, msan, ...)
(2) Set the target properties for sorting files in IDE generators
(3) Make the compiler-rt target depend on the top-level target
The new step is to check if a command named "runtime_register_component" is defined, and to call it with the component name.
The runtime_register_component command is defined in llvm/runtimes/CMakeLists.txt, and presently just adds the component to a list of sub-components, which later gets used to generate target mappings.
With this patch a new workflow for runtimes builds is supported. The new workflow when building runtimes from the LLVM runtimes directory is:
> cmake [...]
> ninja runtimes-configure
> ninja asan
The "runtimes-configure" target builds all the dependencies for configuring the runtimes projects, and runs CMake on the runtimes projects. Running the runtimes CMake generates a list of targets to bind into the top-level CMake so subsequent build invocations will have access to some of Compiler-RT's targets through the top-level build.
Note: This patch does exclude some top-level targets from compiler-rt libraries because they either don't install files (sanitizer_common), or don't have a cooresponding `check` target (stats).
llvm-svn: 279863
When compiler-rt's CMake is not directly invoked, it will currently not call
project() and thus ASM will not be enabled.
We also don't need to put the .S files through the C compiler then.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23656
llvm-svn: 279215
Current AArch64 {sig}{set,long}jmp interposing requires accessing glibc
private __pointer_chk_guard to get process xor mask to demangled the
internal {sig}jmp_buf function pointers.
It causes some packing issues, as described in gcc PR#71042 [1], and is
is not a godd practice to rely on a private glibc namespace (since ABI is
not meant to be stable).
This patch fixes it by changing how libtsan obtains the guarded pointer
value: at initialization a specific routine issues a setjmp call and
using the mangled function pointer and the original value derive the
random guarded pointer.
Checked on aarch64 39-bit VMA.
[1] https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=71042
llvm-svn: 278292
The system implementation of OSAtomicTestAndClear returns the original bit, but the TSan interceptor has a bug which always returns zero from the function. This patch fixes this and adds a test.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23061
llvm-svn: 277461
On Darwin, there are some apps that rely on realloc(nullptr, 0) returning a valid pointer. TSan currently returns nullptr in this case, let's fix it to avoid breaking binary compatibility.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22800
llvm-svn: 277458
This patch adds 48-bits VMA support for tsan on aarch64. As current
mappings for aarch64, 48-bit VMA also supports PIE executable. This
limits the mapping mechanism because the PIE address bits
(usually 0aaaaXXXXXXXX) makes it harder to create a mask/xor value
to include all memory regions. I think it is possible to create a
large application VAM range by either dropping PIE support or tune
current range.
It also changes slight the way addresses are packed in SyncVar structure:
previously it assumes x86_64 as the maximum VMA range. Since ID is 14 bits
wide, shifting 48 bits should be ok.
Tested on x86_64, ppc64le and aarch64 (39 and 48 bits VMA).
llvm-svn: 277137
When we delay signals we can deliver them when the signal
is blocked. This can be surprising to the program.
Intercept signal blocking functions merely to process
pending signals. As the result, at worst we will delay
a signal till return from the signal blocking function.
llvm-svn: 276876
Summary:
This patch is a refactoring of the way cmake 'targets' are grouped.
It won't affect non-UI cmake-generators.
Clang/LLVM are using a structured way to group targets which ease
navigation through Visual Studio UI. The Compiler-RT projects
differ from the way Clang/LLVM are grouping targets.
This patch doesn't contain behavior changes.
Reviewers: kubabrecka, rnk
Subscribers: wang0109, llvm-commits, kubabrecka, chrisha
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21952
llvm-svn: 275111
This patch adds interceptors for dispatch_io_*, dispatch_read and dispatch_write functions. This avoids false positives when using GCD IO. Adding several test cases.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21889
llvm-svn: 275071
This patch adds synchronization between the creation of the GCD data object and destructor’s execution. It’s far from perfect, because ideally we’d want to synchronize the destruction of the last reference (via dispatch_release) and the destructor’s execution, but intercepting objc_release is problematic.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21990
llvm-svn: 274749
We already have interceptors for dispatch_source API (e.g. dispatch_source_set_event_handler), but they currently only handle submission synchronization. We also need to synchronize based on the target queue (serial, concurrent), in other words, we need to use dispatch_callback_wrap. This patch implements that.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21999
llvm-svn: 274619
In the patch that introduced support for GCD barrier blocks, I removed releasing a group when leaving it (in dispatch_group_leave). However, this is necessary to synchronize leaving a group and a notification callback (dispatch_group_notify). Adding this back, simplifying dispatch_group_notify_f and adding a test case.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21927
llvm-svn: 274549
Because we use SCOPED_TSAN_INTERCEPTOR in the dispatch_once interceptor, the original dispatch_once can also be sometimes called (when ignores are enabled or when thr->is_inited is false). However the original dispatch_once function doesn’t expect to find “2” in the storage and it will spin forever (but we use “2” to indicate that the initialization is already done, so no waiting is necessary). This patch makes sure we never call the original dispatch_once.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21976
llvm-svn: 274548
The dispatch_group_async interceptor actually extends the lifetime of the executed block. This means the destructor of the block (and captured variables) is called *after* dispatch_group_leave, which changes the semantics of dispatch_group_async. This patch fixes that.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21816
llvm-svn: 274117
Adding support for GCD barrier blocks in concurrent queues. This uses two sync object in the same way as read-write locks do. This also simplifies the use of dispatch groups (the notifications act as barrier blocks).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21604
llvm-svn: 273893
The non-barrier versions of OSAtomic* functions are semantically mo_relaxed, but the two variants (e.g. OSAtomicAdd32 and OSAtomicAdd32Barrier) are actually aliases of each other, and we cannot have different interceptors for them, because they're actually the same function. Thus, we have to stay conservative and treat the non-barrier versions as mo_acq_rel.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21733
llvm-svn: 273890
There is a "well-known" TSan false positive when using C++ weak_ptr/shared_ptr and code in destructors, e.g. described at <https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=22324>. The "standard" solution is to build and use a TSan-instrumented version of libcxx, which is not trivial for end-users. This patch tries a different approach (on OS X): It adds an interceptor for the specific function in libc++.dylib, which implements the atomic operation that needs to be visible to TSan.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21609
llvm-svn: 273806
This patch replaces all uses of __libc_malloc and friends with the internal allocator.
It seems that the only reason why we have calls to __libc_malloc in the first place was the lack of the internal allocator at the time. Using the internal allocator will also make sure that the system allocator is never used (this is the same behavior as ASan), and we don’t have to worry about working with unknown pointers coming from the system allocator.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21025
llvm-svn: 271916
This is a very simple optimization that gets about 10% speedup for certain programs. We’re currently storing the pointer to the main thread’s ThreadState, but we can store the state directly in a static variable, which avoid the load acquire.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20910
llvm-svn: 271906
We're not building the Go runtime with -mmacosx-version-min, which means it'll have a minimum deployment target set to the system you're building on. Let's make the code compile (and link) with -mmacosx-version-min=10.7.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20670
llvm-svn: 271833
The new annotation was added a while ago, but was not actually used.
Use the annotation to detect linker-initialized mutexes instead
of the broken IsGlobalVar which has both false positives and false
negatives. Remove IsGlobalVar mess.
llvm-svn: 271663
Currently the added test produces false race reports with glibc 2.19,
because DLTS memory is reused by pthread under the hood.
