Summary:
This patch makes it possible to unwind via breakpad STACK WIN records.
It is "basic" because two important features are missing:
- support for the .raSearch keyword
- support for multiple STACK WIN records within a single function
Right now, we just reject the .raSearch records, and always pick the
first record for the whole function
SymbolFileBreakpad, and so I think it can serve as a good example of
what is needed of the symbol file and unwinding machinery to make this
work.
However, it is already useful for unwinding in some situations, and it
sets up the general framework for the parsing of these kinds of records,
which reduces the size of the followup patches implementing the two
other components.
Reviewers: amccarth, rnk, markmentovai
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67067
llvm-svn: 371017
As DW_AT_rnglists_base points after the header and headers have
different sizes for DWARF32 and DWARF64, we have to use the format
of the CU to adjust the offset correctly in order to extract
the referenced range list table.
The patch also changes the type of RangeSectionBase because in DWARF64
it is 8-bytes long.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67098
llvm-svn: 371016
Previously, segments were aligned according to their first section's
alignment requirements. That was not correct, but segments are also
aligned to a page boundary, and a page boundary is usually much larger
than a section alignment requirement, so no one noticed this bug before.
Now, lld has --nmagic option which sets maxPageSize to 1 to effectively
disable page alignment, which reveals the issue.
Fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=43212
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67152
llvm-svn: 371013
In the review process for some of the refactoring of MIRCanonicalizationPass it
was noted that some of the tests didn't have verifier enabled. Enabling here.
llvm-svn: 371005
template parameters.
This finishes the implementation of the proposal described in
https://github.com/itanium-cxx-abi/cxx-abi/issues/31. (We already
implemented the <lambda-sig> extensions, but didn't take them into
account when computing mangling numbers, and didn't deal properly with
expanded parameter packs, and didn't disambiguate between different
levels of template parameters in manglings.)
llvm-svn: 371004
Current code assumes flags in CompilerLinkerOptionMap don't use =,
which isn't always true.
Patch by Chris Laplante!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66569
llvm-svn: 371002
This adds support for basic sibling call lowering in AArch64. The intent here is
to only handle tail calls which do not change the ABI (hence, sibling calls.)
At this point, it is very restricted. It does not handle
- Vararg calls.
- Calls with outgoing arguments.
- Calls whose calling conventions differ from the caller's calling convention.
- Tail/sibling calls with BTI enabled.
This patch adds
- `AArch64CallLowering::isEligibleForTailCallOptimization`, which is equivalent
to the same function in AArch64ISelLowering.cpp (albeit with the restrictions
above.)
- `mayTailCallThisCC` and `canGuaranteeTCO`, which are identical to those in
AArch64ISelLowering.cpp.
- `getCallOpcode`, which is exactly what it sounds like.
Tail/sibling calls are lowered by checking if they pass target-independent tail
call positioning checks, and checking if they satisfy
`isEligibleForTailCallOptimization`. If they do, then a tail call instruction is
emitted instead of a normal call. If we have a sibling call (which is always the
case in this patch), then we do not emit any stack adjustment operations. When
we go to lower a return, we check if we've already emitted a tail call. If so,
then we skip the return lowering.
For testing, this patch
- Adds call-translator-tail-call.ll to test which tail calls we currently lower,
which ones we don't, and which ones we shouldn't.
- Updates branch-target-enforcement-indirect-calls.ll to show that we fall back
as expected.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67189
llvm-svn: 370996
Moving MIRCanonicalizerPass vreg renaming code to MIRVRegNamerUtils so that it
can be reused in another pass (ie planing to write a standalone mir-namer pass).
I'm going to write a mir-namer pass so that next time someone has to author a
test in MIR, they can use it to cleanup the naming and make it more readable by
having the numbered vregs swapped out with named vregs.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67114
llvm-svn: 370985
In mingw environments, resources are normally compiled to resource
object files directly, instead of letting the linker convert them to
COFF format.
