Summary:
Introduce SANITIZER_INTERCEPT_REMQUOL
dedicated for remquol(). Disable for for NetBSD
as this routine is not implemented in this OS.
Installation of supernumerary interceptors causes
leaking of errors to dlsym(3)-like operations.
Reviewers: joerg, vitalybuka
Reviewed By: vitalybuka
Subscribers: kubamracek, llvm-commits, mgorny, #sanitizers
Tags: #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54051
llvm-svn: 346351
We have seen failing builds due to a race condition between
RTAsan_dynamic and libc++ headers builds, specifically libc++
headers depend on __config and if this header hasn't been copied
into the final location, including other headers will typically
result in failure. To avoid this race, we add an explicit dependency
on libc++ headers which ensures that they've been copied into place
before the sanitizer object library build starts.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54198
llvm-svn: 346339
Summary: instrprof-gcov-fork.test is failing with arm so mark it as XFAIL
Reviewers: marco-c
Reviewed By: marco-c
Subscribers: javed.absar, kristof.beyls, delcypher, chrib, llvm-commits, sylvestre.ledru, #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54209
llvm-svn: 346329
Summary:
This change updates the version number for FDR logs to 5, and update the
trace processing to support changes in the custom event records.
In the runtime, since we're already writing down the record preamble to
handle CPU migrations and TSC wraparound, we can use the same TSC delta
encoding in the custom event and typed event records that we use in
function event records. We do the same change to typed events (which
were unsupported before this change in the trace processing) which now
show up in the trace.
Future changes should increase our testing coverage to make custom and
typed events as first class entities in the FDR mode log processing
tools.
This change is also a good example of how we end up supporting new
record types in the FDR mode implementation. This shows the places where
new record types are added and supported.
Depends on D54139.
Reviewers: mboerger
Subscribers: hiraditya, arphaman, jfb, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54140
llvm-svn: 346293
Summary: If user wants to raise it back, let them.
Reviewers: kcc, vitalybuka
Subscribers: llvm-commits, kubamracek
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54190
llvm-svn: 346284
Some weak external symbols were added to the profile runtime in D49953,
and on Darwin, these need to be exported for tapi verification purposes.
I've tightened the test so that future breakages can be caught earlier.
rdar://45831054
llvm-svn: 346276
This speeds up process startup and teardown and also reduces lock contention when running multiple ASanified/TSanified processes simultaneously. Should greatly improve lit testing time.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48445
llvm-svn: 346262
Summary:
The NetBSD headers use internal indirect type for
standard *int*_t definitions. The internal type is unrolled
inside the sanitizer into e.g. __int32_t from int32_t.
This symbol mangling causes pattern mismatch in
the interger truncation tests as they expect exact
types such as 'int32_t'.
Change the pattern rules so every acceptable internal
form of *int*_t will be accepted flawlessly.
Reviewers: lebedev.ri, vitalybuka, joerg
Reviewed By: lebedev.ri
Subscribers: kubamracek, dmgreen, llvm-commits, mgorny, #sanitizers
Tags: #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54150
llvm-svn: 346228
Summary:
For platforms without preinit support (such as NetBSD/amd64) the
initialization routine __xray_init() was called in non-deterministic order
compared to other constructors. This caused breakage failures
as xray routines attempted to execute code with assumption of
being initialized, which was no always true.
Use GCC/Clang extension to set maximal priority to the constructor
calling __xray_init(). This code switches away from C++ lambda form,
as it did not allow to specify this compiler extension.
Reviewers: dberris, joerg
Reviewed By: dberris
Subscribers: llvm-commits, mgorny, #sanitizers
Tags: #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54136
llvm-svn: 346222
execve("/proc/self/exe") will not work if the binary relies on
$EXEC_ORIGIN in an rpath. Query AT_EXECFN instead, which will give the
same string that the current binary was exec'd with.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54113
llvm-svn: 346215
Summary:
This change cuts across LLVM and compiler-rt to add support for
rendering custom events in the XRayRecord type, to allow for including
user-provided annotations in the output YAML (as raw bytes).
This work enables us to add custom event and typed event records into
the `llvm::xray::Trace` type for user-provided events. This can then be
programmatically handled through the C++ API and can be included in some
of the tooling as well. For now we support printing the raw data we
encounter in the custom events in the converted output.