Use the DTLS machinery to intercept new DTLS ranges.
__tls_get_addr known to cause issues for tsan in the past,
so write the interceptor more carefully.
Reviewed in http://reviews.llvm.org/D20927
llvm-svn: 271568
Summary:
As suggested by kcc@ in http://reviews.llvm.org/D20084#441418, move the CheckFailed and Die functions, and their associated callback functionalities in their own separate file.
I expended the build rules to include a new rule that would not include those termination functions, so that another project can define their own.
The tests check-{a,t,m,ub,l,e,df}san are all passing.
Reviewers: llvm-commits, kcc
Subscribers: kubabrecka
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20742
llvm-svn: 271055
We're missing interceptors for dispatch_after and dispatch_after_f. Let's add them to avoid false positives. Added a test case.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20426
llvm-svn: 270071
Summary:
Adds *fstat to the common interceptors.
Removes the now-duplicate fstat interceptor from msan/tsan
This adds fstat to asan/esan, which previously did not intercept it.
Resubmit of http://reviews.llvm.org/D20318 with ios build fixes.
Reviewers: eugenis, vitalybuka, aizatsky
Subscribers: zaks.anna, kcc, bruening, kubabrecka, srhines, danalbert, tberghammer
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20350
llvm-svn: 269981
The previous patch (r269291) was reverted (commented out) because the patch caused leaks that
were detected by LSan and they broke some lit tests. The actual reason was that dlsym allocates
an error string buffer in TLS, and some LSan lit tests are intentionally not scanning TLS for
root pointers. This patch simply makes LSan ignore the allocation from dlsym, because it's
not interesting anyway.
llvm-svn: 269917
Summary:
Adds *fstat to the common interceptors.
Removes the now-duplicate fstat interceptor from msan/tsan
This adds fstat to asan/esan, which previously did not intercept it.
Reviewers: eugenis, vitalybuka, aizatsky
Subscribers: tberghammer, danalbert, srhines, kubabrecka, bruening, kcc
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20318
llvm-svn: 269856
The ignore_interceptors_accesses setting did not have an effect on mmap, so
let's change that. It helps in cases user code is accessing the memory
written to by mmap when the synchronization is ensured by the code that
does not get rebuilt.
(This effects Swift interoperability since it's runtime is mapping memory
which gets accessed by the code emitted into the Swift application by the
compiler.)
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20294
llvm-svn: 269855
http://reviews.llvm.org/rL269291 introduced a memory leak.
Disabling offending call temprorary rather than rolling back the chain
of CLs.
llvm-svn: 269799
To invoke the Swift demangler, we use dlsym to locate swift_demangle. However, dlsym malloc's storage and stores it in thread-local storage. Since allocations from the symbolizer are done with the system allocator (at least in TSan, interceptors are skipped when inside the symbolizer), we will crash when we try to deallocate later using the sanitizer allocator again.
To fix this, let's just not call dlsym from the demangler, and call it during initialization. The dlsym function calls malloc, so it needs to be only used after our allocator is initialized. Adding a Symbolizer::LateInitialize call that is only invoked after all other initializations.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20015
llvm-svn: 269291
Adds *stat to the common interceptors.
Removes the now-duplicate *stat interceptor from msan/tsan/esan.
This adds *stat to asan, which previously did not intercept it.
Patch by Qin Zhao.
llvm-svn: 269223
Another stack where we try to free sync objects,
but don't have a processors is:
// ResetRange
// __interceptor_munmap
// __deallocate_stack
// start_thread
// clone
Again, it is a latent bug that lead to memory leaks.
Also, increase amount of memory we scan in MetaMap::ResetRange.
Without that the test does not fail, as we fail to free
the sync objects on stack.
llvm-svn: 269041
Fixes crash reported in:
https://bugs.chromium.org/p/v8/issues/detail?id=4995
The problem is that we don't have a processor in a free interceptor
during thread exit.
The crash was introduced by introduction of Processors.
However, previously we silently leaked memory which wasn't any better.
llvm-svn: 268782
Summary:
Adds stat/__xstat to the common interceptors.
Removes the now-duplicate stat/__xstat interceptor from msan/tsan/esan.
This adds stat/__xstat to asan, which previously did not intercept it.
Resubmit of http://reviews.llvm.org/D19875 with win build fixes.
Reviewers: aizatsky, eugenis
Subscribers: tberghammer, llvm-commits, danalbert, vitalybuka, bruening, srhines, kubabrecka, kcc
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19890
llvm-svn: 268466
Summary:
Adds stat/__xstat to the common interceptors.
Removes the now-duplicate stat/__xstat interceptor from msan/tsan/esan.
This adds stat/__xstat to asan, which previously did not intercept it.
Reviewers: aizatsky, eugenis
Subscribers: tberghammer, danalbert, srhines, kubabrecka, llvm-commits, vitalybuka, eugenis, kcc, bruening
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19875
llvm-svn: 268440
We used to depend on host gcc. But some distributions got
new gcc recently which broke the check. Generally, we can't
depend that an arbitrary host gcc generates something stable.
Switch to clang.
This has an additional advantage of catching regressions in
clang codegen.
llvm-svn: 268382
In http://reviews.llvm.org/D19100, I introduced a bug: On OS X, existing programs rely on malloc_size() to detect whether a pointer comes from heap memory (malloc_size returns non-zero) or not. We have to distinguish between a zero-sized allocation (where we need to return 1 from malloc_size, due to other binary compatibility reasons, see http://reviews.llvm.org/D19100), and pointers that are not returned from malloc at all.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19653
llvm-svn: 268157
Recent TSan changes (r267678) which factor out parts of ThreadState into a Processor structure broke worker threads on OS X. This fixes it by properly calling ProcCreate for GCD worker threads and by replacing some CHECKs with RAW_CHECK in early process initialization. CHECK() in TSan calls the allocator, which requires a valid Processor.
llvm-svn: 267864
On linux, some architectures had an ABI transition from 64-bit long double
(ie. same as double) to 128-bit long double. On those, glibc symbols
involving long doubles come in two versions, and we need to pass the
correct one to dlvsym when intercepting them.
A few more functions we intercept are also versioned (all printf, scanf,
strtold variants), but there's no need to fix these, as the REAL() versions
are never called.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19555
llvm-svn: 267794
In short, CVE-2016-2143 will crash the machine if a process uses both >4TB
virtual addresses and fork(). ASan, TSan, and MSan will, by necessity, map
a sizable chunk of virtual address space, which is much larger than 4TB.
Even worse, sanitizers will always use fork() for llvm-symbolizer when a bug
is detected. Disable all three by aborting on process initialization if
the running kernel version is not known to contain a fix.
Unfortunately, there's no reliable way to detect the fix without crashing
the kernel. So, we rely on whitelisting - I've included a list of upstream
kernel versions that will work. In case someone uses a distribution kernel
or applied the fix themselves, an override switch is also included.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19576
llvm-svn: 267747
Current interface assumes that Go calls ProcWire/ProcUnwire
to establish the association between thread and proc.
With the wisdom of hindsight, this interface does not work
very well. I had to sprinkle Go scheduler with wire/unwire
calls, and any mistake leads to hard to debug crashes.
This is not something one wants to maintian.