Since some time, GCC supports the notion of a default manifest object.
When invoking the linker, GCC looks for the default manifest object
file, and if found in the expected path, it is added to linker commands.
The default manifest is one that indicates support for the latest known
versions of windows, to implicitly unlock the modern behaviours of certain
APIs.
Not all mingw/gcc distributions include this file, but e.g. in msys2,
the default manifest object is distributed in a separate package (which
can be but might not always be installed).
This means that even if user projects only use one single resource
object file, the linker can end up with two resource object files,
and thus needs to support merging them.
The default manifest has a language id of zero, and GNU ld has got
logic for dropping a manifest with a zero language id, if there's
another manifest present with a nonzero language id. If there are
multiple manifests with a nonzero language id, the merging process
errors out.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66825
llvm-svn: 370974
This is mostly the same as the
[[clang::require_constant_initialization]] attribute, but has a couple
of additional syntactic and semantic restrictions.
In passing, I added a warning for the attribute form being added after
we have already seen the initialization of the variable (but before we
see the definition); that case previously slipped between the cracks and
the attribute was silently ignored.
llvm-svn: 370972
This patch merges the sancov module and funciton passes into one module pass.
The reason for this is because we ran into an out of memory error when
attempting to run asan fuzzer on some protobufs (pc.cc files). I traced the OOM
error to the destructor of SanitizerCoverage where we only call
appendTo[Compiler]Used which calls appendToUsedList. I'm not sure where precisely
in appendToUsedList causes the OOM, but I am able to confirm that it's calling
this function *repeatedly* that causes the OOM. (I hacked sancov a bit such that
I can still create and destroy a new sancov on every function run, but only call
appendToUsedList after all functions in the module have finished. This passes, but
when I make it such that appendToUsedList is called on every sancov destruction,
we hit OOM.)
I don't think the OOM is from just adding to the SmallSet and SmallVector inside
appendToUsedList since in either case for a given module, they'll have the same
max size. I suspect that when the existing llvm.compiler.used global is erased,
the memory behind it isn't freed. I could be wrong on this though.
This patch works around the OOM issue by just calling appendToUsedList at the
end of every module run instead of function run. The same amount of constants
still get added to llvm.compiler.used, abd we make the pass usage and logic
simpler by not having any inter-pass dependencies.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66988
llvm-svn: 370971
Because of multiple inheritance, a DeclContext pointer does not produce
the same pointer representation as a Decl pointer that references the
same AST Node.
When dumping the parentDeclContextId field of a node, convert the pointer
to Decl* first, so the id can be used to find the AST node it references.
Patch by Bert Belder.
llvm-svn: 370970
When using llvm-rtdyld to execute code, -show-times will now show the time
taken to load the object files, apply relocations, and execute the
rtdyld-linked code.
llvm-svn: 370968
Summary:
- `__wasm_init_memory` is now the WebAssembly start function instead
of being called from `__wasm_call_ctors` or called directly by the
runtime.
- Adds a new synthetic data symbol `__wasm_init_memory_flag` that is
atomically incremented from zero to one by the thread responsible
for initializing memory.
- All threads now unconditionally perform data.drop on all passive
segments.
- Removes --passive-segments and --active-segments flags and controls
segment type based on --shared-memory instead. The deleted flags
were only present to ameliorate the upgrade path in Emscripten.
Reviewers: sbc100, aheejin
Subscribers: dschuff, jgravelle-google, sunfish, jfb, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65783
llvm-svn: 370965
This reverts my change to pseudo_barrier.h which isn't necessary anymore
after Fred's fix to debugserver and caused TestThreadStepOut to fail.
llvm-svn: 370963
Python 3 iteration calls the next() method instead of next() and
value_iter only implemented the Python 2 version.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67184
llvm-svn: 370954
Python 3 calls __bool__() instead of __len__() and lldb.value only
implemented the __len__ method. This adds the __bool__() implementation.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67183
llvm-svn: 370953