Fix a buffer overrun that can occur when parsing '%c' at the end of a
filename pattern string.
rdar://74571261
Reviewed By: kastiglione
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97239
Add support for expanding the %t filename specifier in LLVM_PROFILE_FILE
to the TMPDIR environment variable. This is supported on all platforms.
On Darwin, TMPDIR is used to specify a temporary application-specific
scratch directory. When testing apps on remote devices, it can be
challenging for the host device to determine the correct TMPDIR, so it's
helpful to have the runtime do this work.
rdar://68524185
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87332
InstrProfilingBuffer.c.o is generic code that must support compilation
into freestanding projects. This gets rid of its dependence on the
_getpagesize symbol from libc, shifting it to InstrProfilingFile.c.o.
This fixes a build failure seen in a firmware project.
rdar://66249701
This avoids the test failure that was introduced in rG32bddad where
this function pulls in the rest of InstrProfilingFile.c which is
undesirable in use cases when profile runtime is being used without
the rest of libc.
This also allows additional cleanup by eliminating another variable
from platforms that don't need it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76750
On Fuchsia, we always use the continuous mode with runtime counter
relocation, so there's no need for atexit hook or support for dumping
the profile manually.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76556
This is an alternative to the continous mode that was implemented in
D68351. This mode relies on padding and the ability to mmap a file over
the existing mapping which is generally only available on POSIX systems
and isn't suitable for other platforms.
This change instead introduces the ability to relocate counters at
runtime using a level of indirection. On every counter access, we add a
bias to the counter address. This bias is stored in a symbol that's
provided by the profile runtime and is initially set to zero, meaning no
relocation. The runtime can mmap the profile into memory at abitrary
location, and set bias to the offset between the original and the new
counter location, at which point every subsequent counter access will be
to the new location, which allows updating profile directly akin to the
continous mode.
The advantage of this implementation is that doesn't require any special
OS support. The disadvantage is the extra overhead due to additional
instructions required for each counter access (overhead both in terms of
binary size and performance) plus duplication of counters (i.e. one copy
in the binary itself and another copy that's mmapped).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69740
The executable acquires an advisory record lock (`fcntl(fd, F_SETLKW, *)`) on a profile file.
Merge pool size >= 10 may be beneficial when the concurrency is large.
Also fix a small problem about snprintf. It can cause the filename to be truncated after %m.
Reviewed By: davidxl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71970
When writing out a profile, avoid allocating a page on the stack for the
purpose of writing out zeroes, as some embedded environments do not have
enough stack space to accomodate this.
Instead, use a small, fixed-size zero buffer that can be written
repeatedly.
For a synthetic file with >100,000 functions, I did not measure a
significant difference in profile write times. We are removing a
page-length zero-fill `memset()` in favor of several smaller buffered
`fwrite()` calls: in practice, I am not sure there is much of a
difference. The performance impact is only expected to affect the
continuous sync mode (%c) -- zero padding is less than 8 bytes in all
other cases.
rdar://57810014
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71323
Continuous mode is not yet supported on Fuchsia/Windows, however an
error should not be reported unless the user attempted to actually
enable continuous mode.
Make it possible to use online profile merging ("%m" mode) with
continuous sync ("%c" mode).
To implement this, the merged profile is locked in the runtime
initialization step and either a) filled out for the first time or b)
checked for compatibility. Then, the profile can simply be mmap()'d with
MAP_SHARED set. With the mmap() in place, counter updates from every
process which uses an image are mapped onto the same set of physical
pages assigned by the filesystem cache. After the mmap() is set up, the
profile is unlocked.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69586
Split out the logic to get the size of a merged profile and to do a
compatibility check. This can be shared with both the continuous+merging
mode implementation, as well as the runtime-allocated counters
implementation planned for Fuchsia.
