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
This clarifies that this is an LLVM specific variable and avoids
potential conflicts with other projects.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119918
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 reverts commit 910a642c0a.
There are serious correctness issues with the current approach: __sync_*
routines which are not actually atomic should not be enabled by default.
I'll continue discussion on the review.
ARMv5 and older architectures don’t support SMP and do not have atomic instructions. Still they’re in use in IoT world, where one has to stick to libgcc.
Reviewed By: mstorsjo
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116088
This way, we do not need to set LLVM_CMAKE_PATH to LLVM_CMAKE_DIR when (NOT LLVM_CONFIG_FOUND)
Reviewed By: #libc, ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107717
This is a second attempt at D101497, which landed as
9a9bc76c0e but had to be reverted in
8cf7ddbdd4.
This issue was that in the case that `COMPILER_RT_INSTALL_PATH` is
empty, expressions like "${COMPILER_RT_INSTALL_PATH}/bin" evaluated to
"/bin" not "bin" as intended and as was originally.
One solution is to make `COMPILER_RT_INSTALL_PATH` always non-empty,
defaulting it to `CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX`. D99636 adopted that approach.
But, I think it is more ergonomic to allow those project-specific paths
to be relative the global ones. Also, making install paths absolute by
default inhibits the proper behavior of functions like
`GNUInstallDirs_get_absolute_install_dir` which make relative install
paths absolute in a more complicated way.
Given all this, I will define a function like the one asked for in
https://gitlab.kitware.com/cmake/cmake/-/issues/19568 (and needed for a
similar use-case).
---
Original message:
Instead of using `COMPILER_RT_INSTALL_PATH` through the CMake for
complier-rt, just use it to define variables for the subdirs which
themselves are used.
This preserves compatibility, but later on we might consider getting rid
of `COMPILER_RT_INSTALL_PATH` and just changing the defaults for the
subdir variables directly.
---
There was a seaming bug where the (non-Apple) per-target libdir was
`${target}` not `lib/${target}`. I suspect that has to do with the docs
on `COMPILER_RT_INSTALL_PATH` saying was the library dir when that's no
longer true, so I just went ahead and fixed it, allowing me to define
fewer and more sensible variables.
That last part should be the only behavior changes; everything else
should be a pure refactoring.
---
I added some documentation of these variables too. In particular, I
wanted to highlight the gotcha where `-DSomeCachePath=...` without the
`:PATH` will lead CMake to make the path absolute. See [1] for
discussion of the problem, and [2] for the brief official documentation
they added as a result.
[1]: https://cmake.org/pipermail/cmake/2015-March/060204.html
[2]: https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/manual/cmake.1.html#options
In 38b2dec37e the problem was somewhat
misidentified and so `:STRING` was used, but `:PATH` is better as it
sets the correct type from the get-go.
---
D99484 is the main thrust of the `GnuInstallDirs` work. Once this lands,
it should be feasible to follow both of these up with a simple patch for
compiler-rt analogous to the one for libcxx.
Reviewed By: phosek, #libc_abi, #libunwind
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105765
This reverts commit 9a9bc76c0e.
That commit broke "ninja install" when building compiler-rt for mingw
targets, building standalone (pointing cmake at the compiler-rt
directory) with cmake 3.16.3 (the one shipped in ubuntu 20.04), with
errors like this:
-- Install configuration: "Release"
CMake Error at cmake_install.cmake:44 (file):
file cannot create directory: /include/sanitizer. Maybe need
administrative privileges.
Call Stack (most recent call first):
/home/martin/code/llvm-mingw/src/llvm-project/compiler-rt/build-i686-sanitizers/cmake_install.cmake:37 (include)
FAILED: include/CMakeFiles/install-compiler-rt-headers
cd /home/martin/code/llvm-mingw/src/llvm-project/compiler-rt/build-i686-sanitizers/include && /usr/bin/cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_COMPONENT="compiler-rt-headers" -P /home/martin/code/llvm-mingw/src/llvm-project/compiler-rt/build-i686-sanitizers/cmake_install.cmake
ninja: build stopped: subcommand failed.
Instead of using `COMPILER_RT_INSTALL_PATH` through the CMake for
complier-rt, just use it to define variables for the subdirs which
themselves are used.
This preserves compatibility, but later on we might consider getting rid
of `COMPILER_RT_INSTALL_PATH` and just changing the defaults for the
subdir variables directly.
