Commit Graph

14 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Lang Hames 1d0676b54c [ORC] Break up OrcJIT library, add Orc-RPC based remote TargetProcessControl
implementation.

This patch aims to improve support for out-of-process JITing using OrcV2. It
introduces two new class templates, OrcRPCTargetProcessControlBase and
OrcRPCTPCServer, which together implement the TargetProcessControl API by
forwarding operations to an execution process via an Orc-RPC Endpoint. These
utilities are used to implement out-of-process JITing from llvm-jitlink to
a new llvm-jitlink-executor tool.

This patch also breaks the OrcJIT library into three parts:
  -- OrcTargetProcess: Contains code needed by the JIT execution process.
  -- OrcShared: Contains code needed by the JIT execution and compiler
     processes
  -- OrcJIT: Everything else.

This break-up allows JIT executor processes to link against OrcTargetProcess
and OrcShared only, without having to link in all of OrcJIT. Clients executing
JIT'd code in-process should start linking against OrcTargetProcess as well as
OrcJIT.

In the near future these changes will enable:
  -- Removal of the OrcRemoteTargetClient/OrcRemoteTargetServer class templates
     which provided similar functionality in OrcV1.
  -- Restoration of Chapter 5 of the Building-A-JIT tutorial series, which will
     serve as a simple usage example for these APIs.
  -- Implementation of lazy, cross-target compilation in lli's -jit-kind=orc-lazy
     mode.
2020-11-13 17:05:13 +11:00
Miloš Stojanović bff33bd5c8 [unittests] Fix "comparison of integers of different signs" warnings
A warning is sent because `std::distance()` returns a signed type so
`CmpHelperEQ()` gets instantiated into a function that compares
differently signed arguments.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72632
2020-01-14 13:24:51 +01:00
Lang Hames 58e66f2f63 [JITLink] Move block ownership from LinkGraph to Section.
This enables easy iteration over blocks in a specific section.
2019-10-30 17:57:03 -07:00
Lang Hames cd24a00bd3 [JITLink] Remove relocation unit tests.
These tests were written before llvm-jitlink supported regression testing of
relocation support. They are now redundant.
2019-10-30 13:16:37 -07:00
Lang Hames 4ceca8fa66 [JITLink] Add missing include, explicitly qualify STLExtras functions.
This should fix the failures on some bots due to commit
b9d8e23b80.
2019-10-30 13:06:15 -07:00
Lang Hames b9d8e23b80 [JITLink] Add a utility for splitting blocks at a given index.
LinkGraph::splitBlock will split a block at a given index, returning a new
block covering the range [ 0, index ) and modifying the original block to
cover the range [ index, original-block-size ). Block addresses, content,
edges and symbols will be updated as necessary. This utility will be used
in upcoming improvements to JITLink's eh-frame support.
2019-10-30 12:35:49 -07:00
Mirko Brkusanin 4b63ca1379 [Mips] Use appropriate private label prefix based on Mips ABI
MipsMCAsmInfo was using '$' prefix for Mips32 and '.L' for Mips64
regardless of -target-abi option. By passing MCTargetOptions to MCAsmInfo
we can find out Mips ABI and pick appropriate prefix.

Tags: #llvm, #clang, #lldb

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66795
2019-10-23 12:24:35 +02:00
Lang Hames 4e920e58e6 [JITLink] Switch from an atom-based model to a "blocks and symbols" model.
In the Atom model the symbols, content and relocations of a relocatable object
file are represented as a graph of atoms, where each Atom represents a
contiguous block of content with a single name (or no name at all if the
content is anonymous), and where edges between Atoms represent relocations.
If more than one symbol is associated with a contiguous block of content then
the content is broken into multiple atoms and layout constraints (represented by
edges) are introduced to ensure that the content remains effectively contiguous.
These layout constraints must be kept in mind when examining the content
associated with a symbol (it may be spread over multiple atoms) or when applying
certain relocation types (e.g. MachO subtractors).