Future work will allow us to start interpreting these custom and typed
events through a yet-to-be-defined API for extending the trace analysis
library.
Reviewers: mboerger
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54139
llvm-svn: 346214
value-profile-cmp was always flaky, and OOM fails to work in some environments.
counters.test fails when vectorization is enabled, and it is more likely
to kick in when compiling for ARM.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54004
llvm-svn: 346193
While testing my to-be-submitted Solaris sanitizer support on gcc mainline, I ran into
an issue on Solaris/SPARC (sparc-sun-solaris2.11). Initially libasan.so failed to link:
Undefined first referenced
symbol in file
__sanitizer::BufferedStackTrace::FastUnwindStack(unsigned long, unsigned long, unsigned long, unsigned long, unsigned int) /var/gcc/gcc-9.0.0-20181024/11.5-gcc-gas/sparc-sun-solaris2.11/./libsanitizer/asan/.libs/libasan.so
This happens because SANITIZER_CAN_FAST_UNWIND is enabled on non-Linux
SPARC targets (cf. sanitizer_stacktrace.h), but the guard around the SPARCv8-only
definition in sanitizer_stacktrace_sparc.cc only works with clang:
clang predefines __sparcv8__ on non-Solaris, and __sparcv8 only on Solaris
gcc predefines __sparcv8 on Solaris, but __sparc_v8__ on non-Solaris
The attached patch allows for all three variants.
However, disabling SANITIZER_CAN_FAST_UNWIND on all SPARC targets
fixes a couple of testsuite failures in the Solaris asan testsuite, so for now it's better
to keep it disabled everywhere.
This allowed the libsanitizer build to complete and gave reasonable (though slightly
worse than on Solaris/x86) testsuite results.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54099
llvm-svn: 346155
While testing the Solaris libsanitizer port on GCC mainline, I found that
I'd messed up
the largefile checks in various ways, some of which showed as compile failures
(wrong structure sizes and member offsets), others at runtime, some of those only
on sparc as a big-endian target.
This patch fixes all of them:
- OFF_T is now correctly defined for 32-bit largefile and traditional
environments, and 64-bit.
- The definition of __sanitizer_dirent now checks the correct conditionals.
- sanitizer_procmaps_solaris.cc undefines _FILE_OFFSET_BITS: before
Solaris 11.4 <procfs.h> doesn't even compile with largefile support
enabled, but the use at hand doesn't need it anyway while g++ 9 will
define _FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 out of the box.
- With full largefile support enabled, one needs to use e.g. mmap64
instead of mmap; this is hidden behind macros.
With this patch I could bootstrap gcc mainline on both sparc-sun-solaris2.11 and
i386-pc-solaris2.11. In addition, I've successfully built llvm on
i386-pc-solaris2.11.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54101
llvm-svn: 346153
Summary:
Prior to this change, we can run into situations where the TSC we're
getting when exiting a function is less than the TSC we got when
entering it. This would sometimes cause the counter for cumulative call
times overflow, which was erroneously also being stored as a signed
64-bit integer.
This change addresses both these issues while adding provisions for
tracking CPU migrations. We do this because moving from one CPU to
another doesn't guarantee that the timestamp counter for some
architectures aren't guaranteed to be synchronised. For the moment, we
leave the provisions there until we can update the data format to
include the counting of CPU migrations we can catch.
We update the necessary tests as well, ensuring that our expectations
for the cycle accounting to be met in case of counter wraparound.
Reviewers: mboerger
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54088
llvm-svn: 346116
This fixes the issue introduced in r345765 which changed the way in
which the embedded libc++ is being built but omitted tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54058
llvm-svn: 346052
We're using an old NDK and a new Clang. New Clangs default to
`-stdlib=libc++` for Android, but those libraries cannot be found by
default with an old NDK. Use an explicit `-stdlib=libstdc++` in the
cxx_mode_flags.
llvm-svn: 346051
Include the build of unpoison_passwd() and unpoison_group() for
SANITIZER_INTERCEPT_FGETPWENT_R and SANITIZER_INTERCEPT_FGETGRENT_R.
static void unpoison_passwd(
llvm-svn: 346042
Summary:
NetBSD does not ship with fgetpwent_r() and fgetgrent_r().
