ExternalSymbolMap now stores the string key (rather than using a StringRef),
as the object file backing the key may be removed at any time.
llvm-svn: 323001
Bulk queries reduce IPC/RPC overhead for cross-process JITing and expose
opportunities for parallel compilation.
The two new query methods are lookupFlags, which finds the flags for each of a
set of symbols; and lookup, which finds the address and flags for each of a
set of symbols. (See doxygen comments for more details.)
The existing JITSymbolResolver class is renamed LegacyJITSymbolResolver, and
modified to extend the new JITSymbolResolver class using the following scheme:
- lookupFlags is implemented by calling findSymbolInLogicalDylib for each of the
symbols, then returning the result of calling getFlags() on each of these
symbols. (Importantly: lookupFlags does NOT call getAddress on the returned
symbols, so lookupFlags will never trigger materialization, and lookupFlags will
never call findSymbol, so only symbols that are part of the logical dylib will
return results.)
- lookup is implemented by calling findSymbolInLogicalDylib for each symbol and
falling back to findSymbol if findSymbolInLogicalDylib returns a null result.
Assuming a symbol is found its getAddress method is called to materialize it and
the result (if getAddress succeeds) is stored in the result map, or the error
(if getAddress fails) is returned immediately from lookup. If any symbol is not
found then lookup returns immediately with an error.
This change will break any out-of-tree derivatives of JITSymbolResolver. This
can be fixed by updating those classes to derive from LegacyJITSymbolResolver
instead.
llvm-svn: 322913
ExecutionSession will represent a running JIT program.
VModuleKey is a unique key assigned to each module added as part of
an ExecutionSession. The Layer concept will be updated in future to
require a VModuleKey when a module is added.
llvm-svn: 322336
version being used on some of the green dragon builders (plus a clang-format).
Workaround: AsynchronousSymbolQuery and VSO want to work with
JITEvaluatedSymbols anyway, so just use them (instead of JITSymbol, which
happens to tickle the bug).
The libcxx bug being worked around was fixed in r276003, and there are plans to
update the offending builders.
llvm-svn: 322140
The original commit broke the builders due to a think-o in an assertion:
AsynchronousSymbolQuery's constructor needs to check the callback member
variables, not the constructor arguments.
llvm-svn: 321853
SymbolSource.
These new APIs are a first stab at tackling some current shortcomings of ORC,
especially in performance and threading support.
VSO (Virtual Shared Object) is a symbol table representing the symbol
definitions of a set of modules that behave as if they had been statically
linked together into a shared object or dylib. Symbol definitions, either
pre-defined addresses or lazy definitions, can be added and queries for symbol
addresses made. The table applies the same linkage strength rules that static
linkers do when constructing a dylib or shared object: duplicate definitions
result in errors, strong definitions override weak or common ones. This class
should improve symbol lookup speed by providing centralized symbol tables (as
compared to the findSymbol implementation in the in-tree ORC layers, which
maintain one symbol table per object file / module added).
AsynchronousSymbolQuery is a query for the addresses of a set of symbols.
Query results are returned via a callback once they become available. Querying
for a set of symbols, rather than one symbol at a time (as the current lookup
scheme does) the JIT has the opportunity to make better use of available
resources (e.g. by spawning multiple jobs to materialize the requested symbols
if possible). Returning results via a callback makes queries asynchronous, so
queries from multiple threads of JIT'd code can proceed simultaneously.
SymbolSource represents a source of symbol definitions. It is used when
adding lazy symbol definitions to a VSO. Symbol definitions can be materialized
when needed or discarded if a stronger definition is found. Materializing on
demand via SymbolSources should (eventually) allow us to remove the lazy
materializers from JITSymbol, which will in turn allow the removal of many
current error checks and reduce the number of RPC round-trips involved in
materializing remote symbols. Adding a discard function allows sources to
discard symbol definitions (or mark them as available_externally), reducing the
amount of redundant code generated by the JIT for ODR symbols.
llvm-svn: 321838
Summary:
This will let ORC JIT clients plug in custom logic for the mmap, munmap and
mprotect paths.
Reviewers: loladiro, dblaikie
Subscribers: mcrosier, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39300
llvm-svn: 317770
The overflow detection assertions were tautological due to truncation.
Adjust them to no longer be tautological.
Patch by Alex Langford!
llvm-svn: 316303
We want to be writing a 32bit value, so we should be writing 4 bytes
instead of 2.
Patch by Alex Langford <apl@fb.com>.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38872
llvm-svn: 315964
This reverts commit SVN r313668. The original test case attempted to
write a pointer value into 16-bits, although the value may exceed the
range representable in 16-bits. Ensure that the symbol is located in
the address space such that its absolute address is representable in
16-bits. This should fix the assertion failure that was seen on the
Windows hosts.
llvm-svn: 313822
This reverts commit SVN r313654. Seems that it is triggering an
assertion on Windows specifically. Revert until I can build on Windows
and look into what is happening there.
llvm-svn: 313668
Add support for the R_AARCH64_ABS{16,32} relocations in the execution
engine. This is primarily used for DWARF debug information relocations
and needed by the LLVM JIT to support JITing for lldb.
Patch by Alex Langford!
llvm-svn: 313654
This patch introduces RemoteObjectClientLayer and RemoteObjectServerLayer,
which can be used to forward ORC object-layer operations from a JIT stack in
the client to a JIT stack (consisting only of object-layers) in the server.