Lifted out of D69586.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70135
Use the printf macros from inttypes.h to sidestep -Wformat issues:
/var/lib/buildbot/sanitizer-buildbot6/sanitizer-x86_64-linux-android/build/llvm-project/compiler-rt/lib/profile/InstrProfilingFile.c:425:14: error: format specifies type 'long long' but the argument has type 'off_t' (aka 'long') [-Werror,-Wformat]
CurrentFileOffset, PageSize);
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
/var/lib/buildbot/sanitizer-buildbot6/sanitizer-x86_64-linux-android/build/llvm-project/compiler-rt/lib/profile/InstrProfilingPort.h:114:50: note: expanded from macro 'PROF_ERR'
fprintf(stderr, "LLVM Profile Error: " Format, __VA_ARGS__);
~~~~~~ ^~~~~~~~~~~
/var/lib/buildbot/sanitizer-buildbot6/sanitizer-x86_64-linux-android/build/llvm-project/compiler-rt/lib/profile/InstrProfilingFile.c:461:41: error: format specifies type 'unsigned long long' but the argument has type 'uint64_t' (aka 'unsigned long') [-Werror,-Wformat]
strerror(errno), CountersBegin, PageAlignedCountersLength, Fileno,
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
/var/lib/buildbot/sanitizer-buildbot6/sanitizer-x86_64-linux-android/build/llvm-project/compiler-rt/lib/profile/InstrProfilingPort.h:114:50: note: expanded from macro 'PROF_ERR'
fprintf(stderr, "LLVM Profile Error: " Format, __VA_ARGS__);
~~~~~~ ^~~~~~~~~~~
/var/lib/buildbot/sanitizer-buildbot6/sanitizer-x86_64-linux-android/build/llvm-project/compiler-rt/lib/profile/InstrProfilingFile.c:462:9: error: format specifies type 'unsigned long long' but the argument has type 'uint64_t' (aka 'unsigned long') [-Werror,-Wformat]
FileOffsetToCounters);
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
/var/lib/buildbot/sanitizer-buildbot6/sanitizer-x86_64-linux-android/build/llvm-project/compiler-rt/lib/profile/InstrProfilingPort.h:114:50: note: expanded from macro 'PROF_ERR'
fprintf(stderr, "LLVM Profile Error: " Format, __VA_ARGS__);
Add support for continuously syncing profile counter updates to a file.
The motivation for this is that programs do not always exit cleanly. On
iOS, for example, programs are usually killed via a signal from the OS.
Running atexit() handlers after catching a signal is unreliable, so some
method for progressively writing out profile data is necessary.
The approach taken here is to mmap() the `__llvm_prf_cnts` section onto
a raw profile. To do this, the linker must page-align the counter and
data sections, and the runtime must ensure that counters are mapped to a
page-aligned offset within a raw profile.
Continuous mode is (for the moment) incompatible with the online merging
mode. This limitation is lifted in https://reviews.llvm.org/D69586.
Continuous mode is also (for the moment) incompatible with value
profiling, as I'm not sure whether there is interest in this and the
implementation may be tricky.
As I have not been able to test extensively on non-Darwin platforms,
only Darwin support is included for the moment. However, continuous mode
may "just work" without modification on Linux and some UNIX-likes. AIUI
the default value for the GNU linker's `--section-alignment` flag is set
to the page size on many systems. This appears to be true for LLD as
well, as its `no_nmagic` option is on by default. Continuous mode will
not "just work" on Fuchsia or Windows, as it's not possible to mmap() a
section on these platforms. There is a proposal to add a layer of
indirection to the profile instrumentation to support these platforms.
rdar://54210980
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68351
When the %m filename pattern is used, the filename is unique to each
image, so the cached value is wrong.
It struck me that the full filename isn't something that's recomputed
often, so perhaps it doesn't need to be cached at all. David Li pointed
out we can go further and just hide lprofCurFilename. This may regress
workflows that depend on using the set-filename API to change filenames
across all loaded DSOs, but this is expected to be very rare.
rdar://55137071
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69137
llvm-svn: 375301
Summary:
User code can open a file on its own and pass it to the runtime, rather than
specifying a name and having the runtime open the file. This supports the use
case where a process cannot open a file on its own but can receive a file
descriptor from another process.
Relanding https://reviews.llvm.org/D62541. The original revision unlocked
the file before calling flush, this revision fixes that.
Reviewers: Dor1s, davidxl
Reviewed By: Dor1s
Subscribers: #sanitizers, llvm-commits
Tags: #sanitizers, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63581
llvm-svn: 364231
This caused instrumented Clang to become crashy. See llvm-commits thread
for repro steps.
This also reverts follow-up r362716 which added test cases.
> Author: Sajjad Mirza
>
> Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D62541
llvm-svn: 363134
r355343 was landed and was reverted in r355363 due to build breakage.
This patch adds Linux/Windows support on top of r355343.
In this patch, Darwin should be working with testing case. Linux should be working,
I will enable the testing case in a follwup diff. Windows/Other should be building.
Correct implementation for Other platforms will be added.
Thanks David for reviewing the original diff, helping me with issues on Linux, and
giving suggestions for adding support for Other platforms.
llvm-svn: 355701
to reflect the new license.
We understand that people may be surprised that we're moving the header
entirely to discuss the new license. We checked this carefully with the
Foundation's lawyer and we believe this is the correct approach.
