I don't think the stat subsystem was ever used since tsan
development in 2012. But it adds lots of code and this
effectively dead code needs to be updated if the runtime
code changes, which adds maintanance cost for no benefit.
Normal profiler usually gives enough info and that info
is more trustworthy.
Remove the stats subsystem.
Reviewed By: vitalybuka
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106276
We have some significant amount of duplication around
CheckFailed functionality. Each sanitizer copy-pasted
a chunk of code. Some got random improvements like
dealing with recursive failures better. These improvements
could benefit all sanitizers, but they don't.
Deduplicate CheckFailed logic across sanitizers and let each
sanitizer only print the current stack trace.
I've tried to dedup stack printing as well,
but this got me into cmake hell. So let's keep this part
duplicated in each sanitizer for now.
Reviewed By: vitalybuka
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102221
Currently we have a bit of a mess related to tids:
- sanitizers re-declare kInvalidTid multiple times
- some call it kUnknownTid
- implicit assumptions that main tid is 0
- asan/memprof claim their tids need to fit into 24 bits,
but this does not seem to be true anymore
- inconsistent use of u32/int to store tids
Introduce kInvalidTid/kMainTid in sanitizer_common
and use them consistently.
Reviewed By: vitalybuka
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101428
Commit efd254b636 ("tsan: fix deadlock in pthread_atfork callbacks")
fixed another deadlock related to atfork handling.
But builders with DCHECKs enabled reported failures of
pthread_atfork_deadlock2.c and pthread_atfork_deadlock3.c tests
related to the fact that we hold runtime locks on interceptor exit:
https://lab.llvm.org/buildbot/#/builders/70/builds/6727
This issue is somewhat inherent to the current approach,
we indeed execute user code (atfork callbacks) with runtime lock held.
Refactor fork handling to not run user code (atfork callbacks)
with runtime locks held. This change does this by installing
own atfork callbacks during runtime initialization.
Atfork callbacks run in LIFO order, so the expectation is that
our callbacks run last, right before the actual fork.
This way we lock runtime mutexes around fork, but not around
user callbacks.
Extend tests to also install after fork callbacks just to cover
more scenarios. Some tests also started reporting real races
that we previously suppressed.
Also extend tests to cover fork syscall support.
Reviewed By: vitalybuka
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101517
Commit efd254b636 ("tsan: fix deadlock in pthread_atfork callbacks")
fixed another deadlock related to atfork handling.
But builders with DCHECKs enabled reported failures of
pthread_atfork_deadlock2.c and pthread_atfork_deadlock3.c tests
related to the fact that we hold runtime locks on interceptor exit:
https://lab.llvm.org/buildbot/#/builders/70/builds/6727
This issue is somewhat inherent to the current approach,
we indeed execute user code (atfork callbacks) with runtime lock held.
Refactor fork handling to not run user code (atfork callbacks)
with runtime locks held. This change does this by installing
own atfork callbacks during runtime initialization.
Atfork callbacks run in LIFO order, so the expectation is that
our callbacks run last, right before the actual fork.
This way we lock runtime mutexes around fork, but not around
user callbacks.
Extend tests to also install after fork callbacks just to cover
more scenarios. Some tests also started reporting real races
that we previously suppressed.
Reviewed By: vitalybuka
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101385
We take report/thread_registry locks around fork.
This means we cannot report any bugs in atfork handlers.
We resolved this by enabling per-thread ignores around fork.
This resolved some of the cases, but not all.
The added test triggers a race report from a signal handler
called from atfork callback, we reset per-thread ignores
around signal handlers, so we tried to report it and deadlocked.
But there are more cases: a signal handler can be called
synchronously if it's sent to itself. Or any other report
types would cause deadlocks as well: mutex misuse,
signal handler spoiling errno, etc.
Disable all reports for the duration of fork with
thr->suppress_reports and don't re-enable them around
signal handlers.
Reviewed By: vitalybuka
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101154
realeaseAcquire() is a new function added to TSan in support of the Go data-race detector.