Fortunately, there is a simpler solution. We can ask Go
runtime as to what is the current Processor, and that
question is very easy to answer on Go side.
Switch to such interface.
llvm-svn: 267703
tsan_debugging.cc: In function ‘void* __tsan_get_current_report()’:
tsan_debugging.cc:61:18: warning: cast from type ‘const __tsan::ReportDesc*’
to type ‘void*’ casts away qualifiers [-Wcast-qual]
return (void *)rep;
llvm-svn: 267679
This is reincarnation of http://reviews.llvm.org/D17648 with the bug fix pointed out by Adhemerval (zatrazz).
Currently ThreadState holds both logical state (required for race-detection algorithm, user-visible)
and physical state (various caches, most notably malloc cache). Move physical state in a new
Process entity. Besides just being the right thing from abstraction point of view, this solves several
problems:
Cache everything on P level in Go. Currently we cache on a mix of goroutine and OS thread levels.
This unnecessary increases memory consumption.
Properly handle free operations in Go. Frees are issue by GC which don't have goroutine context.
As the result we could not do anything more than just clearing shadow. For example, we leaked
sync objects and heap block descriptors.
This will allow to get rid of libc malloc in Go (now we have Processor context for internal allocator cache).
This in turn will allow to get rid of dependency on libc entirely.
Potentially we can make Processor per-CPU in C++ mode instead of per-thread, which will
reduce resource consumption.
The distinction between Thread and Processor is currently used only by Go, C++ creates Processor per OS thread,
which is equivalent to the current scheme.
llvm-svn: 267678
The field "pid" in ReportThread is used to store the OS-provided thread ID (pthread_self or gettid). The name "pid" suggests it's a process ID, which it isn't. Let's rename it.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19365
llvm-svn: 266994
The real problem is that sanitizer_print_stack_trace obtains current PC and
expects the PC to be in the stack trace after function calls. We don't
prevent tail calls in sanitizer runtimes, so this assumption does not
necessary hold.
We add "always inline" attribute on PrintCurrentStackSlow to address this
issue, however this solution is not reliable enough, but unfortunately, we
don't see any simple, reliable solution.
Reviewers: samsonov hfinkel kbarton tjablin dvyukov kcc
http://reviews.llvm.org/D19148
Thanks Hal, dvyukov, and kcc for invaluable discussion, I have even borrowed
part of dvyukov's summary as my commit message!
llvm-svn: 266869
In short, CVE-2016-2143 will crash the machine if a process uses both >4TB
virtual addresses and fork(). ASan, TSan, and MSan will, by necessity, map
a sizable chunk of virtual address space, which is much larger than 4TB.
Even worse, sanitizers will always use fork() for llvm-symbolizer when a bug
is detected. Disable all three by aborting on process initialization if
the running kernel version is not known to contain a fix.
Unfortunately, there's no reliable way to detect the fix without crashing
the kernel. So, we rely on whitelisting - I've included a list of upstream
kernel versions that will work. In case someone uses a distribution kernel
or applied the fix themselves, an override switch is also included.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18915
llvm-svn: 266297
The custom zone implementation for OS X must not return 0 (even for 0-sized allocations). Returning 0 indicates that the pointer doesn't belong to the zone. This can break existing applications. The underlaying allocator allocates 1 byte for 0-sized allocations anyway, so returning 1 in this case is okay.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19100
llvm-svn: 266283
We need to handle the case when handler is NULL in dispatch_source_set_cancel_handler and similar interceptors.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18968
llvm-svn: 266080
OS X provides atomic functions in libkern/OSAtomic.h. These provide atomic guarantees and they have alternatives which have barrier semantics. This patch adds proper TSan support for the functions from libkern/OSAtomic.h.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18500
llvm-svn: 265665
To avoid using the public header (tsan_interface_atomic.h), which has different data types, let's add all the __tsan_atomic* functions to tsan_interface.h.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18543
llvm-svn: 265663
Adding an interceptor with two more release+acquire pairs to avoid false positives with dispatch_apply.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18722
llvm-svn: 265662
XPC APIs have async callbacks, and we need some more happen-before edges to avoid false positives. This patch add them, plus a test case (sorry for the long boilerplate code, but XPC just needs all that).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18493
llvm-svn: 265661
GCD has APIs for event sources, we need some more release-acquire pairs to avoid false positives in TSan.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18515
llvm-svn: 265660
In the interceptor for dispatch_sync, we're currently missing synchronization between the callback and the code *after* the call to dispatch_sync. This patch fixes this by adding an extra release+acquire pair to dispatch_sync() and similar APIs. Added a testcase.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18502
llvm-svn: 265659
Summary:
After patch https://lkml.org/lkml/2015/12/21/340 is introduced in
linux kernel, the random gap between stack and heap is increased
from 128M to 36G on 39-bit aarch64. And it is almost impossible
to cover this big range. So we need to disable randomized virtual
space on aarch64 linux.
Reviewers: llvm-commits, zatrazz, dvyukov, rengolin
Subscribers: aemerson, rengolin, tberghammer, danalbert, srhines
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18526
llvm-svn: 265366
We've reset thr->ignore_reads_and_writes, but forget to do
thr->fast_state.ClearIgnoreBit(). So ignores were not effective
reset and fast_state.ignore_bit was corrupted if signal handler
itself uses ignores.
Properly reset/restore fast_state.ignore_bit around signal handlers.
llvm-svn: 265288
This patch fixes the custom ThreadState destruction on OS X to avoid crashing when dispatch_main calls pthread_exit which quits the main thread.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18496
llvm-svn: 264627
Summary:
Currently, sanitizer_common_interceptors.inc has an implicit, undocumented
assumption that the sanitizer including it has previously declared
interceptors for memset and memmove. Since the memset, memmove, and memcpy
routines require interception by many sanitizers, we add them to the
set of common interceptions, both to address the undocumented assumption
and to speed future tool development. They are intercepted under a new
flag intercept_intrin.
The tsan interceptors are removed in favor of the new common versions. The
asan and msan interceptors for these are more complex (they incur extra
interception steps and their function bodies are exposed to the compiler)
so they opt out of the common versions and keep their own.
Reviewers: vitalybuka
Subscribers: zhaoqin, llvm-commits, kcc
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18465
llvm-svn: 264451
On OS X, fork() under TSan asserts (in debug builds only) because REAL(fork) calls some intercepted functions, which check that no internal locks are held via CheckNoLocks(). But the wrapper of fork intentionally holds some locks. This patch fixes that by using ScopedIgnoreInterceptors during the call to REAL(fork). After that, all the fork-based tests seem to pass on OS X, so let's just remove all the UNSUPPORTED: darwin annotations we have.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18409
llvm-svn: 264261
This reverts commits r264068 and r264079, and they were breaking the build and
weren't reverted in time, nor they exhibited expected behaviour from the
reviewers. There is more to discuss than just a test fix.
llvm-svn: 264150
Summary:
After patch https://lkml.org/lkml/2015/12/21/340 is introduced in
linux kernel, the random gap between stack and heap is increased
from 128M to 36G on 39-bit aarch64. And it is almost impossible
to cover this big range. So I think we need to disable randomized
virtual space on aarch64 linux.