Split their interceptors from getpwent_r() and getgrent_r()
and disable for this OS.
Installation of supernumerary interceptors causes leaking of
errors to dlsym(3)-like operations.
No functional change for other OSes.
Reviewers: vitalybuka, joerg
Reviewed By: vitalybuka
Subscribers: srhines, kubamracek, fedor.sergeev, llvm-commits, #sanitizers, mgorny
Tags: #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54041
llvm-svn: 346038
Recent versions of Ubuntu (17.04 and 18.04) on PowerPC have introduced changes
to Address Space Layout Randomization (ASLR) that is causing 500+ sanitizer
failures. This patch disables ASLR when running the sanitizers on PowerPC 64bit
LE.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52900
llvm-svn: 346030
Summary:
The motivation here is to be able support initialisation of the
malloc zone on other code paths.
rdar://problem/45284065
Reviewers: kubamracek, george.karpenkov
Subscribers: llvm-commits, #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54037
llvm-svn: 345983
Summary:
Fix some issues discovered from mostly manual inspection of outputs from
the `llvm-xray fdr-dump` tool.
It turns out we haven't been writing the deltas properly, and have been
writing down zeros for deltas of some records. This change fixes this
oversight born by the recent refactoring.
Reviewers: mboerger
Subscribers: llvm-commits, hiraditya
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54022
llvm-svn: 345954
Summary:
This is a follow-on change to D53858 which turns out to have had a TSC
accounting bug when writing out function exit records in FDR mode.
This change adds a number of tests to ensure that:
- We are handling the delta between the exit TSC and the last TSC we've
seen.
- We are writing the custom event and typed event records as a single
update to the buffer extents.
- We are able to catch boundary conditions when loading FDR logs.
We introduce a TSC matcher to the test helpers, which we use in the
testing/verification of the TSC accounting change.
Reviewers: mboerger
Subscribers: mgorny, hiraditya, jfb, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53967
llvm-svn: 345905
Summary:
This change cuts across compiler-rt and llvm, to increment the FDR log
version number to 4, and include the CPU ID in the custom event records.
This is a step towards allowing us to change the `llvm::xray::Trace`
object to start representing both custom and typed events in the stream
of records. Follow-on changes will allow us to change the kinds of
records we're presenting in the stream of traces, to incorporate the
data in custom/typed events.
A follow-on change will handle the typed event case, where it may not
fit within the 15-byte buffer for metadata records.
This work is part of the larger effort to enable writing analysis and
processing tools using a common in-memory representation of the events
found in traces. The work will focus on porting existing tools in LLVM
to use the common representation and informing the design of a
library/framework for expressing trace event analysis as C++ programs.
Reviewers: mboerger, eizan
Subscribers: hiraditya, mgrang, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53920
llvm-svn: 345798
Summary:
Windows has always been LLP64, not LP64, so the macros were incorrect.
Check for _WIN64, since AArch64 sets that too.
The tests have to be fixed up in two main ways:
1. Use 'ULL' suffixes to avoid sign extension when passing hex literals
with the sign bit set to signed 128 arguments. Clang
-fms-compatibility makes such hex literals signed, not unsigned.
2. Disable various tests for 80-bit long double interoperation with i128
values.
Reviewers: joerg, mstorsjo
Subscribers: javed.absar, kristof.beyls, hiraditya, aheejin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53918
llvm-svn: 345796
When building the custom libc++ that's used by libFuzzer as well as
MSan and TSan tests, passthrough the C and C++ flags that were passed
to the compiler-rt CMake build. These may be needed to successfuly
compile the library on a particular platform.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53862
llvm-svn: 345788
libc++ now supports customizing the ABI namespace directly from the
CMake build so we no longer need to rely on custom CFLAGS.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53939
llvm-svn: 345765
Eliminate dropped operations, add new operations.
Update included headers for newer need.
Add a fallback definition of nvlist_ref_t, becaue this type
is internal to libnpf and the kernel, not exported into public
headers.
llvm-svn: 345726
Summary:
In r81552, the HAS_80_BIT_LONG_DOUBLE macro was added to the unit test
only version of int_lib.h. One month later in r85260 the duplicate
int_lib.h was removed, but the tests still passed because we don't build
with -Werror.
This is the minimal change to bring it back, and I decided to put the
configuration macro next to our 128-bit integer support macro.