This is a new way to support remote-JITing in LLVM. The previous approach
(supported by OrcRemoteTargetClient and OrcRemoteTargetServer) used a
remote-mapping memory manager that sat "beneath" the JIT stack and sent
fully-relocated binary blobs to the server. The main advantage of the new
approach is that relocatable objects can be cached on the server and re-used
(if the code that they represent hasn't changed), whereas fully-relocated blobs
can not (since the addresses they have been permanently bound to will change
from run to run).
llvm-svn: 312511
Calling grow may result in an error if, for example, this is a callback
manager for a remote target. We need to be able to return this error to the
callee.
llvm-svn: 312429
https://reviews.llvm.org/D36888
From that review description:
When an OrcMCJITReplacement object gets destructed, LazyEmitLayer may still
contain a shared_ptr of a module, which requires ShouldDelete in the deleter.
But ShouldDelete gets destructed before LazyEmitLayer due to the order of
declaration in OrcMCJITReplacement, which leads to a crash, when the destructor
of LazyEmitLayer is executed. Changing the order of declaration fixes this.
Patch by Moritz Kroll. Thanks Moritz!
llvm-svn: 312086
Expose the dependencies of LLVMExecutionEngine library as PUBLIC rather
than PRIVATE when building a shared library. This is necessary because
the library is not contained but exposes API of other LLVM libraries via
its headers.
This causes other libraries to fail to link if the linker verifies for
correctness of -l flags (i.e. fails on indirect dependencies). This e.g.
happens when building LLDB against shared LLVM:
lib64/liblldbExpression.a(IRExecutionUnit.cpp.o):(.data.rel.ro._ZTIN4llvm18MCJITMemoryManagerE[_ZTIN4llvm18MCJITMemoryManagerE]+0x10): undefined reference to `typeinfo for llvm::RuntimeDyld::MemoryManager'
lib64/liblldbExpression.a(IRExecutionUnit.cpp.o):(.data.rel.ro._ZTVN4llvm18MCJITMemoryManagerE[_ZTVN4llvm18MCJITMemoryManagerE]+0x60): undefined reference to `llvm::RuntimeDyld::MemoryManager::anchor()'
lib64/liblldbExpression.a(IRExecutionUnit.cpp.o):(.data.rel.ro._ZTVN12lldb_private15IRExecutionUnit13MemoryManagerE[_ZTVN12lldb_private15IRExecutionUnit13MemoryManagerE]+0x48): undefined reference to `llvm::RTDyldMemoryManager::deregisterEHFrames()'
lib64/liblldbExpression.a(IRExecutionUnit.cpp.o):(.data.rel.ro._ZTVN12lldb_private15IRExecutionUnit13MemoryManagerE[_ZTVN12lldb_private15IRExecutionUnit13MemoryManagerE]+0x60): undefined reference to `llvm::RuntimeDyld::MemoryManager::anchor()'
lib64/liblldbExpression.a(IRExecutionUnit.cpp.o):(.data.rel.ro._ZTVN12lldb_private15IRExecutionUnit13MemoryManagerE[_ZTVN12lldb_private15IRExecutionUnit13MemoryManagerE]+0xd0): undefined reference to `llvm::JITSymbolResolver::anchor()'
collect2: error: ld returned 1 exit status
Declaring the dependencies as PUBLIC guarantees that any package using
the ExecutionEngine library will also get explicit -l flags for
the dependent libraries guaranteeing that the symbols exposed in headers
could be resolved.
Patch originally written by NAKAMURA Takumi.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36211
llvm-svn: 310712
This patch adds support for thumb relocations to RuntimeDyldMachOARM, and adds
a target-specific flags field to JITSymbolFlags (so that on ARM we can record
whether each symbol is Thumb-mode code).
RuntimeDyldImpl::emitSection is modified to ensure that stubs memory is
correctly aligned based on the size returned by getStubAlignment().
llvm-svn: 310517
IMHO it is an antipattern to have a enum value that is Default.
At any given piece of code it is not clear if we have to handle
Default or if has already been mapped to a concrete value. In this
case in particular, only the target can do the mapping and it is nice
to make sure it is always done.
This deletes the two default enum values of CodeModel and uses an
explicit Optional<CodeModel> when it is possible that it is
unspecified.
llvm-svn: 309911
This patch updates the ORC layers and utilities to return and propagate
llvm::Errors where appropriate. This is necessary to allow ORC to safely handle
error cases in cross-process and remote JITing.
llvm-svn: 307350
Make it usable by any class derived (even indirectly) from
LoadedObjectInfo by allowing a custom base class to be specified and
perfect forwarding to the ctor.
llvm-svn: 307166
symbol resolver argument.
De-templatizing the symbol resolver is part of the ongoing simplification of
ORC layer API.
Removing the memory management argument (and delegating construction of memory
managers for RTDyldObjectLinkingLayer to a functor passed in to the constructor)
allows us to build JITs whose base object layers need not be compatible with
RTDyldObjectLinkingLayer's memory mangement scheme. For example, a 'remote
object layer' that sends fully relocatable objects directly to the remote does
not need a memory management scheme at all (that will be handled by the remote).
llvm-svn: 307058
I think there are some destruction ordering issues here. The
ShouldDelete map seems to be getting destroyed before the shared_ptr
deleter lambda accesses it. In any case, this avoids inserting elements
into the map during shutdown.
llvm-svn: 306736
The style guide states that the explicit `inline`
should not be used with inline methods. classof is
very common inline method with a fair amount on
inconsistency:
$ git grep classof ./include | grep inline | wc -l
230
$ git grep classof ./include | grep -v inline | wc -l
257
I chose to target this method rather the larger change
since this method is easily cargo-culted (I did it at
least once). I considered doing the larger change and
removing all occurrences but that would be a much larger
change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33906
llvm-svn: 306731
Revert "[ORC] Remove redundant semicolons from DEFINE_SIMPLE_CONVERSION_FUNCTIONS uses."