Reviewers: kcc, llvm-commits, eugenis, zatrazz, dvyukov, rengolin
Subscribers: rengolin, aemerson, tberghammer, danalbert, srhines, enh
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18003
llvm-svn: 264068
Adds strchr, strchrnul, and strrchr to the common interceptors, under a new
common flag intercept_strchr.
Removes the now-duplicate strchr interceptor from asan and all 3
interceptors from tsan. Previously, asan did not intercept strchrnul, but
does now; previously, msan did not intercept strchr, strchrnul, or strrchr,
but does now.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D18329
Patch by Derek Bruening!
llvm-svn: 263992
`__tsan_get_report_thread` and others can crash if a stack trace is missing, let's add the missing checks.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18306
llvm-svn: 263939
Summary:
Introducing InitializeCommonFlags accross all sanitizers to simplify
common flags management.
Setting coverage=1 when html_cov_report is requested.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18273
llvm-svn: 263820
On OS X, we have pthread_cond_timedwait_relative_np. TSan needs to intercept this API to avoid false positives when using condition variables.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18184
llvm-svn: 263782
On OS X 10.11+, we have "automatic interceptors", so we don't need to use DYLD_INSERT_LIBRARIES when launching instrumented programs. However, non-instrumented programs that load TSan late (e.g. via dlopen) are currently broken, as TSan will still try to initialize, but the program will crash/hang at random places (because the interceptors don't work). This patch adds an explicit check that interceptors are working, and if not, it aborts and prints out an error message suggesting to explicitly use DYLD_INSERT_LIBRARIES.
TSan unit tests run with a statically linked runtime, where interceptors don't work. To avoid aborting the process in this case, the patch replaces `DisableReexec()` with a weak `ReexecDisabled()` function which is defined to return true in unit tests.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18212
llvm-svn: 263695
This patch adds a new TSan report type, ReportTypeMutexInvalidAccess, which is triggered when pthread_mutex_lock or pthread_mutex_unlock returns EINVAL (this means the mutex is invalid, uninitialized or already destroyed).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18132
llvm-svn: 263641
Summary:
Adds strlen to the common interceptors, under a new common flag
intercept_strlen. This provides better sharing of interception code among
sanitizers and cleans up the inconsistent type declarations of the
previously duplicated interceptors.
Removes the now-duplicate strlen interceptor from asan, msan, and tsan.
The entry check semantics are normalized now for msan and asan, whose
private strlen interceptors contained multiple layers of checks that
included impossible-to-reach code. The new semantics are identical to the
old: bypass interception if in the middle of init or if both on Mac and not
initialized; else, call the init routine and proceed.
Patch by Derek Bruening!
Reviewers: samsonov, vitalybuka
Subscribers: llvm-commits, kcc, zhaoqin
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18020
llvm-svn: 263177
Currently, TSan only reports everything in a formatted textual form. The idea behind this patch is to provide a consistent API that can be used to query information contained in a TSan-produced report. User can use these APIs either in a debugger (via a script or directly), or they can use it directly from the process (e.g. in the __tsan_on_report callback). ASan already has a similar API, see http://reviews.llvm.org/D4466.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16191
llvm-svn: 263126
Summary:
__BIG_ENDIAN__ and __LITTLE_ENDIAN__ are not supported by gcc, which
eg. for ubsan Value::getFloatValue will silently fall through to
the little endian branch, breaking display of float values by ubsan.
Use __BYTE_ORDER__ == __ORDER_BIG/LITTLE_ENDIAN__ as the condition
instead, which is supported by both clang and gcc.
Noticed while porting ubsan to s390x.
Patch by Marcin Kościelnicki!
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17660
llvm-svn: 263077
Currently ThreadState holds both logical state (required for race-detection algorithm, user-visible)
and physical state (various caches, most notably malloc cache). Move physical state in a new
Process entity. Besides just being the right thing from abstraction point of view, this solves several
problems:
1. Cache everything on P level in Go. Currently we cache on a mix of goroutine and OS thread levels.
This unnecessary increases memory consumption.
2. Properly handle free operations in Go. Frees are issue by GC which don't have goroutine context.
As the result we could not do anything more than just clearing shadow. For example, we leaked
sync objects and heap block descriptors.
3. This will allow to get rid of libc malloc in Go (now we have Processor context for internal allocator cache).
This in turn will allow to get rid of dependency on libc entirely.
4. Potentially we can make Processor per-CPU in C++ mode instead of per-thread, which will
reduce resource consumption.
The distinction between Thread and Processor is currently used only by Go, C++ creates Processor per OS thread,
which is equivalent to the current scheme.
llvm-svn: 262037
This patch moves recv and recvfrom interceptors from MSan and TSan to
sanitizer_common to enable them in ASan.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17479
llvm-svn: 261841
The first issue is that we longjmp from ScopedInterceptor scope
when called from an ignored lib. This leaves thr->in_ignored_lib set.
This, in turn, disables handling of sigaction. This, in turn,
corrupts tsan state since signals delivered asynchronously.
Another issue is that we can ignore synchronization in asignal
handler, if the signal is delivered into an IgnoreSync region.
Since signals are generally asynchronous, they should ignore
memory access/synchronization/interceptor ignores.
This could lead to false positives in signal handlers.
llvm-svn: 261658
FreeBSD does not install a number of Clang-provided headers for the
compiler in the base system due to incompatibilities between FreeBSD's
and Clang's versions. As a workaround do not use --sysroot=. on FreeBSD
until this is addressed.
llvm.org/pr26651
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17383
llvm-svn: 261229
FreeBSD also needs to have sanitizer_linux_libcdep.cc included,
otherwise linking will fail with "undefined reference to
`__sanitizer::GetRSS()'".
While here, tabify the FreeBSD part, similar to the other parts.
llvm-svn: 260839
r260695 caused extra push/pop instruction pair in __tsan_read1
implementation. Still, that change in InstCombine is believed to
be good, as it reduces the number of instructions performed.
Adjust the expectations to match the newly generated code.
llvm-svn: 260775
Summary:
This is a workaround to a problem in the 3.8 release that affects MIPS and
possibly other targets where the default is not supported but a sibling is
supported.
When TSAN_SUPPORTED_ARCH is not empty, cmake currently attempts to build a
tsan'd libcxx as well as test tsan for the default target regardless of whether
the default target is supported or not. This causes problems on MIPS32 since
tsan is supported for MIPS64 but not MIPS32.
This patch causes cmake to only build the libcxx and run the lit test-suite for
archictures in ${TSAN_SUPPORTED_ARCH}
This re-commit fixes an issue where 'check-tsan' continued to look for the
tsan'd libc++ in the directory it used to be built in.
Reviewers: hans, samsonov
Subscribers: tberghammer, llvm-commits, danalbert, srhines, dvyukov
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16685
llvm-svn: 259542
check-tsan does not pick up the correct libc++.so. It succeeded on my machine
by picking up the libc++.so that was built before making this change.
llvm-svn: 259519
Summary:
This is a workaround to a problem in the 3.8 release that affects MIPS and
possibly other targets where the default is not supported but a sibling is
supported.
When TSAN_SUPPORTED_ARCH is not empty, cmake currently attempts to build a
tsan'd libcxx as well as test tsan for the default target regardless of whether
the default target is supported or not. This causes problems on MIPS32 since
tsan is supported for MIPS64 but not MIPS32.