---
There was a seaming bug where the (non-Apple) per-target libdir was
`${target}` not `lib/${target}`. I suspect that has to do with the docs
on `COMPILER_RT_INSTALL_PATH` saying was the library dir when that's no
longer true, so I just went ahead and fixed it, allowing me to define
fewer and more sensible variables.
That last part should be the only behavior changes; everything else
should be a pure refactoring.
---
D99484 is the main thrust of the `GnuInstallDirs` work. Once this lands,
it should be feasible to follow both of these up with a simple patch for
compiler-rt analogous to the one for libcxx.
Reviewed By: phosek
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101497
Currently, the compiler-rt build system checks only whether __X86_64
is defined to determine whether the default compiler-rt target arch
is x86_64. Since x32 defines __X86_64 as well, we must also check that
the default pointer size is eight bytes and not four bytes to properly
detect a 64-bit x86_64 compiler-rt default target arch.
Reviewed By: hvdijk, vitalybuka
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99988
The previous check was wrong because it only checks that the LLVM CMake
directory exists. However, it's possible that the directory exists but
the `LLVMConfig.cmake` file does not. When this happens we would
incorectly try to include the non-existant file.
To fix this we make the check stricter by checking that the file
we want to include actually exists.
This is a follow up to fd28517d87.
rdar://76870467
Previously it wasn't possible to configure a standalone compiler-rt
build if the `LLVMConfig.cmake` file isn't present in a shipped
toolchain.
This patch adds a fallback behaviour for when `LLVMConfig.cmake` is not
available in the toolchain being used for configure. The fallback
behaviour mocks out the bare minimum required to make a configure
succeed when the host is Darwin. Support for other platforms could
be added in future patches.
The new code path is taken either in one of the following cases:
* `llvm-config` is not available.
* `llvm-config` is available but it provides an invalid path for the CMake files.
The motivation here is to be able to generate the compiler-rt lit test
suites for an arbitrary LLVM toolchain and then run the tests against
it.
The invocation to do this looks something like.
```
CC=/path/to/cc \
CXX=/path/to/c++ \
cmake \
-G Ninja \
-DLLVM_CONFIG_PATH=/path/to/llvm-config \
-DCOMPILER_RT_INCLUDE_TESTS=ON \
/path/to/llvm-project/compiler-rt
# Note we don't compile compiler-rt in this workflow.
bin/llvm-lit -v test/path/to/generated/test_suite
```
A possible alternative approach is to configure the
`cmake/modules/LLVMConfig.cmake.in` file in the LLVM source tree
and then include it. This approach was not taken because it is more
complicated.
An interesting side benefit of this patch is that it is now
possible to configure on Darwin without `llvm-config` being available
by configuring with `-DLLVM_CONFIG_PATH=""`. This moves us a step
closer to a world where no LLVM build artefacts are required to
build compiler-rt.
rdar://76016632
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99621
layout.
When doing a standalone compiler-rt build we currently rely on
getting information from the `llvm-config` binary. Previously
we would rely on calling `llvm-config --src-root` to find the
LLVM sources. Unfortunately the returned path could easily be wrong
if the sources were built on another machine.
Now that compiler-rt is part of a monorepo we can easily fix this
problem by finding the LLVM source tree next to `compiler-rt` in
the monorepo. We do this regardless of whether or not the `llvm-config`
binary is available which moves us one step closer to not requiring
`llvm-config` to be available.
To try avoid anyone breaking anyone who relies on the current behavior,
if the path assuming the monorepo layout doesn't exist we invoke
`llvm-config --src-root` to get the path. A deprecation warning is
emitted if this path is taken because we should remove this path
in the future given that other runtimes already assume the monorepo
layout.
We also now emit a warning if `LLVM_MAIN_SRC_DIR` does not exist.
The intention is that this should be a hard error in future but
to avoid breaking existing users we'll keep this as a warning
for now.
rdar://76016632
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99620
Don't normalize arm architecture names; doing that loses the ability
to pick the right implementation of builtins for each architecture
variant. When building compiler-rt builtins as part of a
runtimes build, builtins for multiple armv* variants could be built
in the same directory, and with the simplified architecture name,
they'd all be built in the same directory, overlapping each other.
