The partitioning logic attempted to handle uses of an alloca with an
offset starting before the alloca so long as the use had some overlap
with the alloca itself. However, there was a bug where we tested
'(uint64_t)Offset >= AllocSize' without first checking whether 'Offset'
was positive. As a consequence, essentially every negative offset (that
is, starting *before* the alloca does) would be thrown out, even if it
was overlapping. The subsequent code to throw out negative offsets which
were actually non-overlapping was essentially dead. The code to *handle*
overlapping negative offsets was actually dead!
I've just removed all of this, and taught SROA to discard any uses which
start prior to the alloca from the beginning. It has the lovely property
of simplifying the code. =] All the tests still pass, and in fact no new
tests are needed as this is already covered by our testsuite. Fixing the
code so that negative offsets work the way the comments indicate they
were supposed to work causes regressions. That's how I found this.
Anyways, this is all progress in the correct direction -- tightening up
SROA to be maximally aggressive. Some day, I really hope to turn
out-of-bounds accesses to an alloca into 'unreachable'.
llvm-svn: 169120
If user specifies aborting after a recoverable failed check is
appropriate, frontend should emit call to the _abort variant.
Test this behavior with newly added -fsanitize-recover flag.
llvm-svn: 169113
; CHECK: [[VAR:[a-z]]]
The problem was that to find the end of the regex var definition, it was
simplistically looking for the next ]] and finding the incorrect one. A
better approach is to count nesting of brackets (taking escaping into
account). This way the brackets that are part of the regex can be discovered
and skipped properly, and the ]] ending is detected in the right place.
llvm-svn: 169109
Recent changes in isl:
- Allow analysis of loops during code generation
This simplifies the detection of parallel loops.
- Simplify the way costumized ast printers are defined
This enables us to highlight parallel / vector loops in our debug output.
- Compile time improvements for codegen contexts that include parameters
- Various bug fixes
This update also gets us in sync for the isl 0.11 release.
llvm-svn: 169100
that kexts were newly added.
The Darwin userland dynamic loader provides lldb with a list of
newly-added or newly-removed binaries but in the kernel case we
only know that something has changed. DynamicLoaderDarwinKernel
really needs to maintain its own persistent list of kexts that
it has been notified about (most importantly, it will not detect
kext unlods) but for now we'll at least avoid re-adding an already
present kext.
<rdar://problem/12658487>, <rdar://problem/12658487>
llvm-svn: 169082
Also check in a case to repeat the issue, on which 'opt -globalopt' consumes 1.6GB memory.
The big memory footprint cause is that current GlobalOpt one by one hoists and stores the leaf element constant into the global array, in each iteration, it recreates the global array initializer constant and leave the old initializer alone. This may result in many obsolete constants left.
For example: we have global array @rom = global [16 x i32] zeroinitializer
After the first element value is hoisted and installed: @rom = global [16 x i32] [ 1, 0, 0, ... ]
After the second element value is installed: @rom = global [16 x 32] [ 1, 2, 0, 0, ... ] // here the previous initializer is obsolete
...
When the transform is done, we have 15 obsolete initializers left useless.
llvm-svn: 169079
from /proc/self/maps.
The mappings are currently being cached on each access to /proc/self/maps. In the future we'll need to add an API that allows the client to notify ASan about the sandbox.
llvm-svn: 169076