Reviewers: joerg, compnerd, mstorsjo
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53838
llvm-svn: 345645
When -ffreestanding is used, main() isn't considered special and
when compiled as C++ code it'll get mangled which makes the
compilation fail since main() will be undefined so this check will
never succeed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49332
llvm-svn: 345632
Summary:
Add a new helper macro TSAN_INTERCEPTOR_NETBSD_ALIAS_THR2
that handles pthread(3)/libc aliases in scenarios when a name in both
libraries differs not just in prefix namespace.
Handle TSan pthread_sigmask mangling accordingly into __libc_thr_sigsetmask.
Reviewers: vitalybuka, joerg
Reviewed By: vitalybuka
Subscribers: kubamracek, jfb, llvm-commits, #sanitizers, mgorny
Tags: #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53863
llvm-svn: 345627
Summary: Add a test for coverage for function definition like void foo() { }.
Reviewers: marco-c
Reviewed By: marco-c
Subscribers: delcypher, llvm-commits, #sanitizers, sylvestre.ledru
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53601
llvm-svn: 345625
Sort the headers more correctly according to NetBSD style.
Prevent in this code part clang-format, as shuffling the order
will cause build failures.
llvm-svn: 345586
Register new syscall getsockopt2.
Drop removed syscalls pmc_get_info and pmc_control.
While there address compiler warnings about potentially
unused variables.
llvm-svn: 345582
Register new syscall getsockopt2.
Drop removed syscalls pmc_get_info and pmc_control.
While there address compiler warnings about potentially
unused variables.
llvm-svn: 345580
Summary:
This change completes the refactoring of the FDR runtime to support the
following:
- Generational buffer management.
- Centralised and well-tested controller implementation.
In this change we've had to:
- Greatly simplify the code in xray_fdr_logging.cc to only implement the
glue code for calling into the controller.
- Implement the custom and typed event logging functions in the
FDRLogWriter.
- Imbue the `XRAY_NEVER_INSTRUMENT` attribute onto all functions in the
controller implementation.
Reviewers: mboerger, eizan, jfb
Subscribers: jfb, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53858
llvm-svn: 345568
Summary:
Prepend minimal when UBsan is mentioned and delete a dead comment
Patch by Igor Sugak
Reviewers: eugenis, pcc
Reviewed By: eugenis
Subscribers: mgorny, llvm-commits, #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53826
llvm-svn: 345557
This breaks some configurations, so just forward declare everything that we need.
rdar://35943793
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50269
llvm-svn: 345551
Revert older change that was incorrect in this test.
It was already reverted in the past after an attempt to port it to Darwin.
While there, mark FreeBSD as unsupported as well.
llvm-svn: 345492
Summary:
Some cases where `postCurrentThreadFCT()` are not guarded by our
recursion guard. We've observed that sometimes these can lead to
deadlocks when some functions (like memcpy()) gets outlined and the
version of memcpy is XRay-instrumented, which can be materialised by the
compiler in the implementation of lower-level components used by the
profiling runtime.
This change ensures that all calls to `postCurrentThreadFCT` are guarded
by our thread-recursion guard, to prevent deadlocks.
Reviewers: mboerger, eizan
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53805
llvm-svn: 345489
Summary:
In D53560, we assumed a specific layout for memory without using an
explicit structure. This follow-up change uses more portable layout
control by using unions in a struct, and consolidating the memory
management code in the buffer queue.
We also take the opportunity to improve the documentation on the types
and operations, along with simplifying some of the logic in the buffer
queue implementation.
Reviewers: mboerger, eizan
Subscribers: jfb, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53802
llvm-svn: 345485
Summary:
This change implements the ref-counting for backing stores associated
with generational buffer management. We do this as an implementation
detail of the buffer queue, instead of exposing this to the interface.
This change allows us to keep the buffer queue interface and usage model
the same.
Depends on D53551.
Reviewers: mboerger, eizan
Subscribers: jfb, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53560
llvm-svn: 345471
Summary:
This is an intermediary step in the full support for generational buffer
management in the FDR runtime. This change makes the FDR controller
aware of the new generation number in the buffers handed out by the
BufferQueue type.
In the process of making this change, we've realised that the cleanest
way of ensuring that the backing store per generation is live while all
the threads that need access to it will need reference counting to tie
the backing store to the lifetime of all threads that have a handle on
buffers associated with the memory.