Revert "[ORC] Move ORC IR layer interface from addModuleSet to addModule and fix the module type as std::shared_ptr<Module>."
They broke ExecutionEngine/OrcMCJIT/test-global-ctors.ll on linux.
llvm-svn: 306176
move the ObjectCache from the IRCompileLayer to SimpleCompiler.
This is the first in a series of patches aimed at cleaning up and improving the
robustness and performance of the ORC APIs.
llvm-svn: 306058
After the N64 static relocation model support was added to llvm it is required to add its support in RuntimeDyld also because lldb uses ExecutionEngine for evaluating expressions.
Reviewed by sdardis
Differential: D31649
llvm-svn: 305997
This creates a new library called BinaryFormat that has all of
the headers from llvm/Support containing structure and layout
definitions for various types of binary formats like dwarf, coff,
elf, etc as well as the code for identifying a file from its
magic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33843
llvm-svn: 304864
I did this a long time ago with a janky python script, but now
clang-format has built-in support for this. I fed clang-format every
line with a #include and let it re-sort things according to the precise
LLVM rules for include ordering baked into clang-format these days.
I've reverted a number of files where the results of sorting includes
isn't healthy. Either places where we have legacy code relying on
particular include ordering (where possible, I'll fix these separately)
or where we have particular formatting around #include lines that
I didn't want to disturb in this patch.
This patch is *entirely* mechanical. If you get merge conflicts or
anything, just ignore the changes in this patch and run clang-format
over your #include lines in the files.
Sorry for any noise here, but it is important to keep these things
stable. I was seeing an increasing number of patches with irrelevant
re-ordering of #include lines because clang-format was used. This patch
at least isolates that churn, makes it easy to skip when resolving
conflicts, and gets us to a clean baseline (again).
llvm-svn: 304787
Actually, to identify external symbols, we need to check for
*either* non-null Value.SymbolName *or* a SymType of
Symbol::ST_Unknown.
The former may happen for symbols not known to the JIT at all
(e.g. defined in a native library), while the latter happens
for symbols known to the JIT, but defined in a different module.
Fixed several regressions on big-endian ppc64.
llvm-svn: 303655
The PowerPC part of processRelocationRef currently assumes that external
symbols can be identified by checking for SymType == SymbolRef::ST_Unknown.
This is actually incorrect in some cases, causing relocation overflows to
be mis-detected. The correct check is to test whether Value.SymbolName
is null.
Includes test case. Note that it is a bit tricky to replicate the exact
condition that triggers the bug in a test case. The one included here
seems to fail reliably (before the fix) across different operating
system versions on Power, but it still makes a few assumptions (called
out in the test case comments).
Also add ppc64le platform name to the supported list in the lit.local.cfg
files for the MCJIT and OrcMCJIT directories, since those tests were
currently not run at all.
Fixes PR32650.
Reviewer: hfinkel
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33402
llvm-svn: 303637
Code in RuntimeDyldELF currently uses 32-bit temporaries to detect
whether a PPC64 relocation target is out of range. This is incorrect,
and can mis-detect overflow where the distance between relocation site
and target is close to a multiple of 4GB. Fixed by using 64-bit
temporaries.
Noticed while debugging PR32650.
Reviewer: hfinkel
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33403
llvm-svn: 303632
Summary:
Debug info sections, (or non-SHF_ALLOC sections in general) should be
linked as if their load address was zero to emulate the behavior of the
static linker.
This bug was discovered because it was breaking lldb expression evaluation on
linux.
Reviewers: lhames
Subscribers: aprantl, eugene, clayborg, lldb-commits, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32899
llvm-svn: 303239
frames.
RuntimeDyld was previously responsible for tracking allocated EH frames, but it
makes more sense to have the RuntimeDyld::MemoryManager track them (since the
frames are allocated through the memory manager, and written to memory owned by
the memory manager). This patch moves the frame tracking into
RTDyldMemoryManager, and changes the deregisterFrames method on
RuntimeDyld::MemoryManager from:
void deregisterEHFrames(uint8_t *Addr, uint64_t LoadAddr, size_t Size);
to:
void deregisterEHFrames();
Separating this responsibility will allow ORC to continue to throw the
RuntimeDyld instances away post-link (saving a few dozen bytes per lazy
function) while properly deregistering frames when modules are unloaded.
This patch also updates ORC to call deregisterEHFrames when modules are
unloaded. This fixes a bug where an exception that tears down the JIT can then
unwind through dangling EH frames that have been deallocated but not
deregistered, resulting in UB.
For people using SectionMemoryManager this should be pretty much a no-op. For
people with custom allocators that override registerEHFrames/deregisterEHFrames,
you will now be responsible for tracking allocated EH frames.
Reviewed in https://reviews.llvm.org/D32829
llvm-svn: 302589
Currently llvm-rtdyld in -check mode will map sections to back-to-back 4k
aligned slabs starting at 0x1000. Automatically remapping sections by default is
helpful because it quickly exposes relocation bugs due to use of local addresses
rather than load addresses (these would silently pass if the load address was
not remapped). These mappings can be explicitly overridden on a per-section
basis using llvm-rtdlyd's -map-section option. This patch extends this scheme to
also preserve any mappings made by RuntimeDyld itself. Preserving RuntimeDyld's
automatic mappings allows us to write test cases to verify that these automatic
mappings have been applied.