This patch causes cmake to only build the libcxx and run the lit test-suite for
archictures in ${TSAN_SUPPORTED_ARCH}
Reviewers: hans, samsonov
Subscribers: tberghammer, llvm-commits, danalbert, srhines, dvyukov
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16685
llvm-svn: 259512
Summary:
1. Android doesn't support __thread keyword. So allocate ThreadState
dynamically and store its pointer in one TLS slot provided by Android.
2. On Android, intercepted functions can be called before ThreadState
is initialized. So add test of thr_->is_inited in some places.
3. On Android, intercepted functions can be called after ThreadState
is destroyed. So add a fake dead_thread_state to represent all
destroyed ThreadStates. And that is also why we don't store the pointer
to ThreadState in shadow memory of pthread_self().
Reviewers: kcc, eugenis, dvyukov
Subscribers: kubabrecka, llvm-commits, tberghammer, danalbert, srhines
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15301
llvm-svn: 257866
Summary:
Android doesn't intercept sigfillset, so REAL(sigfillset) is null.
And we can use internal_sigfillset() for all cases.
Reviewers: kcc, eugenis, kubabrecka, dvyukov
Subscribers: llvm-commits, tberghammer, danalbert
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15296
llvm-svn: 257862
With COMPILER_RT_INCLUDE_TESTS turned ON and in a cross compiling
environment, the unit tests fail to link. This patch does the following changes
>Rename COMPILER_RT_TEST_CFLAGS to COMPILER_RT_UNITTEST_CFLAGS to reflect the
way it's used.
>Add COMPILER_RT_TEST_COMPILER_CFLAGS to COMPILER_RT_UNITTEST_CFLAGS so
that cross-compiler would be able to build/compile the unit tests
>Add COMPILER_RT_UNITTEST_LINKFLAGS to COMPILER_RT_UNITTEST_CFLAGS so
that cross-compiler would be able to link the unit tests (if needed)
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16165
llvm-svn: 257783
On OS X, TSan already passes all unit and lit tests, but for real-world applications (even very simple ones), we currently produce a lot of false positive reports about data races. This makes TSan useless at this point, because the noise dominates real bugs. This introduces a runtime flag, "ignore_interceptors_accesses", off by default, which makes TSan ignore all memory accesses that happen from interceptors. This will significantly lower the coverage and miss a lot of bugs, but it eliminates most of the current false positives on OS X.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15189
llvm-svn: 257760
The value of the constant PTHREAD_MUTEX_RECURSIVE is not "1" on FreeBSD and OS X.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16075
llvm-svn: 257758
This broke the build. For example, from
http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/clang-cmake-aarch64-full/builds/1191/steps/cmake%20stage%201/logs/stdio:
-- Compiler-RT supported architectures: aarch64
CMake Error at projects/compiler-rt/cmake/Modules/AddCompilerRT.cmake:170 (string):
string sub-command REPLACE requires at least four arguments.
Call Stack (most recent call first):
projects/compiler-rt/lib/CMakeLists.txt:4 (include)
llvm-svn: 257694
environment, the unit tests fail to link. This patch does the following changes
>Rename COMPILER_RT_TEST_CFLAGS to COMPILER_RT_UNITTEST_CFLAGS to reflect the
way it's used.
>Add COMPILER_RT_TEST_COMPILER_CFLAGS to COMPILER_RT_UNITTEST_CFLAGS so that
cross-compiler would be able to build/compile the unit tests
>Add COMPILER_RT_UNITTEST_LINKFLAGS to COMPILER_RT_UNITTEST_CFLAGS so that
cross-compiler would be able to link the unit tests (if needed)
Differential Revision:http://reviews.llvm.org/D15082
llvm-svn: 257686
This patch adds PIE executable support for aarch64-linux. It adds
two more segments:
- 0x05500000000-0x05600000000: 39-bits PIE program segments
- 0x2aa00000000-0x2ab00000000: 42-bits PIE program segments
Fortunately it is possible to use the same transformation formula for
the new segments range with some adjustments in shadow to memory
formula (it adds a constant offset based on the VMA size).
A simple testcase is also added, however it is disabled on x86 due the
fact it might fail on newer kernels [1].
[1] https://git.kernel.org/linus/d1fd836dcf00d2028c700c7e44d2c23404062c90
llvm-svn: 256184
Interceptors using ScopedInteceptor should never call into user's code before the ScopedInterceptor is out of scope (and its destructor is called). Let's add a DCHECK to enforce that.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15381
llvm-svn: 255996
Some interceptors in tsan_libdispatch_mac.cc currently wrongly use TSAN_SCOPED_INTERCEPTOR/ScopedInterceptor. Its constructor can start ignoring memory accesses, and the destructor the stops this -- however, e.g. dispatch_sync can call user's code, so the ignoring will extend to user's code as well. This is not expected and we should only limit the scope of ScopedInterceptor to TSan code. This patch introduces annotations that mark the beginning and ending of a callback into user's code.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15419
llvm-svn: 255995
We're using the dispatch group itself to synchronize (to call Release() and Acquire() on it), but in dispatch group notifications, the group can already be disposed/deallocated. This causes a later assertion failure at `DCHECK_EQ(*meta, 0);` in `MetaMap::AllocBlock` when the same memory is reused (note that the failure only happens in debug builds).
Fixing this by retaining the group and releasing it in the notification. Adding a stress test case that reproduces this.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15380
llvm-svn: 255494
check_memcpy test added in r254959 fails on some configurations due to
memcpy() calls inserted by Clang. Try harder to avoid them by using
internal_memcpy() where applicable.
llvm-svn: 255287
Summary:
Rather than having to add new "experimental" options each time someone wants to work on bringing a sanitizer to a new platform, this patch makes options for all of them.
The default values for the options are set by the platform checks that would have enabled them, but they can be overridden on or off.
Reviewers: kubabrecka, samsonov
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14846
llvm-svn: 255170
Summary:
Android doesn't have __libc_malloc and related allocation
functions. As its dynamic linker doesn't use malloc, so
we can use REAL(malloc) to replace __libc_malloc safely.
Reviewers: kcc, eugenis, dvyukov
Subscribers: llvm-commits, tberghammer, danalbert, srhines
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15297
llvm-svn: 255167
check_memcpy test added in r254959 fails on some configurations due to
memset() calls inserted by Clang. Try harder to avoid them:
* Explicitly use internal_memset() instead of empty braced-initializer.
* Replace "new T()" with "new T", as the former generates zero-initialization
for structs in C++11.
llvm-svn: 255136
This patch provides the assembly support for setjmp/longjmp for use
with the thread sanitizer. This is a big more complicated than for
aarch64, because sibcalls are only legal under our ABIs if the TOC
pointer is unchanged. Since the true setjmp function trashes the TOC
pointer, and we have to leave the stack in a correct state, we emulate
the setjmp function rather than branching to it.
We also need to materialize the TOC for cases where the _setjmp code
is called from libc. This is done differently under the ELFv1 and
ELFv2 ABIs.
llvm-svn: 255059
This patch is by Simone Atzeni with portions by Adhemerval Zanella.
This contains the LLVM patches to enable the thread sanitizer for
PPC64, both big- and little-endian. Two different virtual memory
sizes are supported: Old kernels use a 44-bit address space, while
newer kernels require a 46-bit address space.