It's semantics is:
void ThreadClock::releaseAcquire(SyncClock *sc) const {
for (int i = 0; i < kMaxThreads; i++) {
tmp = clock[i];
clock[i] = max(clock[i], sc->clock[i]);
sc->clock[i] = tmp;
}
}
For context see: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/220419
Reviewed-in: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76322
Author: dfava (Daniel Fava)
Generally we ignore interceptors coming from called_from_lib-suppressed libraries.
However, we must not ignore critical interceptors like e.g. pthread_create,
otherwise runtime will lost track of threads.
pthread_detach is one of these interceptors we should not ignore as it affects
thread states and behavior of pthread_join which we don't ignore as well.
Currently we can produce very obscure false positives. For more context see:
https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/thread-sanitizer/ecH2P0QUqPs
The added test captures this pattern.
While we are here rename ThreadTid to ThreadConsumeTid to make it clear that
it's not just a "getter", it resets user_id to 0. This lead to confusion recently.
Reviewed in https://reviews.llvm.org/D74828
I verified that the test is red without the interceptors.
rdar://40334350
Reviewed By: kubamracek, vitalybuka
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66616
llvm-svn: 371439
Switch `LongJmp` over to lookup JmpBuf via plain old (unmangled) SP.
This makes the computation of mangled SPs in the TSan assembly files
unnecessary, which will be cleaned up in follow-up revisions.
Reviewed By: dvyukov
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63942
llvm-svn: 364818
They need to have same AddressSpaceView and MapUnmapCallback.
Reviewers: eugenis
Subscribers: kubamracek, #sanitizers, llvm-commits
Tags: #sanitizers, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61168
llvm-svn: 359719
Originally this code as added for 64-bit platform and was never changed.
Add static_assert to make sure that we have correct map on all platforms.
llvm-svn: 359269
This patch adds functions for managing fibers:
__tsan_get_current_fiber()
__tsan_create_fiber()
__tsan_destroy_fiber()
__tsan_switch_to_fiber()
__tsan_set_fiber_name()
See the added tests for use examples.
Author: yuri (Yuri Per)
Reviewed in: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54889
[The previous commit of this change was reverted,
this is a resubmit with a squashed fix for check_analyze.sh
and COMMON_INTERCEPTOR_NOTHING_IS_INITIALIZED]
llvm-svn: 353947
This patch adds functions for managing fibers:
__tsan_get_current_fiber()
__tsan_create_fiber()
__tsan_destroy_fiber()
__tsan_switch_to_fiber()
__tsan_set_fiber_name()
See the added tests for use examples.
Author: yuri (Yuri Per)
Reviewed in: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54889
llvm-svn: 353817
Replace bool workerthread flag with ThreadType enum.
This change is preparation for fiber support.
[dvyukov: fixed build of sanitizer_thread_registry_test.cc]
Author: yuri (Yuri Per)
Reviewed in: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57839
Context: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54889
llvm-svn: 353390
to reflect the new license.
We understand that people may be surprised that we're moving the header
entirely to discuss the new license. We checked this carefully with the
Foundation's lawyer and we believe this is the correct approach.
Essentially, all code in the project is now made available by the LLVM
project under our new license, so you will see that the license headers
include that license only. Some of our contributors have contributed
code under our old license, and accordingly, we have retained a copy of
our old license notice in the top-level files in each project and
repository.
llvm-svn: 351636
Summary:
This is a follow up patch to r349138.
This patch makes a `AddressSpaceView` a type declaration in the
allocator parameters used by `SizeClassAllocator64`. For ASan, LSan, and
the unit tests the AP64 declarations have been made templated so that
`AddressSpaceView` can be changed at compile time. For the other
sanitizers we just hard-code `LocalAddressSpaceView` because we have no
plans to use these allocators in an out-of-process manner.
rdar://problem/45284065
Reviewers: kcc, dvyukov, vitalybuka, cryptoad, eugenis, kubamracek, george.karpenkov
Subscribers: #sanitizers, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55764
llvm-svn: 349954
Summary:
This is a follow up patch to r346956 for the `SizeClassAllocator32`
allocator.
