introduce a BufferedStackTrace class, which owns this array.
Summary:
This change splits __sanitizer::StackTrace class into a lightweight
__sanitizer::StackTrace, which doesn't own array of PCs, and BufferedStackTrace,
which owns it. This would allow us to simplify the interface of StackDepot,
and eventually merge __sanitizer::StackTrace with __tsan::StackTrace.
Test Plan: regression test suite.
Reviewers: kcc, dvyukov
Reviewed By: dvyukov
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5985
llvm-svn: 220635
Reviewed at http://reviews.llvm.org/D4527
Fixed a test case failure on 32-bit Linux, I did right shift on intptr_t, instead it should have been uintptr_t.
llvm-svn: 218538
Reviewed at http://reviews.llvm.org/D4527
This patch is part of an effort to implement a more generic debugging API, as proposed in http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/llvmdev/2014-July/074656.html, with first part reviewed at http://reviews.llvm.org/D4466. Now adding several new APIs: __asan_report_present, __asan_get_report_{pc,bp,sp,address,type,size,description}, __asan_locate_address. These return whether an asan report happened yet, the PC, BP, SP, address, access type (read/write), access size and bug description (e.g. "heap-use-after-free"), __asan_locate_address takes a pointer and tries to locate it, i.e. say whether it is a heap pointer, a global or a stack, or whether it's a pointer into the shadow memory. If global or stack, tries to also return the variable name, address and size. If heap, tries to return the chunk address and size. Generally these should serve as an alternative to "asan_describe_address", which only returns all the data in text form. Having an API to get these data could allow having debugging scripts/extensions that could show additional information about a variable/expression/pointer. Test cases in test/asan/TestCases/debug_locate.cc and test/asan/TestCasea/debug_report.cc.
llvm-svn: 218481
Introduce new public header <sanitizer/allocator_interface.h> and a set
of functions __sanitizer_get_ownership(), __sanitizer_malloc_hook() etc.
that will eventually replace their tool-specific equivalents
(__asan_get_ownership(), __msan_get_ownership() etc.). Tool-specific
functions are now deprecated and implemented as stubs redirecting
to __sanitizer_ versions (which are implemented differently in each tool).
Replace all uses of __xsan_ versions with __sanitizer_ versions in unit
and lit tests.
llvm-svn: 212469
Because of the way Bionic sets up signal stack frames, libc unwinder is unable
to step through it, resulting in broken SEGV stack traces.
Luckily, libcorkscrew.so on Android implements an unwinder that can start with
a signal context, thus sidestepping the issue.
llvm-svn: 201151
Invoke a fatal stack trace unwinder when ASan prints allocator-relevant
error reports (double-free, alloc-dealloc-mismatch, invalid-free).
Thus we'll be able to print complete stack trace even if allocation/free
stacks are not stored (malloc_context_size=0).
Based on the patch by Yuri Gribov!
llvm-svn: 194579
In case of partial right OOB, ASan was reporting
X is located 0 bytes to the right of [A, B)
where X was actually inside [A, B).
With this change, ASan will report B as the error address in such case.
llvm-svn: 174373
library.
These headers are intended to be available to user code when built with
AddressSanitizer (or one of the other sanitizer's in the future) to
interface with the runtime library. As such, they form stable external
C interfaces, and the headers shouldn't be located within the
implementation.
I've pulled them out into what seem like fairly obvious locations and
names, but I'm wide open to further bikeshedding of these names and
locations.
I've updated the code and the build system to cope with the new
locations, both CMake and Makefile. Please let me know if this breaks
anyone's build.
The eventual goal is to install these headers along side the Clang
builtin headers when we build the ASan runtime and install it. My
current thinking is to locate them at:
<prefix>/lib/clang/X.Y/include/sanitizer/common_interface_defs.h
<prefix>/lib/clang/X.Y/include/sanitizer/asan_interface.h
<prefix>/lib/clang/X.Y/include/sanitizer/...
But maybe others have different suggestions?
Fixing the style of the #include between these headers at least unblocks
experimentation with installing them as they now should work when
installed in these locations.
llvm-svn: 162822
Currently ASan reports many kinds of errors, and the code that actually prints error messages can
be found inside allocator, OS-specific files, interceptors code etc.
An example of maintenance troubles this situation causes:
There is currently an ASan interface function that registers
callback which should take the char buffer with error report printed by ASan.
This function is now broken, as one has to insert callback calls to all the places in
ASan code where the error reports are printed, surprisingly it is not only
"__asan_report_error" function...
llvm-svn: 161568