Essentially, all code in the project is now made available by the LLVM
project under our new license, so you will see that the license headers
include that license only. Some of our contributors have contributed
code under our old license, and accordingly, we have retained a copy of
our old license notice in the top-level files in each project and
repository.
llvm-svn: 351636
This ports the profiling runtime on Fuchsia and enables the
instrumentation. Unlike on other platforms, Fuchsia doesn't use
files to dump the instrumentation data since on Fuchsia, filesystem
may not be accessible to the instrumented process. We instead use
the data sink to pass the profiling data to the system the same
sanitizer runtimes do.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47208
llvm-svn: 337881
Summary:
Add __llvm_profile_get_filename interface to get the profile filename,
which can be used for identifying which profile file belongs to an app
when multiple binaries are instrumented and dumping profiles into the
same directory. The filename includes the path.
Reviewers: davidxl
Subscribers: delcypher, #sanitizers, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49529
llvm-svn: 337482
The profile library was missing some includes and was erroneously using
ftruncate. WinASan was using `= {0}` to initialize structs, which
creates -Wmissing-field-initializers and -Wmissing-braces warnings with
clang. Use `= {}` instead, since this is C++.
llvm-svn: 330616
This patch fixes the following issues:
(1) The strong definition of the merge hook function was not working which
breaks the online value profile merging. This patch removes the weak
attribute of VPMergeHook and assigns the value dynamically.
(2) Truncate the proifle file so that we don't have garbage data at the end of
the file.
(3) Add new __llvm_profile_instrument_target_value() interface to do the value
profile update in batch. This is needed as the original incremental by 1
in __llvm_profile_instrument_target() is too slow for online merge.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44847
llvm-svn: 328987
This includes a few nice bits of refactoring (e.g splitting out the
exclusive locking code into a common utility).
Hopefully the Windows support is fixed now.
Patch by Rainer Orth!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40944
llvm-svn: 320731
This includes a few nice bits of refactoring (e.g splitting out the
exclusive locking code into a common utility).
Patch by Rainer Orth!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40944
llvm-svn: 320726
The buildbots have shown that -Wstrict-prototypes behaves differently in GCC
and Clang so we should keep it disabled until Clang follows GCC's behaviour
llvm-svn: 312246
Clang 5 supports -Wstrict-prototypes. We should use it to catch any C
declarations that declare a non-prototype function.
rdar://33705313
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36669
llvm-svn: 312240
Introduces a 'owner' struct to include the overridable write
method and the write context in C.
This allows easy introdution of new member API to help reduce
profile merge time in the follow up patch.
llvm-svn: 306432
And also r295364 [PGO] remove unintended debug trace. NFC
I removed the test case: it's hard to write synchronized test b/w processes
in this framework. I will revisit the test-case later.
llvm-svn: 298113
Summary:
We found a nondeterministic behavior when doing online profile merging
for multi-process applications. The application forks a sub-process and
sub-process sets to get SIGKILL when the parent process exits,
The first process gets the lock, and dumps the profile. The second one
will mmap the file, do the merge and write out the file. Note that before
the merged write, we truncate the profile.
Depending on the timing, the child process might be terminated
abnormally when the parent exits first. If this happens:
(1) before the truncation, we will get the profile for the main process
(2) after the truncation, and before write-out the profile, we will get
0 size profile.
(3) after the merged write, we get merged profile.
This patch temporarily suspend the SIGKILL for PR_SET_PDEATHSIG
before profile-write and restore it after the write.
This patch only applies to Linux system.
Reviewers: davidxl
Reviewed By: davidxl
Subscribers: xur, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29954
llvm-svn: 295364
Summary: In profile data paths, we replace "%h" with the hostname of the machine the program is running on. On Windows, we used gethostname() to obtain the hostname. This requires linking with ws2_32. With this change, we instead get the hostname from GetComputerNameExW(), which does not require ws2_32.
Reviewers: rnk, vsk, amccarth
Subscribers: zturner, ruiu, hans
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27178
llvm-svn: 288146
This makes __llvm_profile_set_filename() work across dylib boundaries on
Darwin.
This functionality was originally meant to work on all platforms, but
was moved to a Linux-only directory with r272404. The root cause of the
test failure on Darwin was that lprofCurFilename was not marked weak.
Each dylib maintained its own copy of the variable due to the two-level
namespace.
Tested with check-profile (on Darwin). I don't expect this to regress
other platforms.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25707
llvm-svn: 284440
This reverts commit r282294. It breaks a Linux bot:
http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/clang-cmake-aarch64-42vma/builds/12180
It looks like the test checks that __llvm_profile_set_filename() alters the raw
profile filename in both the dylib and the main program. Now that
lprofCurFilename is hidden, this can't work, and we get two profiles (one for
the call to "main" and one for "func").
Back this change out so that we don't affect external users.
llvm-svn: 282304