This patch makes `AddressSpaceView` a template parameter both to the
`ByteMap` implementations (but makes `LocalAddressSpaceView` the
default), some `AP32` implementations and is used in `SizeClassAllocator32`.
The actual changes to `ByteMap` implementations and
`SizeClassAllocator32` are very simple. However the patch is large
because it requires changing all the `AP32` definitions, and users of
those definitions.
For ASan and LSan we make `AP32` and `ByteMap` templateds type that take
a single `AddressSpaceView` argument. This has been done because we will
instantiate the allocator with a type that isn't `LocalAddressSpaceView`
in the future patches. For the allocators used in the other sanitizers
(i.e. HWAsan, MSan, Scudo, and TSan) use of `LocalAddressSpaceView` is
hard coded because we do not intend to instantiate the allocators with
any other type.
In the cases where untemplated types have become templated on a single
`AddressSpaceView` parameter (e.g. `PrimaryAllocator`) their name has
been changed to have a `ASVT` suffix (Address Space View Type) to
indicate they are templated. The only exception to this are the `AP32`
types due to the desire to keep the type name as short as possible.
In order to check that template is instantiated in the correct a way a
`static_assert(...)` has been added that checks that the
`AddressSpaceView` type used by `Params::ByteMap::AddressSpaceView` matches
the `Params::AddressSpaceView`. This uses the new `sanitizer_type_traits.h`
header.
rdar://problem/45284065
Reviewers: kcc, dvyukov, vitalybuka, cryptoad, eugenis, kubamracek, george.karpenkov
Subscribers: mgorny, llvm-commits, #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54904
llvm-svn: 349138
Add pthread_tryjoin_np() and pthread_timedjoin_np() interceptors on Linux,
so that ThreadSanitizer can handle programs using these functions.
Author: Yuri Per (yuri)
Reviewed in: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54521
llvm-svn: 347383
Summary:
Following up on and complementing D44404 and other sanitizer allocators.
Currently many allocator specific errors (OOM, for example) are reported as
a text message and CHECK(0) termination, no stack, no details, not too
helpful nor informative. To improve the situation, detailed and structured
common errors were defined and reported under the appropriate conditions.
Common tests were generalized a bit to cover a slightly different TSan
stack reporting format, extended to verify errno value and returned
pointer value check is now explicit to facilitate debugging.
Reviewers: dvyukov
Subscribers: srhines, kubamracek, delcypher, #sanitizers, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48087
llvm-svn: 334975
The problem is reported in:
https://github.com/google/sanitizers/issues/945
We already disable as much as possible after multithreaded fork,
trace switching is last place that can hang due to basic
operations (memory accesses, function calls).
Disable it too.
llvm-svn: 331163
Summary:
The low-fat STL-like vector container will be reused in MSan.
It is needed to implement an atexit(3) interceptor on NetBSD/amd64 in MSan.
Sponsored by <The NetBSD Foundation>
Reviewers: joerg, dvyukov, eugenis, vitalybuka, kcc
Reviewed By: dvyukov
Subscribers: kubamracek, mgorny, llvm-commits, #sanitizers
Tags: #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40726
llvm-svn: 319650
Summary:
With rL279771, SizeClassAllocator64 was changed to accept only one template
instead of 5, for the following reasons: "First, this will make the mangled
names shorter. Second, this will make adding more parameters simpler". This
patch mirrors that work for SizeClassAllocator32.
This is in preparation for introducing the randomization of chunks in the
32-bit SizeClassAllocator in a later patch.
Reviewers: kcc, alekseyshl, dvyukov
Reviewed By: alekseyshl
Subscribers: llvm-commits, kubamracek
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33141
llvm-svn: 303071
This patch allows the Swift compiler to emit calls to `__tsan_external_write` before starting any modifying access, which will cause TSan to detect races on arrays, dictionaries and other classes defined in non-instrumented modules. Races on collections from the Swift standard library and user-defined structs and a frequent cause of subtle bugs and it's important that TSan detects those on top of existing LLVM IR instrumentation, which already detects races in direct memory accesses.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31630
llvm-svn: 302050
For a linker init mutex with lazy flag setup
(no __tsan_mutex_create call), it is possible that
no lock/unlock happened before the destroy call.