This will allow the fix in https://reviews.llvm.org/D32899 to be tested with
llvm-rtdyld -check.
llvm-svn: 302372
. there should be no runtime relocation inside the bpf function.
. relocation supported here mostly for debugging.
. a test case is added.
Signed-off-by: Yonghong Song <yhs@fb.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org>
llvm-svn: 302055
This reverts commit r301105, 4, 3 and 1, as a follow up of the previous
revert, which broke even more bots.
For reference:
Revert "[APInt] Use operator<<= where possible. NFC"
Revert "[APInt] Use operator<<= instead of shl where possible. NFC"
Revert "[APInt] Use ashInPlace where possible."
PR32754.
llvm-svn: 301111
This patch uses lshrInPlace to replace code where the object that lshr is called on is being overwritten with the result.
This adds an lshrInPlace(const APInt &) version as well.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32155
llvm-svn: 300566
This patch allows Error and Expected types to be passed to and returned from
RPC functions.
Serializers and deserializers for custom error types (types deriving from the
ErrorInfo class template) can be registered with the SerializationTraits for
a given channel type (see registerStringError in RPCSerialization.h for an
example), allowing a given custom type to be sent/received. Unregistered types
will be serialized/deserialized as StringErrors using the custom type's log
message as the error string.
llvm-svn: 300167
and to expose a handle to represent the actual case rather than having
the iterator return a reference to itself.
All of this allows the iterator to be used with common STL facilities,
standard algorithms, etc.
Doing this exposed some missing facilities in the iterator facade that
I've fixed and required some work to the actual iterator to fully
support the necessary API.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31548
llvm-svn: 300032
When the ProcessAllSections flag (introduced in r204398) is set RuntimeDyld is
supposed to make a call to the client's memory manager for every section in each
object that is loaded. Due to some missing checks, this was not happening in all
cases. This patch adds the missing cases, and fixes the Orc unit test that
verifies correct behavior for ProcessAllSections (The unit test had been
silently bailing out due to an ordering issue: a change in the test order meant
that this unit-test was running before the native target was registered. This
issue has also been fixed in this patch).
This fixes <rdar://problem/22789965>
llvm-svn: 299449
Summary:
This class is a list of AttributeSetNodes corresponding the function
prototype of a call or function declaration. This class used to be
called ParamAttrListPtr, then AttrListPtr, then AttributeSet. It is
typically accessed by parameter and return value index, so
"AttributeList" seems like a more intuitive name.
Rename AttributeSetImpl to AttributeListImpl to follow suit.
It's useful to rename this class so that we can rename AttributeSetNode
to AttributeSet later. AttributeSet is the set of attributes that apply
to a single function, argument, or return value.
Reviewers: sanjoy, javed.absar, chandlerc, pete
Reviewed By: pete
Subscribers: pete, jholewinski, arsenm, dschuff, mehdi_amini, jfb, nhaehnle, sbc100, void, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31102
llvm-svn: 298393
The current ObjectLinkingLayer (now RTDyldObjectLinkingLayer) links objects
in-process using MCJIT's RuntimeDyld class. In the near future I hope to add new
object linking layers (e.g. a remote linking layer that links objects in the JIT
target process, rather than the client), so I'm renaming this class to be more
descriptive.
llvm-svn: 295636
LLVM defines `PTHREAD_LIB` which is used by AddLLVM.cmake and various projects
to correctly link the threading library when needed. Unfortunately
`PTHREAD_LIB` is defined by LLVM's `config-ix.cmake` file which isn't installed
and therefore can't be used when configuring out-of-tree builds. This causes
such builds to fail since `pthread` isn't being correctly linked.
This patch attempts to fix that problem by renaming and exporting
`LLVM_PTHREAD_LIB` as part of`LLVMConfig.cmake`. I renamed `PTHREAD_LIB`
because It seemed likely to cause collisions with downstream users of
`LLVMConfig.cmake`.
llvm-svn: 294690
This patch implements two GOT relocations:
R_AARCH64_ADR_GOT_PAGE and R_AARCH64_LD64_GOT_LO12_NC
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28571
llvm-svn: 294191
negotiateFunction where appropriate.
Replacing the old ECError with a custom type allows us to attach the name of
the function that could not be negotiated, enabling better diagnostics for
negotiation failures.
llvm-svn: 292055
This patch doesn't create thunk for branch operation when following conditions are met:
- Architecture is AArch64
- Relocation target is in the same object file
- Relocation target is close enough to be encoded in immediate offset
In such case we branch directly to the target instead of branching to thunk
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28108
llvm-svn: 291431
multiple asynchronous RPC calls.
ParallelCallGroup allows multiple asynchronous calls to be dispatched,
and provides a wait method that blocks until all asynchronous calls have
been executed on the remote and all return value handlers run on the
local machine.
This will allow, for example, the JIT client to issue memory allocation calls
for all sections in parallel, then block until all memory has been allocated
on the remote and the allocated addresses registered with the client, at which
point the JIT client can proceed to applying relocations.
llvm-svn: 290523
RTDyldMemoryManager.cpp describes the differing __register_frame
API between libunwind and libgcc, with a mailing list posting URL.
The original link was 404; replace it with what I believe is the
intended post, as well as a reference to the "OS X" implementation in
libunwind.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27965
llvm-svn: 290269
Summary: The relocation is missing mask so an address that has non-zero bits in 47:43 may overwrite the register number. (Frequently shows up as target register changed to `xzr`....)
