Summary:
Now that ubsan does function interception (for signals), we
need to ensure that ubsan is initialized before any library
constructors are called. Otherwise, if a constructor calls
sigaction, ubsan will intercept in an unitialized state, which
will cause a crash.
This patch is a partial revert of r317757, which removed
preinit arrays for ubsan.
Reviewers: vitalybuka, eugenis, pcc
Subscribers: kubamracek, mgorny, llvm-commits, #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42389
llvm-svn: 323249
Previously ubsan_standalone used the GetEnv function to read the
environment variables UBSAN_OPTIONS and UBSAN_SYMBOLIZER_PATH. The
problem with GetEnv is that it does not respect changes to the
environment variables made using the libc setenv function, which
prevents clients from setting environment variables to configure
ubsan before loading ubsan-instrumented libraries.
The reason why we have GetEnv is that some runtimes need to read
environment variables while they initialize using .preinit_array,
and getenv does not work while .preinit_array functions are being
called. However, it is unnecessary for ubsan_standalone to initialize
that early. So this change switches ubsan_standalone to using getenv
and removes the .preinit_array entry. The static version of the runtime
still ends up being initialized using a C++ constructor that exists
to support the shared runtime.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39827
llvm-svn: 317757
As a follow-up to r315142, this makes it possible to use ubsan with a
static runtime on Darwin. I've also added a new StandaloneStatic testing
configuration so the new setup can be tested.
llvm-svn: 315143
Summary:
This change moves cxx-abi library in asan/ubsan/dd link command line
ahead of other libraries, such as pthread/rt/dl/c/gcc. Given that
cxx-abi may be the full libstdc++/libc++, it makes sense for it to be
ahead of libc and libgcc, at least.
The real motivation is Android, where in the arm32 NDK toolchain
libstdc++.a is actually a linker script that tries to sneak LLVM's
libunwind ahead of libgcc's. Wrong library order breaks unwinding.
Reviewers: srhines, danalbert
Subscribers: aemerson, kubamracek, mgorny, kristof.beyls, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38520
llvm-svn: 314948
Summary:
Link everything, including the C++ bits, in the single
ubsan_standalone SHARED library. This matches ASan setup.
Reviewers: vitalybuka
Subscribers: kubamracek, llvm-commits, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38340
llvm-svn: 314369
Summary:
Part of https://github.com/google/sanitizers/issues/637
Standalone ubsan needs signal and sigaction handlers and interceptors.
Plugin mode should rely on parent tool.
Reviewers: eugenis, alekseyshl
Subscribers: kubamracek, llvm-commits, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37895
llvm-svn: 314052
Summary:
On Linux we may need preinit_array in static lib and
ubsan_standalone_initializer in shared lib.
Reviewers: eugenis
Subscribers: kubamracek, llvm-commits, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38013
llvm-svn: 313851
Remove the explicit i686 target that is completely duplicate to
the i386 target, with the latter being used more commonly.
1. The runtime built for i686 will be identical to the one built for
i386.
2. Supporting both -i386 and -i686 suffixes causes unnecessary confusion
on the clang end which has to expect either of them.
3. The checks are based on wrong assumption that __i686__ is defined for
all newer x86 CPUs. In fact, it is only declared when -march=i686 is
explicitly used. It is not available when a more specific (or newer)
-march is used.
Curious enough, if CFLAGS contain -march=i686, the runtime will be built
both for i386 and i686. For any other value, only i386 variant will be
built.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26764
llvm-svn: 311924
Remove the explicit i686 target that is completely duplicate to
the i386 target, with the latter being used more commonly.
1. The runtime built for i686 will be identical to the one built for
i386.
2. Supporting both -i386 and -i686 suffixes causes unnecessary confusion
on the clang end which has to expect either of them.
3. The checks are based on wrong assumption that __i686__ is defined for
all newer x86 CPUs. In fact, it is only declared when -march=i686 is
explicitly used. It is not available when a more specific (or newer)
-march is used.
Curious enough, if CFLAGS contain -march=i686, the runtime will be built
both for i386 and i686. For any other value, only i386 variant will be
built.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26764
llvm-svn: 311842
This change adds sanitizer support for LLVM's libunwind and libc++abi
as an alternative to libstdc++. This allows using the in tree version
of libunwind and libc++abi which is useful when building a toolchain
for different target.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34501
llvm-svn: 309362
This change adds support for compiler-rt builtins as an alternative
compiler runtime to libgcc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35165
llvm-svn: 309361
This change adds sanitizer support for LLVM's libunwind and libc++abi
as an alternative to libstdc++. This allows using the in tree version
of libunwind and libc++abi which is useful when building a toolchain
for different target.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34501
llvm-svn: 309074
This change adds support for compiler-rt builtins as an alternative
compiler runtime to libgcc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35165
llvm-svn: 309060
In Windows, when sanitizers are implemented as a shared library (DLL), users can
redefine and export a new definition for weak functions, in the main executable,
for example:
extern "C" __declspec(dllexport)
void __sanitizer_cov_trace_pc_guard(u32* guard) {
// Different implementation provided by the client.
}
However, other dlls, will continue using the default implementation imported
from the sanitizer dll. This is different in linux, where all the shared
libraries will consider the strong definition.
With the implementation in this diff, when the dll is initialized, it will check
if the main executable exports the definition for some weak function (for
example __sanitizer_cov_trace_pc_guard). If it finds that function, then it will
override the function in the dll with that pointer. So, all the dlls with
instrumentation that import __sanitizer_cov_trace_pc_guard__dll() from asan dll,
will be using the function provided by the main executable.
In other words, when the main executable exports a strong definition for a weak
function, we ensure all the dlls use that implementation instead of the default
weak implementation.