There are two companion patches that will be added shortly. There is
a Clang patch to actually turn on the use of the thread sanitizer for
PPC64. There is also a patch that I wrote to provide interceptor
support for setjmp/longjmp on PPC64.
Patch discussion at reviews.llvm.org/D12841.
llvm-svn: 255057
Summary:
It was barely supported for a several years for now, somewhat
rotten and doesn't correspond to the way we build/test TSan runtime
in Clang anymore.
CMake build has proper compile flags, library layout, build
dependencies etc.
Shell scripts that depended on the output of Makefile.old are
either obsolete now (check_cmake.sh), or moved to lit tests
(check_memcpy.sh), or kept as a standalone scripts not suitable
for generic test suite, but invoked on bots (check_analyze.sh).
It is not used on bots anymore: all "interesting" configurations
(gcc/clang as a host compiler; debug/release build types) are now
tested via CMake.
Reviewers: dvyukov, kcc
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15316
llvm-svn: 255032
Another attempt at fixing tsan_invisible_barrier.
Current implementation causes:
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=25643
There were several unsuccessful iterations for this functionality:
Initially it was implemented in user code using REAL(pthread_barrier_wait). But pthread_barrier_wait is not supported on MacOS. Futexes are linux-specific for this matter.
Then we switched to atomics+usleep(10). But usleep produced parasitic "as-if synchronized via sleep" messages in reports which failed some output tests.
Then we switched to atomics+sched_yield. But this produced tons of tsan- visible events, which lead to "failed to restore stack trace" failures.
Move implementation into runtime and use internal_sched_yield in the wait loop.
This way tsan should see no events from the barrier, so not trace overflows and
no "as-if synchronized via sleep" messages.
llvm-svn: 255030
This patch adds release and acquire semantics for dispatch groups, plus a test case.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15048
llvm-svn: 255020
Check that TSan runtime doesn't contain compiler-inserted calls
to memset/memmove functions.
In future, we may consider moving this test to test/sanitizer_common,
as we don't want to have compiler-inserted memcpy/memmove calls in
any sanitizer runtime.
llvm-svn: 254955
De-hardcode path to TSan-ified executable: pass it as an input to
the scripts. Fix them so that they don't write to the current
directory. Remove their invocation from Makefile.old: they are
broken there anyway, as check_analyze.sh now matches trunk Clang.
llvm-svn: 254936
This script is superseded by lit test suite integrated into CMake
for quite a while now. It doesn't support many tests, and require
custom hacks for a few other.
llvm-svn: 254932
This option builds TSan runtime with extra debug printfs
and stats collection. This build configuration is developer-only
and should rarely be used, but we need to keep it to make sure
it doesn't bitrot.
llvm-svn: 254818
mac_ignore_invalid_free was helpful when ASan runtime used to intercept
CFAllocator and sometimes corrupted its memory. This behavior had been long
gone, and the flag was unused.
This patch also deletes ReportMacCfReallocUnknown(), which was used by the
CFAllocator realloc() wrapper.
llvm-svn: 254722
On OS X, there are other-than-pthread locking APIs that are used quite extensively - OSSpinLock and os_lock_lock. Let's add interceptors for those.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14987
llvm-svn: 254611
In AddressSanitizer, we have the MaybeReexec method to detect when we're running without DYLD_INSERT_LIBRARIES (in which case interceptors don't work) and re-execute with the environment variable set. On OS X 10.11+, this is no longer necessary, but to have ThreadSanitizer supported on older versions of OS X, let's use the same method as well. This patch moves the implementation from `asan/` into `sanitizer_common/`.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15123
llvm-svn: 254600
This patch adds release and acquire semantics for libdispatch semaphores and a test case.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14992
llvm-svn: 254412
1) There's a few wrongly defined things in tsan_interceptors.cc,
2) a typo in tsan_rtl_amd64.S which calls setjmp instead of sigsetjmp in the interceptor, and
3) on OS X, accessing an mprotected page results in a SIGBUS (and not SIGSEGV).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15052
llvm-svn: 254299
On OS X, for weak function (that user can override by providing their own implementation in the main binary), we need extern `"C" SANITIZER_INTERFACE_ATTRIBUTE SANITIZER_WEAK_ATTRIBUTE NOINLINE`.
Fixes a broken test case on OS X, java_symbolization.cc, which uses a weak function __tsan_symbolize_external.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14907
llvm-svn: 254298
Serial queues need extra happens-before between individual tasks executed in the same queue. This patch adds `Acquire(queue)` before the executed task and `Release(queue)` just after it (for serial queues only). Added a test case.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15011
llvm-svn: 254229
This patch ports the assembly file tsan_rtl_amd64.S to OS X, where we need several changes:
* Some assembler directives are not available on OS X (.hidden, .type, .size)
* Symbol names need to start with an underscore (added a ASM_TSAN_SYMBOL macro for that).
* To make the interceptors work, we ween to name the function "_wrap_setjmp" (added ASM_TSAN_SYMBOL_INTERCEPTOR for that).
* Calling the original setjmp is done with a simple "jmp _setjmp".
* __sigsetjmp doesn't exist on OS X.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14947
llvm-svn: 254228
When a race on file descriptors is detected, `FindThreadByUidLocked()` is called to retrieve ThreadContext with a specific unique_id. However, this ThreadContext might not exist in the thread registry anymore (it may have been recycled), in which case `FindThreadByUidLocked` will cause an assertion failure in `GetThreadLocked`. Adding a test case that reproduces this, producing:
FATAL: ThreadSanitizer CHECK failed: sanitizer_common/sanitizer_thread_registry.h:92 "((tid)) < ((n_contexts_))" (0x34, 0x34)
This patch fixes this by replacing the loop with `FindThreadContextLocked`.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14984
llvm-svn: 254223
This patch unify the 39 and 42-bit support for AArch64 by using an external
memory read to check the runtime detected VMA and select the better mapping
and transformation. Although slower, this leads to same instrumented binary
to be independent of the kernel.
Along with this change this patch also fix some 42-bit failures with
ALSR disable by increasing the upper high app memory threshold and also
the 42-bit madvise value for non large page set.
llvm-svn: 254151
We need to intercept libdispatch APIs (dispatch_sync, dispatch_async, etc.) to add synchronization between the code that submits the task and the code that gets executed (possibly on a different thread). This patch adds release+acquire semantics for dispatch_sync, and dispatch_async (plus their "_f" and barrier variants). The synchronization is done on malloc'd contexts (separate for each submitted block/callback). Added tests to show usage of dispatch_sync and dispatch_async, for cases where we expect no warnings and for cases where TSan finds races.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14745
llvm-svn: 253982
On OS X, interceptors don't work in unit tests, so calloc() calls the system allocator. We need to use user_calloc() instead.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14918
llvm-svn: 253979
This patch fixes the __cxa_guard_acquire, __cxa_guard_release and __cxa_guard_abort interceptors on OS X. They apparently work on Linux just by having the same name, but on OS X, we actually need to use TSAN_INTERCEPTOR.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14868
llvm-svn: 253776
We need to call the intercepted version of pthread_detach. Secondly, PTHREAD_CREATE_JOINABLE and PTHREAD_CREATE_DETACHED are not 0 and 1 on OS X, so we need to properly pass these constants and not just a bool.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14837
llvm-svn: 253775
The tsan_test_util_posix.cc implementation of mutexes call pthread APIs directly, which on OS X don't end up calling the intercepted versions and we miss the synchronization. This patch changes the unit tests to directly call the intercepted versions. This fixes several test failures on OS X.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14835
llvm-svn: 253774
When ASan currently detects a bug, by default it will only print out the text
of the report to stderr. This patch changes this behavior and writes the full
text of the report to syslog before we terminate the process. It also calls
os_trace (Activity Tracing available on OS X and iOS) with a message saying
that the report is available in syslog. This is useful, because this message
will be shown in the crash log.