This patch replaces the Atom model in JITLink with a blocks-and-symbols model.
The blocks-and-symbols model represents relocatable object files as bipartite
graphs, with one set of nodes representing contiguous content (Blocks) and
another representing named or anonymous locations (Symbols) within a Block.
Relocations are represented as edges from Blocks to Symbols. This scheme
removes layout constraints (simplifying handling of MachO alt-entry symbols,
and hopefully ELF sections at some point in the future) and simplifies some
relocation logic.

llvm-svn: 373689
2019-10-04 03:55:26 +00:00
Jonas Devlieghere 0eaee545ee [llvm] Migrate llvm::make_unique to std::make_unique
Now that we've moved to C++14, we no longer need the llvm::make_unique
implementation from STLExtras.h. This patch is a mechanical replacement
of (hopefully) all the llvm::make_unique instances across the monorepo.

llvm-svn: 369013
2019-08-15 15:54:37 +00:00
Lang Hames 1233c15be5 [JITLink] Remove a lot of reduntant 'JITLink_' prefixes. NFC.
llvm-svn: 358869
2019-04-22 03:03:09 +00:00
Fangrui Song 70961f17ef [JITLink] Add dependency on MCParser to unit test after rL358818
This is required by -DBUILD_SHARED_LIBS=on builds for createMCAsmParser.

llvm-svn: 358842
2019-04-21 06:12:00 +00:00
Lang Hames 7fc7b368bd [JITLink] Add dependencies on MCDissassembler and Target to unit test.
llvm-svn: 358836
2019-04-21 00:35:58 +00:00
Lang Hames bcdce5cd41 [JITLink] Add check to JITLink unit test to bail out for unsupported targets.
This should prevent spurious JITLink unit test failures for builds that do not
support the target(s) required by the tests.

llvm-svn: 358825
2019-04-20 18:30:17 +00:00
Lang Hames 11c8dfa583 Initial implementation of JITLink - A replacement for RuntimeDyld.
Summary:

JITLink is a jit-linker that performs the same high-level task as RuntimeDyld:
it parses relocatable object files and makes their contents runnable in a target
process.

JITLink aims to improve on RuntimeDyld in several ways:

(1) A clear design intended to maximize code-sharing while minimizing coupling.

RuntimeDyld has been developed in an ad-hoc fashion for a number of years and
this had led to intermingling of code for multiple architectures (e.g. in
RuntimeDyldELF::processRelocationRef) in a way that makes the code more
difficult to read, reason about, extend. JITLink is designed to isolate
format and architecture specific code, while still sharing generic code.

(2) Support for native code models.

RuntimeDyld required the use of large code models (where calls to external
functions are made indirectly via registers) for many of platforms due to its
restrictive model for stub generation (one "stub" per symbol). JITLink allows
arbitrary mutation of the atom graph, allowing both GOT and PLT atoms to be
added naturally.

(3) Native support for asynchronous linking.

JITLink uses asynchronous calls for symbol resolution and finalization: these
callbacks are passed a continuation function that they must call to complete the
linker's work. This allows for cleaner interoperation with the new concurrent
ORC JIT APIs, while still being easily implementable in synchronous style if
asynchrony is not needed.

To maximise sharing, the design has a hierarchy of common code:

(1) Generic atom-graph data structure and algorithms (e.g. dead stripping and
 |  memory allocation) that are intended to be shared by all architectures.
 |
 + -- (2) Shared per-format code that utilizes (1), e.g. Generic MachO to
       |  atom-graph parsing.
       |
       + -- (3) Architecture specific code that uses (1) and (2). E.g.
                JITLinkerMachO_x86_64, which adds x86-64 specific relocation
                support to (2) to build and patch up the atom graph.

To support asynchronous symbol resolution and finalization, the callbacks for
these operations take continuations as arguments:

  using JITLinkAsyncLookupContinuation =
      std::function<void(Expected<AsyncLookupResult> LR)>;

  using JITLinkAsyncLookupFunction =
      std::function<void(const DenseSet<StringRef> &Symbols,
                         JITLinkAsyncLookupContinuation LookupContinuation)>;

  using FinalizeContinuation = std::function<void(Error)>;

  virtual void finalizeAsync(FinalizeContinuation OnFinalize);

In addition to its headline features, JITLink also makes other improvements:

  - Dead stripping support: symbols that are not used (e.g. redundant ODR
    definitions) are discarded, and take up no memory in the target process
    (In contrast, RuntimeDyld supported pointer equality for weak definitions,
    but the redundant definitions stayed resident in memory).

  - Improved exception handling support. JITLink provides a much more extensive
    eh-frame parser than RuntimeDyld, and is able to correctly fix up many
    eh-frame sections that RuntimeDyld currently (silently) fails on.

  - More extensive validation and error handling throughout.

This initial patch supports linking MachO/x86-64 only. Work on support for
other architectures and formats will happen in-tree.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58704

llvm-svn: 358818
2019-04-20 17:10:34 +00:00