We also learn that we're missing the edge-case in the function exit
handler's implementation where the first record being written into the
buffer is a function exit, which is caught/fixed by the test for
generational buffer management.
We still haven't wired the controller into the FDR mode runtime, which
will need the reference counting on the backing store implemented to
ensure that we're being conservatively thread-safe with this approach.
Depends on D52974.
Reviewers: mboerger, eizan
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53551
llvm-svn: 345445
There's a TSan startup crash on Linux when used in Swift programs, where MonotonicNanoTime will try to call real_clock_gettime and then jump to NULL because interceptors are not yet initialized. This is on Ubuntu 18.04. Looks like TSan's main Initialize() function is called at a point where __progname is already set, but interceptors aren't yet set up. Let's fix this by checking whether interceptors are initialized in MonotonicNanoTime.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53528
llvm-svn: 345174
Summary:
At compile-time, create an array of {PC,HumanReadableStackFrameDescription}
for every function that has an instrumented frame, and pass this array
to the run-time at the module-init time.
Similar to how we handle pc-table in SanitizerCoverage.
The run-time is dummy, will add the actual logic in later commits.
Reviewers: morehouse, eugenis
Reviewed By: eugenis
Subscribers: srhines, llvm-commits, kubamracek
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53227
llvm-svn: 344985
Some Darwin functions have pairs like dispatch_apply and dispatch_apply_f so the added _f to interceptor types causes a clash. Let's add _type suffix instead.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53167
llvm-svn: 344954
Change the assumption when releasing memory to a buffer queue that new
generations might not be able to re-use the memory mapped addresses.
llvm-svn: 344882
Summary:
This change updates the buffer queue implementation to support using a
generation number to identify the lifetime of buffers. This first part
introduces the notion of the generation number, without changing the way
we handle the buffers yet.
What's missing here is the cleanup of the buffers. Ideally we'll keep
the two most recent generations. We need to ensure that before we do any
writes to the buffers, that we check the generation number(s) first.
Those changes will follow-on from this change.
Depends on D52588.
Reviewers: mboerger, eizan
Subscribers: llvm-commits, jfb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52974
llvm-svn: 344881
Summary:
This change allows us to handle allocator exhaustion properly in the
segmented array implementation. Before this change, we relied on the
caller of the `trim` function to provide a valid number of elements to
trim. This change allows us to do the right thing in case the elements
to trim is greater than the size of the container.
Reviewers: mboerger, eizan
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53484
llvm-svn: 344880
Summary: This patch adds additional features and cpus from libgcc. Unfortunately we've overflowed the existing 32-bits of features so we had to add a new __cpu_features2 variable to hold the additional bits. This matches libgcc as far as I can tell.
Reviewers: echristo
Reviewed By: echristo
Subscribers: dberris, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53461
llvm-svn: 344830
Summary:
C++ flags should not be used for not-C++ files as it may trigger
-Werror=unused-command-line-argument. CMake will use CMAKE_C_FLAGS,
CMAKE_CXX_FLAGS, and CMAKE_ASM_FLAGS as appropriate implicitly, so
this does not need to be explicitly handled here.
This change depends on https://reviews.llvm.org/D53301, since one of
the builders depended on this behavior because it was not configuring
CMAKE_ASM_FLAGS.
Reviewers: eugenis, vitalybuka
Reviewed By: eugenis, vitalybuka
Subscribers: dberris, mgorny, delcypher, #sanitizers, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53335
llvm-svn: 344751
Summary:
This change updates the buffer queue implementation to support using a
generation number to identify the lifetime of buffers. This first part
introduces the notion of the generation number, without changing the way
we handle the buffers yet.
What's missing here is the cleanup of the buffers. Ideally we'll keep
the two most recent generations. We need to ensure that before we do any
writes to the buffers, that we check the generation number(s) first.
Those changes will follow-on from this change.
Depends on D52588.
Reviewers: mboerger, eizan
Subscribers: llvm-commits, jfb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52974
llvm-svn: 344670
This abstracts away the file descriptor related logic which makes it
easier to port XRay to platform that don't use file descriptors or
file system for writing the log data, such as Fuchsia.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52161
llvm-svn: 344578