Reviewers: t.p.northover, lhames
Subscribers: davide, aemerson, rengolin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27609
llvm-svn: 289880
At least the plugin used by the LibreOffice build
(<https://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Development/Clang_plugins>) indirectly
uses those members (through inline functions in LLVM/Clang include files in turn
using them), but they are not exported by utils/extract_symbols.py on Windows,
and accessing data across DLL/EXE boundaries on Windows is generally
problematic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26671
llvm-svn: 289647
N32 relocations are only correct for individual relocations at the moment.
Support for relocation composition will follow in a later patch.
Patch By: Daniel Sanders
Reviwers: vkalintiris, atanasyan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27467
llvm-svn: 289532
Instead, expose whether the current type is an array or a struct, if an array
what the upper bound is, and if a struct the struct type itself. This is
in preparation for a later change which will make PointerType derive from
Type rather than SequentialType.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26594
llvm-svn: 288458
This patch updates a bunch of places where add_dependencies was being explicitly called to add dependencies on intrinsics_gen to instead use the DEPENDS named parameter. This cleanup is needed for a patch I'm working on to add a dependency debugging mode to the build system.
llvm-svn: 287206
(1) Add support for function key negotiation.
The previous version of the RPC required both sides to maintain the same
enumeration for functions in the API. This means that any version skew between
the client and server would result in communication failure.
With this version of the patch functions (and serializable types) are defined
with string names, and the derived function signature strings are used to
negotiate the actual function keys (which are used for efficient call
serialization). This allows clients to connect to any server that supports a
superset of the API (based on the function signatures it supports).
(2) Add a callAsync primitive.
The callAsync primitive can be used to install a return value handler that will
run as soon as the RPC function's return value is sent back from the remote.
(3) Launch policies for RPC function handlers.
The new addHandler method, which installs handlers for RPC functions, takes two
arguments: (1) the handler itself, and (2) an optional "launch policy". When the
RPC function is called, the launch policy (if present) is invoked to actually
launch the handler. This allows the handler to be spawned on a background
thread, or added to a work list. If no launch policy is used, the handler is run
on the server thread itself. This should only be used for short-running
handlers, or entirely synchronous RPC APIs.
(4) Zero cost cross type serialization.
You can now define serialization from any type to a different "wire" type. For
example, this allows you to call an RPC function that's defined to take a
std::string while passing a StringRef argument. If a serializer from StringRef
to std::string has been defined for the channel type this will be used to
serialize the argument without having to construct a std::string instance.
This allows buffer reference types to be used as arguments to RPC calls without
requiring a copy of the buffer to be made.
llvm-svn: 286620
rL284780 fixed the PREL31 relocation and added a test for it. Being
the first such test for ARM relocations, it exposed incorrect endianness
assumptions (causing buildbot failures on big-endian hosts). Fix that by
using the same helpers used for the x86 case.
llvm-svn: 284789
All of these existed because MSVC 2013 was unable to synthesize default
move ctors. We recently dropped support for it so all that error-prone
boilerplate can go.
No functionality change intended.
llvm-svn: 284721
Summary:
This adds the necessary logic to support relocations to thumb functions in the COFF dynamic linker.
The jumps to function addresses are mostly blx, which requires the ISA selection bit when jumping to a thumb function.
Note: I'm determining if the relocation requires the ISA bit when creating the relocation entries and not when resolving the relocation. I have to do that because I need the ObjectFile and the actual Symbol, which are available only when creating the entries. It would require a gross refactor if I do it otherwise, but I'm okay with doing it if you think it's better.
Reviewers: peter.smith, compnerd
Subscribers: rengolin, sas
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25151
llvm-svn: 284410
This patch moves symbol mangling from findSymbol to getSymbolAddress. The
findSymbol, findExistingSymbol and findModuleForSymbol methods now always take
a mangled name, allowing the 'demangle-and-retry' cruft to be removed from
findSymbol. See http://llvm.org/PR28699 for details.
Patch by James Holderness. Thanks very much James!
llvm-svn: 281238
ObjectCache is an ExecutionEngine utility, so its anchor belongs there. The
practical impact of this change is that ORC users no longer need to link MCJIT
to use ObjectCaches.
llvm-svn: 280616
According to the arm arm specifications, 4 bytes are needed for a shift instead
of 8, this was causing the movt instruction to write to a different register
sometimes.
Patch by Walter Erquinigo!
llvm-svn: 280005
Patch by William Dillon. Thanks William!
This patch adds support for the R_ARM_REL32 and R_ARM_GOT_PREL ELF ARM
relocations to RuntimeDyld, which should allow JITing of code that
produces these relocations.
No test case: Unfortunately RuntimeDyldELF's GOT building mechanism (which
uses a separate section for GOT entries) isn't compatible with
RuntimeDyldChecker. The correct fix for this is to fix RuntimeDyldELF's GOT
support (it's fundamentally broken at the moment: separate sections aren't
guaranteed to be in range of a GOT entry load), but that's a non-trivial job.
llvm-svn: 279182
RTDyldMemoryManager::getSymbolAddressInProcess()
This should allow JIT'd code for win32 to find in-process symbols. See
http://llvm.org/PR28699 .