For this to work, the patch makes sure we store the full report into
error_message_buffer unconditionally, and it also strips out ANSI escape
sequences from the report (they are used when producing colored reports).
I've initially tried to log to syslog during printing, which is done on Android
right now. The advantage is that if we crash during error reporting or the
produced error does not go through ScopedInErrorReport, we would still get a
(partial) message in the syslog. However, that solution is very problematic on
OS X. One issue is that the logging routine uses GCD, which may spawn a new
thread on its behalf. In many cases, the reporting logic locks threadRegistry,
which leads to deadlocks.
Reviewed at http://reviews.llvm.org/D13452
(In addition, add sanitizer_common_libcdep.cc to buildgo.sh to avoid
build failures on Linux.)
llvm-svn: 253688
On OS X, this unit test (ThreadSpecificDtors) fails, because the new and delete operators actually call the overridden operators, which end up using TLVs and crash. Since C++'s new and delete is not important in this test, let's just replace them with a local variable. This fixes the test on OS X.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14826
llvm-svn: 253583
On OS X, the thread finalization is fragile due to thread-local variables destruction order. I've seen cases where the we destroy the ThreadState too early and subsequent thread-local values' destructors call interceptors again. Let's replace the TLV-based thread finalization method with libpthread hooks. The notification PTHREAD_INTROSPECTION_THREAD_TERMINATE is called *after* all TLVs have been destroyed.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14777
llvm-svn: 253560
On OS X, we build a dylib of the TSan runtime, which doesn't necessarily need to contain debugging symbols (and file and line information), so llvm-symbolizer might not be able to find file names for TSan internal frames. FrameIsInternal currently only considers filenames, but we should simply treat all frames within `libclang_rt.tsan_osx_dynamic.dylib` as internal. This patch treats all modules starting with `libclang_rt.tsan_` as internal, because there may be more runtimes for other platforms in the future.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14813
llvm-svn: 253559
Reimplement dispatch_once in an interceptor to solve these issues that may produce false positives with TSan on OS X:
1) there is a racy load inside an inlined part of dispatch_once,
2) the fast path in dispatch_once doesn't perform an acquire load, so we don't properly synchronize the initialization and subsequent uses of whatever is initialized,
3) dispatch_once is already used in a lot of already-compiled code, so TSan doesn't see the inlined fast-path.
This patch uses a trick to avoid ever taking the fast path (by never storing ~0 into the predicate), which means the interceptor will always be called even from already-compiled code. Within the interceptor, our own atomic reads and writes are not written into shadow cells, so the race in the inlined part is not reported (because the accesses are only loads).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14811
llvm-svn: 253552
Symbolizers can call malloc/realloc/free/..., which we don't want to intercept. This is already implemented on Linux, let's do it for OS X as well.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14710
llvm-svn: 253460
This patch adds assembly routines to enable setjmp/longjmp for aarch64
on linux. It fixes:
* test/tsan/longjmp2.cc
* test/tsan/longjmp3.cc
* test/tsan/longjmp4.cc
* test/tsan/signal_longjmp.cc
I also checked with perlbench from specpu2006 (it fails to run
with missing setjmp/longjmp intrumentation).
llvm-svn: 253205
Currently, we crash on finalization of detached threads, because we'll try to clear the ThreadState twice.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14644
llvm-svn: 253079
The default symbolizer, `llvm-symbolizer` provides sizes for global symbols. On OS X, we want to also allow using `atos` (because it's available everywhere and users don't need to copy/install it) and `dladdr` (it's the only available option when running in a sandbox). However, these symbolizers do not supply the symbol sizes, only names and starting addresses. This patch changes the reporting functions to hide the size of the symbol when this value is unavailable, and modifies tests to make this part of the report "optional".
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14608
llvm-svn: 252896
The TSan unit test build currently fails if we're also building the iOS parts of compiler-rt, because `TSAN_SUPPORTED_ARCH` contains ARM64. For unit tests, we need to filter this only to host architecture(s).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14604
llvm-svn: 252873
Summary:
On Darwin, interposed functions are prefixed with "wrap_". On Linux,
they are prefixed with "__interceptor_".
Reviewers: dvyukov, samsonov, glider, kcc, kubabrecka
Subscribers: zaks.anna, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14512
llvm-svn: 252695
Fixing `tsan_interceptors.cc`, which on OS X produces a bunch of warnings about unused constants and functions.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14381
llvm-svn: 252165
On OS X, memcpy and memmove are actually aliases of the same implementation, which means the interceptor of memcpy is also invoked when memmove is called. The current implementation of the interceptor uses `internal_memcpy` to perform the actual memory operation, which can produce an incorrect result when memmove semantics are expected. Let's call `internal_memmove` instead.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14336
llvm-svn: 252162
A call to memmove is used early during new thread initialization on OS X. This patch uses the `COMMON_INTERCEPTOR_NOTHING_IS_INITIALIZED` check, similarly to how we deal with other early-used interceptors.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14377
llvm-svn: 252161
TSan has a re-implementation of `pthread_once` in its interceptor, which assumes that the `pthread_once_t *once_control` pointer is actually pointing to a "storage" which is zero-initialized and used for the atomic operations. However, that's not true on OS X, where pthread_once_t is a structure, that contains a header (with a magic value) and the actual storage follows after that. This patch skips the header to make the interceptor work on OS X.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14379
llvm-svn: 252160
This implements a "poor man's TLV" to be used for TSan's ThreadState on OS X. Based on the fact that `pthread_self()` is always available and reliable and returns a valid pointer to memory, we'll use the shadow memory of this pointer as a thread-local storage. No user code should ever read/write to this internal libpthread structure, so it's safe to use it for this purpose. We lazily allocate the ThreadState object and store the pointer here.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14288
llvm-svn: 252159
TSan needs to use a custom malloc zone on OS X, which is already implemented in ASan. This patch uses the sanitizer_common implementation in `sanitizer_malloc_mac.inc` for TSan as well.
Reviewed at http://reviews.llvm.org/D14330
llvm-svn: 252155
On OS X, GCD worker threads are created without a call to pthread_create. We need to properly register these threads with ThreadCreate and ThreadStart. This patch uses a libpthread API (`pthread_introspection_hook_install`) to get notifications about new threads and about threads that are about to be destroyed.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14328
llvm-svn: 252049
Updating the shadow memory initialization in `tsan_platform_mac.cc` to also initialize the meta shadow and to mprotect the memory ranges that need to be avoided.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14324
llvm-svn: 252044
This patch moves a few functions from `sanitizer_linux_libcdep.cc` to `sanitizer_posix_libcdep.cc` in order to use them on OS X as well. Plus a few more small build fixes.