This corresponds to getArchNameForCompilerRTLib in clang; any
32 bit x86 architecture triple (except on android, but those
exceptions are already handled in compiler-rt on a different level)
get the compiler rt library names with i386; arm targets get either
"arm" or "armhf". (Mapping to "armhf" is handled in the toplevel
CMakeLists.txt.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98173
While sanitizers don't use C++ standard library, we could still end
up accidentally including or linking it just by the virtue of using
the C++ compiler. Pass -nostdinc++ and -nostdlib++ to avoid these
accidental dependencies.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88922
This patch enables support for building compiler-rt builtins for 32-bit
Power arch on AIX. For now, we leave out the specialized ppc builtin
implementations for 128-bit long double and friends since those will
need some special handling for AIX.
Reviewed By: hubert.reinterpretcast
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87383
For Android only, compiler-rt used detect_target_arch to select the
architecture to target. detect_target_arch was added in Sept 2014
(SVN r218605). At that time, compiler-rt selected the default arch
using ${LLVM_NATIVE_ARCH}, which seems to have been the host
architecture and therefore not suitable for cross-compilation.
The compiler-rt build system was refactored in Sept 2015 (SVN r247094
and SVN r247099) to use COMPILER_RT_DEFAULT_TARGET_TRIPLE to control
the target arch rather than LLVM_NATIVE_ARCH. This approach is simpler
and also works for Android cross-compilation, so remove the
detect_target_arch function.
Android targets i686, but compiler-rt seems to identify 32-bit x86 as
"i386". For Android, we were previously calling add_default_target_arch
with i386, and calling add_default_target_arch with i686 does not build
anything. i686 is not listed in builtin-config-ix.cmake,
ALL_BUILTIN_SUPPORTED_ARCH.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82148
Split filter_builtin_sources into two functions:
- filter_builtin_sources that removes generic files when an
arch-specific file is selected.
- darwin_filter_builtin_sources that implements the EXCLUDE/INCLUDE
lists (using the files in lib/builtins/Darwin-excludes).
darwin_filter_builtin_sources delegates to filter_builtin_sources.
Previously, lib/builtins/CMakeLists.txt had a number of calls to
filter_builtin_sources (with a confusing/broken use of the
`excluded_list` parameter), as well as a redundant arch-vs-generic
filtering for the non-Apple code path at the end of the file. Replace
all of this with a single call to filter_builtin_sources.
Remove i686_SOURCES. Previously, this list contained only the
arch-specific files common to 32-bit and 64-bit x86, which is a strange
set. Normally the ${ARCH}_SOURCES list contains everything needed for
the arch. "i686" isn't in ALL_BUILTIN_SUPPORTED_ARCH.
NFCI, but i686_SOURCES won't be defined, and the order of files in
${arch}_SOURCES lists will change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82151
At this point in this code:
- COMPILER_RT_DEFAULT_TARGET_TRIPLE is "i686-linux-android"
- arch is "i386"
The get_compiler_rt_target function currently turns that into:
i686-android-linux-android
The ${COMPILER_RT_OS_SUFFIX} is "-android" and redundant, so stop
adding it.
The get_compiler_rt_target() function is used for the
LLVM_ENABLE_PER_TARGET_RUNTIME_DIR mode that isn't normally used with
Android.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82150
Summary:
This patch implements dynamic stack allocation for the VE target. Changes:
* compiler-rt: `__ve_grow_stack` to request stack allocation on the VE.
* VE: base pointer support, dynamic stack allocation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79084
XRay builds uses llvm-config to obtain the ldflags and libs and then
passes those to CMake. Unfortunately, this breaks on Windows because
CMake tries to interpret backslashes followed by certain characters
as flags. We need to rewrite these into forward slashes that are used
by CMake (even on Windows).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73523
This patch enables compiler-rt on SPARC targets. Most of the changes are straightforward:
- Add 32 and 64-bit sparc to compiler-rt
- lib/builtins/fp_lib.h needed to check if the int128_t and uint128_t types exist (which they don't on sparc)
There's one issue of note: many asan tests fail to compile on Solaris/SPARC:
fatal error: error in backend: Function "_ZN7testing8internal16BoolFromGTestEnvEPKcb": over-aligned dynamic alloca not supported.
Therefore, while asan is still built, both asan and ubsan-with-asan testing is disabled. The
goal is to check if asan keeps compiling on Solaris/SPARC. This serves asan in gcc,
which doesn't have the problem above and works just fine.
With this patch, sparcv9-sun-solaris2.11 test results are pretty good:
Failing Tests (9):
Builtins-sparc-sunos :: divtc3_test.c
Builtins-sparcv9-sunos :: compiler_rt_logbl_test.c
Builtins-sparcv9-sunos :: divtc3_test.c
[...]
