Fix mismatched-new-delete in asan test unaligned_loads_and_stores.cpp
Reviewed By: vitalybuka, MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D124268
By default -fsanitize=address already compiles with this check,
why not use it.
For compatibly it can be disabled with env ASAN_OPTIONS=detect_stack_use_after_return=0.
Reviewed By: eugenis, kda, #sanitizers, hans
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D124057
On systems where the kernel supports the PR_SCHED_CORE
interface, but there is no SMT, the prctl call will set
errno to ENODEV, which currently causes the test to fail.
Fix by accepting ENODEV in addition to EINVAL.
C89 had a questionable feature where the compiler would implicitly
declare a function that the user called but was never previously
declared. The resulting function would be globally declared as
extern int func(); -- a function without a prototype which accepts zero
or more arguments.
C99 removed support for this questionable feature due to severe
security concerns. However, there was no deprecation period; C89 had
the feature, C99 didn't. So Clang (and GCC) both supported the
functionality as an extension in C99 and later modes.
C2x no longer supports that function signature as it now requires all
functions to have a prototype, and given the known security issues with
the feature, continuing to support it as an extension is not tenable.
This patch changes the diagnostic behavior for the
-Wimplicit-function-declaration warning group depending on the language
mode in effect. We continue to warn by default in C89 mode (due to the
feature being dangerous to use). However, because this feature will not
be supported in C2x mode, we've diagnosed it as being invalid for so
long, the security concerns with the feature, and the trivial
workaround for users (declare the function), we now default the
extension warning to an error in C99-C17 mode. This still gives users
an easy workaround if they are extensively using the extension in those
modes (they can disable the warning or use -Wno-error to downgrade the
error), but the new diagnostic makes it more clear that this feature is
not supported and should be avoided. In C2x mode, we no longer allow an
implicit function to be defined and treat the situation the same as any
other lookup failure.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122983
Makes
bin/llvm-lit \
projects/compiler-rt/test/profile/Profile-arm64/instrprof-darwin-dead-strip.c
pass on my machine.
Without this change, ld64 complains that the bitcode was generated by LLVM 15
while the reader is 13.1 -- the version of Xcode on my machine. Looks like the
DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH technique isn't working.
-lto_library was added back in ld64-136, which was in Xcode 4.6, which was
released over 10 years ago. So relying on it should be safe by now.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D124018
Usually when we generated stacktraces the process is in error state, so
running hooks may crash the process and prevent meaningfull error report.
Symbolizer, unwinder and pthread are potential source of mallocs.
https://b.corp.google.com/issues/228110771
Reviewed By: kda
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D123566
Usually when we generated stacktraces the process is in error state, so
running hooks may crash the process and prevent meaningfull error report.
Symbolizer, unwinder and pthread are potential source of mallocs.
https://b.corp.google.com/issues/228110771
Reviewed By: kda
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D123566
ubsan_GetStackTrace (from 52b751088b) called by
~ScopeReport leaves top/bottom zeroes in the
`!WillUseFastUnwind(request_fast_unwind)` code path.
When BufferedStackTrace::Unwind falls back to UnwindFast,
`if (stack_top < 4096) return;` will return early, leaving just one frame in the stack trace.
Fix this by always initializing top/bottom like 261d6e05d5.
Reviewed By: eugenis, yln
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D123562
According to the RFC [0], this review contains the compiler-rt parts of large integer divison for _BitInt.
It adds the functions
```
/// Computes the unsigned division of a / b for two large integers
/// composed of n significant words.
/// Writes the quotient to quo and the remainder to rem.
///
/// \param quo The quotient represented by n words. Must be non-null.
/// \param rem The remainder represented by n words. Must be non-null.
/// \param a The dividend represented by n + 1 words. Must be non-null.
/// \param b The divisor represented by n words. Must be non-null.
/// \note The word order is in host endianness.
/// \note Might modify a and b.
/// \note The storage of 'a' needs to hold n + 1 elements because some
/// implementations need extra scratch space in the most significant word.
/// The value of that word is ignored.
COMPILER_RT_ABI void __udivmodei5(su_int *quo, su_int *rem, su_int *a,
su_int *b, unsigned int n);
/// Computes the signed division of a / b.
/// See __udivmodei5 for details.
COMPILER_RT_ABI void __divmodei5(su_int *quo, su_int *rem, su_int *a, su_int *b,
unsigned int words);
```
into builtins.
In addition it introduces a new "bitint" library containing only those new functions,
which is meant as a way to provide those when using libgcc as runtime.
[0] https://discourse.llvm.org/t/rfc-add-support-for-division-of-large-bitint-builtins-selectiondag-globalisel-clang/60329
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120327
This is useful when building a complete toolchain to ensure that CRT
is built after builtins but before the rest of the compiler-rt.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120682
This is useful when building a complete toolchain to ensure that CRT
is built after builtins but before the rest of the compiler-rt.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120682
On Darwin, we want to limit the parallelism during test execution for
sanitizer tests that use shadow memory. The reason is explained by this
existing comment:
> Only run up to 3 processes that require shadow memory simultaneously
> on 64-bit Darwin. Using more scales badly and hogs the system due to
> inefficient handling of large mmap'd regions (terabytes) by the
> kernel.
Previously we detected 3 cases:
* on-device: limit to 1 process
* 64-bit: macOS & simulators, limit to 3 processes
* others (32-bit): no limitation
We checked for the 64-bit case like this: `if arch in ['x86_64',
'x86_64h']` which misses macOS running on AS. Additionally, we don't
care about 32-bit anymore, so I've simplified this to 2 cases: on-device
and everything else.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122751
Currently, we only print how threads involved in data race are created from their parent threads.
Add a runtime flag 'print_full_thread_history' to print thread creation stacks for the threads involved in the data race and their ancestors up to the main thread.
Reviewed By: dvyukov
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122131
For errno spoiling reports we only print the stack
where the signal handler is invoked. And the top
frame is the signal handler function, which is supposed
to give the info for debugging.
But in same cases the top frame can be some common thunk,
which does not give much info. E.g. for Go/cgo it's always
runtime.cgoSigtramp.
Print the signal number.
This is what we can easily gather and it may give at least
some hints regarding the issue.
Reviewed By: melver, vitalybuka
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121979