Patch by James Holderness. Thanks James!
llvm-svn: 279016
This is a mechanical change of comments in switches like fallthrough,
fall-through, or fall-thru to use the LLVM_FALLTHROUGH macro instead.
llvm-svn: 278902
ExecutionEngine::runFunction is supposed to allow execution of arbitrary
function types, but MCJIT can only reasonably support a limited subset of
main-linke function types. This patch documents this limitation, and fixes
MCJIT::runFunction to abort with a meaningful error at runtime if called with
an unsupported function type.
llvm-svn: 278348
This patch causes RuntimeDyld to check for existing definitions when it
encounters weak symbols. If a definition already exists then the new weak
definition is discarded. All symbol lookups within a "logical dylib" should now
agree on the address of any given weak symbol. This allows the JIT to better
match the behavior of the static linker for C++ code.
This support is only partial, as it does not allow strong definitions that
occur after the first weak definition (in JIT symbol lookup order) to override
the previous weak definitions. Support for this will be added in a future
patch.
llvm-svn: 278065
It breaks ExecutionEngine/OrcLazy/weak-function.ll on most bots.
Script:
--
...
--
Exit Code: 1
Command Output (stderr):
--
Could not find main function.
llvm-svn: 277907
This adds partial support for weak functions to the CompileOnDemandLayer by
modifying the addLogicalModule method to check for existing stub definitions
before building a new stub for a weak function. This scheme is sufficient to
support ODR definitions, but fails for general weak definitions if strong
definition is encountered after the first weak definition. (A more extensive
refactor will be required to fully support weak symbols).
This patch does *not* add weak symbol support to RuntimeDyld: I hope to add
that in the near future.
llvm-svn: 277896
Common symbol support in ORC was broken in r270716 when the symbol resolution
rules in RuntimeDyld were changed. With the switch to lazily materialized
symbols in r277386, common symbols can be supported by having
RuntimeDyld::emitCommonSymbols search for (but not materialize!) definitions
elsewhere in the logical dylib.
This patch adds the 'Common' flag to JITSymbolFlags, and the necessary check
to RuntimeDyld::emitCommonSymbols.
llvm-svn: 277397
This patch replaces RuntimeDyld::SymbolInfo with JITSymbol: A symbol class
that is capable of lazy materialization (i.e. the symbol definition needn't be
emitted until the address is requested). This can be used to support common
and weak symbols in the JIT (though this is not implemented in this patch).
For consistency, RuntimeDyld::SymbolResolver is renamed to JITSymbolResolver.
For space efficiency a new class, JITEvaluatedSymbol, is introduced that
behaves like the old RuntimeDyld::SymbolInfo - i.e. it is just a pair of an
address and symbol flags. Instances of JITEvaluatedSymbol can be used in
symbol-tables to avoid paying the space cost of the materializer.
llvm-svn: 277386
If there was a tail call, we would incorrectly handle the relocation. It would
end up indexing into the array with an incorrect section id. The symbol was
external to the module, so the Section ID was UNDEFINED (-1). We would then
index the SmallVector with this ID, triggering an assertion. Use the Value
rather than the section load address in this case.
llvm-svn: 275442
See http://reviews.llvm.org/D22079
Changes the Archive::child_begin and Archive::children to require a reference
to an Error. If iterator increment fails (because the archive header is
damaged) the iterator will be set to 'end()', and the error stored in the
given Error&. The Error value should be checked by the user immediately after
the loop. E.g.:
Error Err;
for (auto &C : A->children(Err)) {
// Do something with archive child C.
}
// Check the error immediately after the loop.
if (Err)
return Err;
Failure to check the Error will result in an abort() when the Error goes out of
scope (as guaranteed by the Error class).
llvm-svn: 275316
a good error message to be produced.
This is nearly the last libObject interface that used ErrorOr and the last one
that appears in llvm/include/llvm/Object/MachO.h . For Mach-O objects this is
just a clean up because it’s version of getSymbolAddress() can’t return an
error.
I will leave it to the experts on COFF and ELF to actually add meaning full
error messages in their tests if they wish. And also leave it to these experts
to change the last two ErrorOr interfaces in llvm/include/llvm/Object/ObjectFile.h
for createCOFFObjectFile() and createELFObjectFile() if they wish.
Since there are no test cases for COFF and ELF error cases with respect to
getSymbolAddress() in the test suite this is no functional change (NFC).
llvm-svn: 273701
This adds rudimentary support for COFF ARM to the dynamic loader for the
exeuction engine. This can be used by lldb to JIT code into a COFF ARM
environment. This lays the foundation for the loader, though a few of the
relocation types are yet unhandled.
llvm-svn: 273682
This is a convenience iterator that allows clients to enumerate the
GlobalObjects within a Module.
Also start using it in a few places where it is obviously the right thing
to use.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21580
llvm-svn: 273470
This fixes IMAGE_REL_I386_DIR32, IMAGE_REL_I386_DIR32NB,
IMAGE_REL_I386_SECREL, and IMAGE_REL_I386_REL32 relocations.
Based on patch by Jon Turney <jon.turney@dronecode.org.uk>
llvm-svn: 272911
If a local_unnamed_addr attribute is attached to a global, the address
is known to be insignificant within the module. It is distinct from the
existing unnamed_addr attribute in that it only describes a local property
of the module rather than a global property of the symbol.
This attribute is intended to be used by the code generator and LTO to allow
the linker to decide whether the global needs to be in the symbol table. It is
possible to exclude a global from the symbol table if three things are true:
- This attribute is present on every instance of the global (which means that
the normal rule that the global must have a unique address can be broken without
being observable by the program by performing comparisons against the global's
address)
- The global has linkonce_odr linkage (which means that each linkage unit must have
its own copy of the global if it requires one, and the copy in each linkage unit
must be the same)
- It is a constant or a function (which means that the program cannot observe that
the unique-address rule has been broken by writing to the global)
Although this attribute could in principle be computed from the module
contents, LTO clients (i.e. linkers) will normally need to be able to compute
this property as part of symbol resolution, and it would be inefficient to
materialize every module just to compute it.
See:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-commits/Week-of-Mon-20160509/356401.htmlhttp://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-commits/Week-of-Mon-20160516/356738.html
for earlier discussion.
Part of the fix for PR27553.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20348
llvm-svn: 272709
MCJIT will now set the DataLayout on a module when it is added to the JIT,
rather than waiting until it is codegen'd, and the runFunction method will
finalize the module containing the function to be run before running it.
The fibonacci example has been updated to include and link against MCJIT.
llvm-svn: 272455
This tidies up some code that was manually constructing RuntimeDyld::SymbolInfo
instances from JITSymbols. It will save more mess in the future when
JITSymbol::getAddress is extended to return an Expected<TargetAddress> rather
than just a TargetAddress, since we'll be able to embed the error checking in
the conversion.
llvm-svn: 271350
searching for external symbols, and fall back to the SymbolResolver::findSymbol
method if the former returns null.
This makes RuntimeDyld behave more like a static linker: Symbol definitions
from within the current module's "logical dylib" will be preferred to
external definitions. We can build on this behavior in the future to properly
support weak symbol handling.
Custom symbol resolvers that override the findSymbolInLogicalDylib method may
notice changes due to this patch. Clients who have not overridden this method
should generally be unaffected, however users of the OrcMCJITReplacement class
may notice changes.
llvm-svn: 270716
Having an enum member named Default is quite confusing: Is it distinct
from the others?
This patch removes that member and instead uses Optional<Reloc> in
places where we have a user input that still hasn't been maped to the
default value, which is now clear has no be one of the remaining 3
options.
llvm-svn: 269988
when the object is in an archive to use something like libx.a(foo.o) as part of
the error message.
Also changed llvm-objdump and llvm-size to be like llvm-nm and ignore non-object
files in archives and not produce any error message.
To do this Archive::Child::getAsBinary() was changed from ErrorOr<...> to
Expected<...> then that was threaded up to its users.
Converting this interface to Expected<> from ErrorOr<> does involve
touching a number of places. To contain the changes for now the use of
errorToErrorCode() is still used in one place yet to be fully converted.
Again there some were bugs in the existing code that did not deal with the
old ErrorOr<> return values. So now with Expected<> since they must be
checked and the error handled, I added a TODO and a comments for those.
llvm-svn: 269784
Summary: When the MCJIT generates ELF code, some DWARF data requires 64-bit PC-relative relocation (R_390_PC64). This patch adds support for R_390_PC64 relocation to RuntimeDyld::resolveSystemZRelocation, to avoid an assertion failure.
Reviewers: uweigand
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20033
llvm-svn: 269436
Produce another specific error message for a malformed Mach-O file when a symbol’s
section index is more than the number of sections. The existing test case in test/Object/macho-invalid.test
for macho-invalid-section-index-getSectionRawName now reports the error with the message indicating
that a symbol at a specific index has a bad section index and that bad section index value.
Again converting interfaces to Expected<> from ErrorOr<> does involve
touching a number of places. Where the existing code reported the error with a
string message or an error code it was converted to do the same.
Also there some were bugs in the existing code that did not deal with the
old ErrorOr<> return values. So now with Expected<> since they must be
checked and the error handled, I added a TODO and a comment:
"// TODO: Actually report errors helpfully" and a call something like
consumeError(NameOrErr.takeError()) so the buggy code will not crash
since needed to deal with the Error.
llvm-svn: 268298
std::to_string is not available from the Android NDK.
Reviewers: lhames, ovyalov, chandlerc
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19638
llvm-svn: 267829
Also replaces a number of calls to report_fatal_error with Error returns.
The plumbing will make it easier to return errors originating in libObject.
Replacing report_fatal_errors with Error returns will give JIT clients the
opportunity to recover gracefully when the JIT is unable to produce/relocate
code, as well as providing meaningful error messages that can be used to file
bug reports.
llvm-svn: 267776
This replaces use of std::error_code and ErrorOr in the ORC RPC support library
with Error and Expected. This required updating the OrcRemoteTarget API, Client,
and server code, as well as updating the Orc C API.
This patch also fixes several instances where Errors were dropped.
llvm-svn: 267457
The previous allocation code was over-estimating the amount of memory required.
No test case: we don't currently have a good way to detect conervative
over-allocation.
llvm-svn: 267041
Produce another specific error message for a malformed Mach-O file when a symbol’s
string index is past the end of the string table. The existing test case in test/Object/macho-invalid.test
for macho-invalid-symbol-name-past-eof now reports the error with the message indicating
that a symbol at a specific index has a bad sting index and that bad string index value.
Again converting interfaces to Expected<> from ErrorOr<> does involve
touching a number of places. Where the existing code reported the error with a
string message or an error code it was converted to do the same. There is some
code for this that could be factored into a routine but I would like to leave that for
the code owners post-commit to do as they want for handling an llvm::Error. An
example of how this could be done is shown in the diff in
lib/ExecutionEngine/RuntimeDyld/RuntimeDyldImpl.h which had a Check() routine
already for std::error_code so I added one like it for llvm::Error .