Then when destroy runs we still don't know that
it is a linker init mutex and will emulate a memory write.
This in turn can lead to false positives as the mutex
is in fact linker initialized.
Support linker init flag in destroy annotation to resolve this.
llvm-svn: 301795
To make the TSan external API work with Swift and other use cases, we need to track "tags" for individual memory accesses. Since there is no space to store this information in shadow cells, let's use the thread traces for that. This patch stores the tag as an extra frame in the stack traces (by calling FuncEntry and FuncExit with the address of a registered tag), this extra frame is then stripped before printing the backtrace to stderr.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32382
llvm-svn: 301777
This patch make sure we don't report deadlocks and other bug types when we're inside an interceptor that was called from a noninstrumented module (when ignore_noninstrumented_modules=1 is set). Adding a testcase that shows that deadlock detection still works on Darwin (to make sure we're not silencing too many reports).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31449
llvm-svn: 300998
We seem to assume that OS-provided thread IDs are either uptr or int, neither of which is true on Darwin. This introduces a tid_t type, which holds a OS-provided thread ID (gettid on Linux, pthread_threadid_np on Darwin, pthread_self on FreeBSD).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31774
llvm-svn: 300473
There are several problems with the current annotations (AnnotateRWLockCreate and friends):
- they don't fully support deadlock detection (we need a hook _before_ mutex lock)
- they don't support insertion of random artificial delays to perturb execution (again we need a hook _before_ mutex lock)
- they don't support setting extended mutex attributes like read/write reentrancy (only "linker init" was bolted on)
- they don't support setting mutex attributes if a mutex don't have a "constructor" (e.g. static, Java, Go mutexes)
- they don't ignore synchronization inside of lock/unlock operations which leads to slowdown and false negatives
The new annotations solve of the above problems. See tsan_interface.h for the interface specification and comments.
Reviewed in https://reviews.llvm.org/D31093
llvm-svn: 298809
This patch allows a non-instrumented library to call into TSan runtime, and tell us about "readonly" and "modifying" accesses to an arbitrary "object" and provide the caller and tag (type of object). This allows TSan to detect violations of API threading contracts where "read-only" methods can be called simulatenously from multiple threads, while modifying methods must be exclusive.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28836
llvm-svn: 293885
When dealing with GCD worker threads, TSan currently prints weird things like "created by thread T-1" and "[failed to restore the stack]" in reports. This patch avoids that and instead prints "Thread T3 (...) is a GCD worker thread".
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29103
llvm-svn: 293882
In ASan, we have __asan_locate_address and __asan_get_alloc_stack, which is used in LLDB/Xcode to show the allocation backtrace for a heap memory object. This patch implements the same for TSan.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27656
llvm-svn: 290119
Currently we either define SANITIZER_GO for Go or don't define it at all for C++.
This works fine with preprocessor (ifdef/ifndef/defined), but does not work
for C++ if statements (e.g. if (SANITIZER_GO) {...}). Also this is different
from majority of SANITIZER_FOO macros which are always defined to either 0 or 1.
Always define SANITIZER_GO to either 0 or 1.
This allows to use SANITIZER_GO in expressions and in flag default values.
Also remove kGoMode and kCppMode, which were meant to be used in expressions,
but they are not defined in sanitizer_common code, so SANITIZER_GO become prevalent.
Also convert some preprocessor checks to C++ if's or ternary expressions.
Majority of this change is done mechanically with:
sed "s#ifdef SANITIZER_GO#if SANITIZER_GO#g"
sed "s#ifndef SANITIZER_GO#if \!SANITIZER_GO#g"
sed "s#defined(SANITIZER_GO)#SANITIZER_GO#g"
llvm-svn: 285443