UBSan-Standalone-sparc :: TestCases/TypeCheck/misaligned.cpp
UBSan-Standalone-sparcv9 :: TestCases/TypeCheck/misaligned.cpp
The builtin failures are due to Bugs 42493 and 42496. The tree contained a few additonal
patches either currently in review or about to be submitted.
Tested on sparcv9-sun-solaris2.11.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40943
llvm-svn: 365880
This is a follow up to r361432, changing the layout of per-target
runtimes to more closely resemble multiarch. While before, we used
the following layout:
[RESOURCE_DIR]/<target>/lib/libclang_rt.<runtime>.<ext>
Now we use the following layout:
[RESOURCE_DIR]/lib/<target>/libclang_rt.<runtime>.<ext>
This also more closely resembles the existing "non-per-target" layout:
[RESOURCE_DIR]/lib/<os>/libclang_rt.<runtime>-<arch>.<ext>
This change will enable further simplification of the driver logic
in follow up changes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62469
llvm-svn: 361784
Darwin targets were generating CMake install rules but not the
corresponding install targets. Centralize the existing install target
creation to a function and use that function for both Darwin and
non-Darwin builds.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61541
llvm-svn: 360181
Summary:
There were existing calls to `try_compile_only()` with arguments not
prefixed by `SOURCE` or `FLAGS`. These were silently being ignored.
It looks like the `SOURCE` and `FLAGS` arguments were first introduced
in r278454.
One implication of this is that for a builtins only build for Darwin
(see `darwin_test_archs()`) it would mean we weren't actually passing
`-arch <arch>` to the compiler). This would result in compiler-rt
claiming all supplied architectures could be targetted provided
the compiler could build for Clang's default architecture.
This patch fixes this in several ways.
* Fixes all incorrect calls to `try_compile_only()`.
* Adds code to `try_compile_only()` to check for unhandled arguments
and raises a fatal error if this occurs. This should stop any
incorrect calls in the future.
* Improve the documentation on `try_compile_only()` which seemed
completely wrong.
rdar://problem/48928526
Reviewers: beanz, fjricci, dsanders, kubamracek, yln, dcoughlin
Subscribers: mgorny, jdoerfert, #sanitizers, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm, #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59429
llvm-svn: 356295
Otherwise this propagates all the way to CMake and results in an error
during configuration. We check and handle the result and report warning
separately so this is not changing the behavior.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58086
llvm-svn: 353784
Disable tests requiring sunrpc when the relevant headers are missing.
In order to accommodate that, move the header check
from sanitizer_common to base-config-ix, and define the check result
as a global variable there. Use it afterwards both for definition
needed by sanitizer_common, and to control 'sunrpc' test feature.
While at it, remove the append_have_file_definition macro that was used
only once, and no longer fits the split check-definition.
Bug report: https://github.com/google/sanitizers/issues/974
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47819
llvm-svn: 351109
Add a code to properly test for presence of LLVMTestingSupport library
when performing a stand-alone build, and skip tests requiring it when
it is not present. Since the library is not installed, llvm-config
reported empty --libs for it and the tests failed to link with undefined
references. Skipping the two fdr_* test files is better than failing to
build, and should be good enough until we find a better solution.
NB: both installing LLVMTestingSupport and building it automatically
from within compiler-rt sources are non-trivial. The former due to
dependency on gtest, the latter due to tight integration with LLVM
source tree.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55891
llvm-svn: 349899
When building for default target only, use exact target spelling
when deriving the name for the per-target runtime directory. This
is necessary for AArch32 where the CMake build by default rewrites
the architecture which leads to unexpected results.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54612
llvm-svn: 347022
Summary:
This change spans both LLVM and compiler-rt, where we do the following:
- Add XRay to the LLVMBuild system, to allow for distributing the XRay
trace loading library along with the LLVM distributions.
- Use `llvm-config` better in the compiler-rt XRay implementation, to
depend on the potentially already-distributed LLVM XRay library.
While this is tested with the standalone compiler-rt build, it does
require that the LLVMXRay library (and LLVMSupport as well) are
available during the build. In case the static libraries are available,
the unit tests will build and work fine. We're still having issues with
attempting to use a shared library version of the LLVMXRay library since
the shared library might not be accessible from the standard shared
library lookup paths.
The larger change here is the inclusion of the LLVMXRay library in the
distribution, which allows for building tools around the XRay traces and
profiles that the XRay runtime already generates.