Also there some were bugs in the existing code that did not deal with the
old ErrorOr<> return values. So now with Expected<> since they must be
checked and the error handled, I added a TODO and a comment:
“// TODO: Actually report errors helpfully” and a call something like
consumeError(NameOrErr.takeError()) so the buggy code will not crash
since needed to deal with the Error.
Note there fixes needed to lld that goes along with this that I will commit right after this.
So expect lld not to built after this commit and before the next one.
llvm-svn: 266919
Three problems:
1. <future> can't be easily used. If you must use it, see
include/Support/ThreadPool.h for how.
2. constexpr problems, even after 266588.
3. Move assignment operators can't be defaulted in MSVC2013.
llvm-svn: 266615
Removed some unused headers, replaced some headers with forward class declarations.
Found using simple scripts like this one:
clear && ack --cpp -l '#include "llvm/ADT/IndexedMap.h"' | xargs grep -L 'IndexedMap[<]' | xargs grep -n --color=auto 'IndexedMap'
Patch by Eugene Kosov <claprix@yandex.ru>
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19219
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 266595
asynchronous call/handle. Also updates the ORC remote JIT API to use the new
scheme.
The previous version of the RPC tools only supported void functions, and
required the user to manually call a paired function to return results. This
patch replaces the Procedure typedef (which only supported void functions) with
the Function typedef which supports return values, e.g.:
Function<FooId, int32_t(std::string)> Foo;
The RPC primitives and channel operations are also expanded. RPC channels must
support four new operations: startSendMessage, endSendMessage,
startRecieveMessage and endRecieveMessage, to handle channel locking. In
addition, serialization support for tuples to RPCChannels is added to enable
multiple return values.
The RPC primitives are expanded from callAppend, call, expect and handle, to:
appendCallAsync - Make an asynchronous call to the given function.
callAsync - The same as appendCallAsync, but calls send on the channel when
done.
callSTHandling - Blocking call for single-threaded code. Wraps a call to
callAsync then waits on the result, using a user-supplied
handler to handle any callbacks from the remote.
callST - The same as callSTHandling, except that it doesn't handle
callbacks - it expects the result to be the first return.
expect and handle - as before.
handleResponse - Handle a response from the remote.
waitForResult - Wait for the response with the given sequence number to arrive.
llvm-svn: 266581
Produce the first specific error message for a malformed Mach-O file describing
the problem instead of the generic message for object_error::parse_failed of
"Invalid data was encountered while parsing the file”. Many more good error
messages will follow after this first one.
This is built on Lang Hames’ great work of adding the ’Error' class for
structured error handling and threading Error through MachOObjectFile
construction. And making createMachOObjectFile return Expected<...> .
So to to get the error to the llvm-obdump tool, I changed the stack of
these methods to also return Expected<...> :
object::ObjectFile::createObjectFile()
object::SymbolicFile::createSymbolicFile()
object::createBinary()
Then finally in ParseInputMachO() in MachODump.cpp the error can
be reported and the specific error message can be printed in llvm-objdump
and can be seen in the existing test case for the existing malformed binary
but with the updated error message.
Converting these interfaces to Expected<> from ErrorOr<> does involve
touching a number of places. To contain the changes for now use of
errorToErrorCode() and errorOrToExpected() are used where the callers
are yet to be converted.
Also there some were bugs in the existing code that did not deal with the
old ErrorOr<> return values. So now with Expected<> since they must be
checked and the error handled, I added a TODO and a comment:
“// TODO: Actually report errors helpfully” and a call something like
consumeError(ObjOrErr.takeError()) so the buggy code will not crash
since needed to deal with the Error.
Note there is one fix also needed to lld/COFF/InputFiles.cpp that goes along
with this that I will commit right after this. So expect lld not to built
after this commit and before the next one.
llvm-svn: 265606
in the test suite. While this is not really an interesting tool and option to run
on a Mach-O file to show the symbol table in a generic libObject format
it shouldn’t crash.
The reason for the crash was in MachOObjectFile::getSymbolType() when it was
calling MachOObjectFile::getSymbolSection() without checking its return value
for the error case.
What makes this fix require a fair bit of diffs is that the method getSymbolType() is
in the class ObjectFile defined without an ErrorOr<> so I needed to add that all
the sub classes. And all of the uses needed to be updated and the return value
needed to be checked for the error case.
The MachOObjectFile version of getSymbolType() “can” get an error in trying to
come up with the libObject’s internal SymbolRef::Type when the Mach-O symbol
symbol type is an N_SECT type because the code is trying to select from the
SymbolRef::ST_Data or SymbolRef::ST_Function values for the SymbolRef::Type.
And it needs the Mach-O section to use isData() and isBSS to determine if
it will return SymbolRef::ST_Data.
One other possible fix I considered is to simply return SymbolRef::ST_Other
when MachOObjectFile::getSymbolSection() returned an error. But since in
the past when I did such changes that “ate an error in the libObject code” I
was asked instead to push the error out of the libObject code I chose not
to implement the fix this way.
As currently written both the COFF and ELF versions of getSymbolType()
can’t get an error. But if isReservedSectionNumber() wanted to check for
the two known negative values rather than allowing all negative values or
the code wanted to add the same check as in getSymbolAddress() to use
getSection() and check for the error then these versions of getSymbolType()
could return errors.
At the end of the day the error printed now is the generic “Invalid data was
encountered while parsing the file” for object_error::parse_failed. In the
future when we thread Lang’s new TypedError for recoverable error handling
though libObject this will improve. And where the added // Diagnostic(…
comment is, it would be changed to produce and error message
like “bad section index (42) for symbol at index 8” for this case.
llvm-svn: 264187