The behavior is similar to linux. Now, every user that want to override a weak
function, only has to define and export it. The same for Linux and Windows, and
it will work fine. So, there is no difference on the user's side.
All the sanitizers will include a file sanitizer_win_weak_interception.cc that
register sanitizer's weak functions to be intercepted in the binary section WEAK
When the sanitizer dll is initialized, it will execute weak_intercept_init()
which will consider all the CB registered in the section WEAK. So, for all the
weak functions registered, we will check if a strong definition is provided in
the main executable.
All the files sanitizer_win_weak_interception.cc are independent, so we do not
need to include a specific list of sanitizers.
Now, we include [asan|ubsan|sanitizer_coverage]_win_weak_interception.cc and
sanitizer_win_weak_interception.cc in asan dll, so when it is initialized, it
will consider all the weak functions from asan, ubsan and sanitizer coverage.
After this diff, sanitizer coverage is fixed for MD on Windows. In particular
libFuzzer can provide custom implementation for all sanitizer coverage's weak
functions, and they will be considered by asan dll.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29168
llvm-svn: 293958
In Windows, when the sanitizer is implemented as a shared library (DLL), we need
an auxiliary static library dynamic_runtime_thunk that will be linked to the
main executable and dlls.
In the sanitizer DLL, we are exposing weak functions with WIN_WEAK_EXPORT_DEF(),
which exports the default implementation with __dll suffix. For example: for
sanitizer coverage, the default implementation of __sanitizer_cov_trace_cmp is
exported as: __sanitizer_cov_trace_cmp__dll.
In the dynamic_runtime_thunk static library, we include weak aliases to the
imported implementation from the dll, using the macro WIN_WEAK_IMPORT_DEF().
By default, all users's programs that include calls to weak functions like
__sanitizer_cov_trace_cmp, will be redirected to the implementation in the dll,
when linking to dynamic_runtime_thunk.
After this diff, we are able to compile code with sanitizer coverage
instrumentation on Windows. When the instrumented object files are linked with
clang-rt_asan_dynamic_runtime_thunk-arch.lib all the weak symbols will be
resolved to the implementation imported from asan dll.
All the files sanitizer_dynamic_runtime_thunk.cc are independent, so we do not
need to include a specific list of sanitizers.
Now, we compile: [asan|ubsan|sanitizer_coverage]_win_dynamic_runtime_thunk.cc
and sanitizer_win_dynamic_runtime_thunk.cc to generate
asan_dynamic_runtime_thunk.lib, because we include asan, ubsan and sanitizer
coverage in the address sanitizer library.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29158
llvm-svn: 293953
When the sanitizer is implemented as a static library and is included in the
main executable, we need an auxiliary static library dll_thunk that will be
linked to the dlls that have instrumentation, so they can refer to the runtime
in the main executable. Basically, it uses interception to get a pointer the
function in the main executable and override its function with that pointer.
Before this diff, all of the implementation for dll_thunks was included in asan.
In this diff I split it into different sanitizers, so we can use other
sanitizers regardless of whether we include asan or not.
All the sanitizers include a file sanitizer_win_dll_thunk.cc that register
functions to be intercepted in the binary section: DLLTH
When the dll including dll_thunk is initialized, it will execute
__dll_thunk_init() implemented in: sanitizer_common/sanitizer_win_dll_thunk.cc,
which will consider all the CB registered in the section DLLTH. So, all the
functions registered will be intercepted, and redirected to the implementation
in the main executable.
All the files "sanitizer_win_dll_thunk.cc" are independent, so we don't need to
include a specific list of sanitizers. Now, we compile: asan_win_dll_thunk.cc
ubsan_win_dll_thunk.cc, sanitizer_coverage_win_dll_thunk.cc and
sanitizer_win_dll_thunk.cc, to generate asan_dll_thunk, because we include asan,
ubsan and sanitizer coverage in the address sanitizer library.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29154
llvm-svn: 293951
Summary:
The build system was inconsistent in its naming conventions for
link flags. This patch changes all uses of LINKFLAGS to LINK_FLAGS,
for consistency with cmake's LINK_FLAGS property.
This patch should make it easier to search the source code for
uses of link flags, as well as providing the benefit of improved
style and consistency.
Reviewers: compnerd, beanz
Subscribers: kubabrecka, llvm-commits, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28506
llvm-svn: 291539
Summary:
By default, darwin requires a definition for weak interface functions at
link time. Adding the '-U' link flag with each weak function allows these
weak interface functions to be used without definitions, which mirrors
behavior on linux and windows.
Reviewers: compnerd, eugenis
Subscribers: kubabrecka, mgorny, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28203
llvm-svn: 291417
Summary:
By default, darwin requires a definition for weak interface functions at
link time. Adding the '-U' link flag with each weak function allows these
weak interface functions to be used without definitions, which mirrors
behavior on linux and windows.
Reviewers: compnerd, eugenis
Subscribers: kubabrecka, mgorny, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28203
llvm-svn: 291314
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
Summary:
On apple targets, when SANITIZER_CAN_USE_CXXABI is false,
the ubsan cxxabi sources aren't built, since they're unused.
Do this on non-apple targets as well.
This fixes errors when linking sanitizers if c++ abi is
unavailable.
Reviewers: pcc, kubabrecka, beanz
Subscribers: rnk, llvm-commits, kubabrecka, compnerd, dberris
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23638
llvm-svn: 279467
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
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:
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 another 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/D12409
llvm-svn: 246178
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: This patch consolidates add_compiler_rt_osx_static_runtime and add_compiler_rt_darwin_dynamic_runtime into a single new function add_compiler_rt_darwin_runtime.
Reviewers: filcab, samsonov, bogner
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12106
llvm-svn: 245317