Reviewers: echristo, beanz
Subscribers: mgorny, hiraditya, mboerger, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52349
llvm-svn: 342859
Summary:
This change introduces an `FDRLogWriter` type which is responsible for
serialising metadata and function records to character buffers. This is
the first step in a refactoring of the implementation of the FDR runtime
to allow for more granular testing of the individual components of the
implementation.
The main contribution of this change is a means of hiding the details of
how specific records are written to a buffer, and for managing the
extents of these buffers. We make use of C++ features (templates and
some metaprogramming) to reduce repetition in the act of writing out
specific kinds of records to the buffer.
In this process, we make a number of changes across both LLVM and
compiler-rt to allow us to use the `Trace` abstraction defined in the
LLVM project in the testing of the runtime implementation. This gives us
a closer end-to-end test which version-locks the runtime implementation
with the loading implementation in LLVM.
We also allow using gmock in compiler-rt unit tests, by adding the
requisite definitions in the `AddCompilerRT.cmake` module. We also add
the terminfo library detection along with inclusion of the appropriate
compiler flags for header include lookup.
Finally, we've gone ahead and updated the FDR logging implementation to
use the FDRLogWriter for the lowest-level record-writing details.
Following patches will isolate the state machine transitions which
manage the set-up and tear-down of the buffers we're using in multiple
threads.
Reviewers: mboerger, eizan
Subscribers: mgorny, jfb, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52220
llvm-svn: 342617
compiler-rt CMake build currently tries to parse the triple and then
put it back together, but doing so inherently tricky, and doing so
from CMake is just crazy and currently doesn't handle triples that
have more than three components. Fortunatelly, the CMake really only
needs the architecture part, which is typically the first component,
to construct variants for other architectures. This means we can keep
the rest of the triple as is and avoid the parsing altogether.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50548
llvm-svn: 339701
when building with an IDE so that header files show up in the UI.
This massively improves the development workflow in IDEs.
To implement this a new function `compiler_rt_process_sources(...)` has
been added that adds header files to the list of sources when the
generator is an IDE. For non-IDE generators (e.g. Ninja/Makefile) no
changes are made to the list of source files.
The function can be passed a list of headers via the
`ADDITIONAL_HEADERS` argument. For each runtime library a list of
explicit header files has been added and passed via
`ADDITIONAL_HEADERS`. For `tsan` and `sanitizer_common` a list of
headers was already present but it was stale and has been updated
to reflect the current state of the source tree.
The original version of this patch used file globbing (`*.{h,inc,def}`)
to find the headers but the approach was changed due to this being a
CMake anti-pattern (if the list of headers changes CMake won't
automatically re-generate if globbing is used).
The LLVM repo contains a similar function named `llvm_process_sources()`
but we don't use it here for several reasons:
* It depends on the `LLVM_ENABLE_OPTION` cache variable which is
not set in standalone compiler-rt builds.
* We would have to `include(LLVMProcessSources)` which I'd like to
avoid because it would include a bunch of stuff we don't need.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48422
llvm-svn: 336663
This change adds a support for multiarch style runtimes layout, so in
addition to the existing layout where runtimes get installed to:
lib/clang/$version/lib/$os
Clang now allows runtimes to be installed to:
lib/clang/$version/$target/lib
This also includes libc++, libc++abi and libunwind; today those are
assumed to be in Clang library directory built for host, with the
new layout it is possible to install libc++, libc++abi and libunwind
into the runtime directory built for different targets.
The use of new layout is enabled by setting the
LLVM_ENABLE_RUNTIME_TARGET_DIR CMake variable and is supported by both
projects and runtimes layouts. The runtimes CMake build has been further
modified to use the new layout when building runtimes for multiple
targets.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45604
llvm-svn: 335809
This reverts commit r332924 and followup r332936 silencing a warning.
The change breaks the build on x86 if there is no 32-bit version of the
C++ libraries, see discussion in https://reviews.llvm.org/D47169.
llvm-svn: 334903
When using system C++ library, assume we have a working C++ compiler and
try to compile a complete C++ program. When using in tree C++ library,
only check the C compiler since the C++ library likely won't have been
built yet at time of running the check.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47169
llvm-svn: 332924
Rather then requiring the user to specify runtime the compiler
runtime and C++ standard library, or trying to guess them which is
error-prone, use auto-detection by parsing the compiler link output.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46857
llvm-svn: 332683