DataFlowSanitizer is a generalised dynamic data flow analysis.
Unlike other Sanitizer tools, this tool is not designed to detect a
specific class of bugs on its own. Instead, it provides a generic
dynamic data flow analysis framework to be used by clients to help
detect application-specific issues within their own code.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D967
llvm-svn: 187924
When prelink is installed in the system, prelink-ed
libraries map between 0x003000000000 and 0x004000000000 thus occupying the shadow Gap,
so we need so split the address space even further, like this:
|| [0x10007fff8000, 0x7fffffffffff] || HighMem ||
|| [0x02008fff7000, 0x10007fff7fff] || HighShadow ||
|| [0x004000000000, 0x02008fff6fff] || ShadowGap3 ||
|| [0x003000000000, 0x003fffffffff] || MidMem ||
|| [0x00087fff8000, 0x002fffffffff] || ShadowGap2 ||
|| [0x00067fff8000, 0x00087fff7fff] || MidShadow ||
|| [0x00008fff7000, 0x00067fff7fff] || ShadowGap ||
|| [0x00007fff8000, 0x00008fff6fff] || LowShadow ||
|| [0x000000000000, 0x00007fff7fff] || LowMem ||
Do it only if necessary.
Also added a bit of profiling code to make sure that the
mapping code is efficient.
Added a lit test to simulate prelink-ed libraries.
Unfortunately, this test does not work with binutils-gold linker.
If gold is the default linker the test silently passes.
Also replaced
__has_feature(address_sanitizer)
with
__has_feature(address_sanitizer) || defined(__SANITIZE_ADDRESS__)
in two places.
Patch partially by Jakub Jelinek.
llvm-svn: 175263
Moved everything users are not supposed to use to a private interface header.
Documented all public interfaces. Made them safe to use even if built without
MemorySanitizer.
llvm-svn: 173800
library.
These headers are intended to be available to user code when built with
AddressSanitizer (or one of the other sanitizer's in the future) to
interface with the runtime library. As such, they form stable external
C interfaces, and the headers shouldn't be located within the
implementation.
I've pulled them out into what seem like fairly obvious locations and
names, but I'm wide open to further bikeshedding of these names and
locations.
I've updated the code and the build system to cope with the new
locations, both CMake and Makefile. Please let me know if this breaks
anyone's build.
The eventual goal is to install these headers along side the Clang
builtin headers when we build the ASan runtime and install it. My
current thinking is to locate them at:
<prefix>/lib/clang/X.Y/include/sanitizer/common_interface_defs.h
<prefix>/lib/clang/X.Y/include/sanitizer/asan_interface.h
<prefix>/lib/clang/X.Y/include/sanitizer/...
But maybe others have different suggestions?
Fixing the style of the #include between these headers at least unblocks
experimentation with installing them as they now should work when
installed in these locations.
llvm-svn: 162822