This is part of an effort to port TSan to OS X, and it's one the very first steps. Don't expect TSan on OS X to actually work or pass tests at this point.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14235
llvm-svn: 251918
This patch modifies `tsan_interceptors.cc` to be buildable on OS X. Several of the intercepted methods are not available on OS X, so we need to `#if !SANITIZER_MAC` them. Plus a few other fixes, e.g. `pthread_yield` doesn't exist, let's use `internal_sched_yield` instead.
This is part of an effort to port TSan to OS X, and it's one the very first steps. Don't expect TSan on OS X to actually work or pass tests at this point.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14237
llvm-svn: 251916
Hi, this patch adds a CMake flag called `COMPILER_RT_ENABLE_TSAN_OSX`, which is off by default. If enabled, the build system will be building the OS X version of the TSan runtime library (called `libclang_rt.tsan_osx_dynamic.dylib`). I'll submit patches that fix OS X build errors shortly.
This is part of an effort to port TSan to OS X, and it's one the very first steps. Don't expect TSan on OS X to actually work or pass tests at this point.
llvm-svn: 251915
This reverts commit r250823.
Replacing at least some of empty
constructors with "= default" variants is a semantical change which we
don't want. E.g. __tsan::ClockBlock contains a union of large arrays,
and it's critical for correctness and performance that we don't memset()
these arrays in the constructor.
llvm-svn: 251717
When ASan currently detects a bug, by default it will only print out the text
of the report to stderr. This patch changes this behavior and writes the full
text of the report to syslog before we terminate the process. It also calls
os_trace (Activity Tracing available on OS X and iOS) with a message saying
that the report is available in syslog. This is useful, because this message
will be shown in the crash log.
For this to work, the patch makes sure we store the full report into
error_message_buffer unconditionally, and it also strips out ANSI escape
sequences from the report (they are used when producing colored reports).
I've initially tried to log to syslog during printing, which is done on Android
right now. The advantage is that if we crash during error reporting or the
produced error does not go through ScopedInErrorReport, we would still get a
(partial) message in the syslog. However, that solution is very problematic on
OS X. One issue is that the logging routine uses GCD, which may spawn a new
thread on its behalf. In many cases, the reporting logic locks threadRegistry,
which leads to deadlocks.
Reviewed at http://reviews.llvm.org/D13452
(In addition, add sanitizer_common_libcdep.cc to buildgo.sh to avoid
build failures on Linux.)
llvm-svn: 251577
This patch adds a runtime check for asan, dfsan, msan, and tsan for
architectures that support multiple VMA size (like aarch64). Currently
the check only prints a warning indicating which is the VMA built and
expected against the one detected at runtime.
llvm-svn: 247413
Race deduplication code proved to be a performance bottleneck in the past if suppressions/annotations are used, or just some races left unaddressed. And we still get user complaints about this:
https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/thread-sanitizer/hB0WyiTI4e4
ReportRace already has several layers of caching for racy pcs/addresses to make deduplication faster. However, ReportRace still takes a global mutex (ThreadRegistry and ReportMutex) during deduplication and also calls mmap/munmap (which take process-wide semaphore in kernel), this makes deduplication non-scalable.
This patch moves race deduplication outside of global mutexes and also removes all mmap/munmap calls.
As the result, race_stress.cc with 100 threads and 10000 iterations become 30x faster:
before:
real 0m21.673s
user 0m5.932s
sys 0m34.885s
after:
real 0m0.720s
user 0m23.646s
sys 0m1.254s
http://reviews.llvm.org/D12554
llvm-svn: 246758
This patch adds support for tsan on aarch64-linux with 42-bit VMA
(current default config for 64K pagesize kernels). The support is
enabled by defining the SANITIZER_AARCH64_VMA to 42 at build time
for both clang/llvm and compiler-rt. The default VMA is 39 bits.
It also enabled tsan for previous supported VMA (39).
llvm-svn: 246330
Summary:
This is another step in a multi-step refactoring to move add_sanitizer_rt_symbols in the direction of other add_* functions in compiler-rt.
Changes to CMakeLists files are all minimal except ubsan which tests the new ARCHS loop.
Further cleanup patches will follow.
Reviewers: filcab, bogner, kubabrecka, zaks.anna, glider, samsonov
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12410
llvm-svn: 246199
Summary: This is the first step in a multi-step refactoring to move add_sanitizer_rt_symbols in the direction of other add_* functions in compiler-rt.
Reviewers: filcab, bogner, kubabrecka, zaks.anna, glider, samsonov
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12386
llvm-svn: 246102
Summary: This refactoring moves much of the Apple-specific behavior into a function in AddCompilerRT. The next cleanup patch will remove more of the if(APPLE) checks in the outlying CMakeLists.
This patch adds a bunch of new functionality to add_compiler_rt_runtime so that the target names don't need to be reconstructed outside the call. It also updates some of the call sites to exercise the new functionality, but does not update all uses fully. Subsequent patches will further update call sites and move to using the new features.
Reviewers: filcab, bogner, kubabrecka, zaks.anna, glider, samsonov
Subscribers: beanz, rengolin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12292
llvm-svn: 245970
Summary:
Merge "exitcode" flag from ASan, LSan, TSan and "exit_code" from MSan
into one entity. Additionally, make sure sanitizer_common now uses the
value of common_flags()->exitcode when dying on error, so that this
flag will automatically work for other sanitizers (UBSan and DFSan) as
well.
User-visible changes:
* "exit_code" MSan runtime flag is now deprecated. If explicitly
specified, this flag will take precedence over "exitcode".
The users are encouraged to migrate to the new version.
* __asan_set_error_exit_code() and __msan_set_exit_code() functions
are removed. With few exceptions, we don't support changing runtime
flags during program execution - we can't make them thread-safe.
The users should use __sanitizer_set_death_callback()
that would call _exit() with proper exit code instead.
* Plugin tools (LSan and UBSan) now inherit the exit code of the parent
tool. In particular, this means that ASan would now crash the program
with exit code "1" instead of "23" if it detects leaks.
Reviewers: kcc, eugenis
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12120
llvm-svn: 245734
Summary: I've copy/pasted the LLVM_NOEXCEPT definition macro goo from LLVM's Compiler.h. Is there somewhere I should put this in Compiler RT? Is there a useful header to define/share things like this?
Reviewers: samsonov
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11780
llvm-svn: 244453
This patch enabled TSAN for aarch64 with 39-bit VMA layout. As defined by
tsan_platform.h the layout used is:
0000 4000 00 - 0200 0000 00: main binary
2000 0000 00 - 4000 0000 00: shadow memory
4000 0000 00 - 5000 0000 00: metainfo
5000 0000 00 - 6000 0000 00: -
6000 0000 00 - 6200 0000 00: traces
6200 0000 00 - 7d00 0000 00: -
7d00 0000 00 - 7e00 0000 00: heap
7e00 0000 00 - 7fff ffff ff: modules and main thread stack
Which gives it about 8GB for main binary, 4GB for heap and 8GB for
modules and main thread stack.
Most of tests are passing, with the exception of:
* ignore_lib0, ignore_lib1, ignore_lib3 due a kernel limitation for
no support to make mmap page non-executable.
* longjmp tests due missing specialized assembly routines.
These tests are xfail for now.
The only tsan issue still showing is:
rtl/TsanRtlTest/Posix.ThreadLocalAccesses
Which still required further investigation. The test is disable for
aarch64 for now.
llvm-svn: 244055