This patch enables explicit generation of TBAA information in all
cases where LValue base info is propagated or constructed in
non-trivial ways. Eventually, we will consider each of these
cases to make sure the TBAA information is correct and not too
conservative. For now, we just fall back to generating TBAA info
from the access type.
This patch should not bring in any functional changes.
This is part of D38126 reworked to be a separate patch to
simplify review.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38733
llvm-svn: 315575
Besides obvious code simplification, avoiding explicit creation
of LValueBaseInfo objects makes it easier to make TBAA
information to be part of such objects.
This is part of D38126 reworked to be a separate patch to
simplify review.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38695
llvm-svn: 315289
In C++11 variable to global variables are considered as constant
expressions and these variables are not captured in the outlined
regions. Patch allows capturing of such variables in the OpenMP regions.
llvm-svn: 315074
This patch is an attempt to clarify and simplify generation and
propagation of TBAA information. The idea is to pack all values
that describe a memory access, namely, base type, access type and
offset, into a single structure. This is supposed to make further
changes, such as adding support for unions and array members,
easier to prepare and review.
DecorateInstructionWithTBAA() is no more responsible for
converting types to tags. These implicit conversions not only
complicate reading the code, but also suggest assigning scalar
access tags while we generally prefer full-size struct-path tags.
TBAAPathTag is replaced with TBAAAccessInfo; the latter is now
the type of the keys of the cache map that translates access
descriptors to metadata nodes.
Fixed a bug with writing to a wrong map in
getTBAABaseTypeMetadata() (former getTBAAStructTypeInfo()).
We now check for valid base access types every time we
dereference a field. The original code only checks the top-level
base type. See isValidBaseType() / isTBAAPathStruct() calls.
Some entities have been renamed to sound more adequate and less
confusing/misleading in presence of path-aware TBAA information.
Now we do not lookup twice for the same cache entry in
getAccessTagInfo().
Refined relevant comments and descriptions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37826
llvm-svn: 315048
This patch makes it possible to produce access tags in a uniform
manner regardless whether the resulting tag will be a scalar or a
struct-path one. getAccessTagInfo() now takes care of the actual
translation of access descriptors to tags and can handle all
kinds of accesses. Facilities that specific to scalar accesses
are eliminated.
Some more details:
* DecorateInstructionWithTBAA() is not responsible for conversion
of types to access tags anymore. Instead, it takes an access
descriptor (TBAAAccessInfo) and generates corresponding access
tag from it.
* getTBAAInfoForVTablePtr() reworked to
getTBAAVTablePtrAccessInfo() that now returns the
virtual-pointer access descriptor and not the virtual-point
type metadata.
* Added function getTBAAMayAliasAccessInfo() that returns the
descriptor for may-alias accesses.
* getTBAAStructTagInfo() renamed to getTBAAAccessTagInfo() as now
it is the only way to generate access tag by a given access
descriptor. It is capable of producing both scalar and
struct-path tags, depending on options and availability of the
base access type. getTBAAScalarTagInfo() and its cache
ScalarTagMetadataCache are eliminated.
* Now that we do not need to care about whether the resulting
access tag should be a scalar or struct-path one,
getTBAAStructTypeInfo() is renamed to getBaseTypeInfo().
* Added function getTBAAAccessInfo() that constructs access
descriptor by a given QualType access type.
This is part of D37826 reworked to be a separate patch to
simplify review.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38503
llvm-svn: 314979
This patch makes it possible to produce access tags in a uniform
manner regardless whether the resulting tag will be a scalar or a
struct-path one. getAccessTagInfo() now takes care of the actual
translation of access descriptors to tags and can handle all
kinds of accesses. Facilities that specific to scalar accesses
are eliminated.
Some more details:
* DecorateInstructionWithTBAA() is not responsible for conversion
of types to access tags anymore. Instead, it takes an access
descriptor (TBAAAccessInfo) and generates corresponding access
tag from it.
* getTBAAInfoForVTablePtr() reworked to
getTBAAVTablePtrAccessInfo() that now returns the
virtual-pointer access descriptor and not the virtual-point
type metadata.
* Added function getTBAAMayAliasAccessInfo() that returns the
descriptor for may-alias accesses.
* getTBAAStructTagInfo() renamed to getTBAAAccessTagInfo() as now
it is the only way to generate access tag by a given access
descriptor. It is capable of producing both scalar and
struct-path tags, depending on options and availability of the
base access type. getTBAAScalarTagInfo() and its cache
ScalarTagMetadataCache are eliminated.
* Now that we do not need to care about whether the resulting
access tag should be a scalar or struct-path one,
getTBAAStructTypeInfo() is renamed to getBaseTypeInfo().
* Added function getTBAAAccessInfo() that constructs access
descriptor by a given QualType access type.
This is part of D37826 reworked to be a separate patch to
simplify review.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38503
llvm-svn: 314977
With this patch we implement a concept of TBAA access descriptors
that are capable of representing both scalar and struct-path
accesses in a generic way.
This is part of D37826 reworked to be a separate patch to
simplify review.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38456
llvm-svn: 314780
Don't emit alignment checks which the IR constant folder throws away.
I've tested this out on X86FastISel.cpp. While this doesn't decrease
end-to-end compile-time significantly, it results in 122 fewer type
checks (1% reduction) overall, without adding any real complexity.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37544
llvm-svn: 314752
This patch fixes misleading names of entities related to getting,
setting and generation of TBAA access type descriptors.
This is effectively an attempt to provide a review for D37826 by
breaking it into smaller pieces.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38404
llvm-svn: 314657
Added missing addrspacecast case in alignment computation
logic of pointer type emission in IR generation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37804
llvm-svn: 314304
Summary:
This is the follow-up patch to D37924.
This change refactors clang to use the the newly added section headers
in SpecialCaseList to specify which sanitizers blacklists entries
should apply to, like so:
[cfi-vcall]
fun:*bad_vcall*
[cfi-derived-cast|cfi-unrelated-cast]
fun:*bad_cast*
The SanitizerSpecialCaseList class has been added to allow querying by
SanitizerMask, and SanitizerBlacklist and its downstream users have been
updated to provide that information. Old blacklists not using sections
will continue to function identically since the blacklist entries will
be placed into a '[*]' section by default matching against all
sanitizers.
Reviewers: pcc, kcc, eugenis, vsk
Reviewed By: eugenis
Subscribers: dberris, cfe-commits, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37925
llvm-svn: 314171
This change will make it possible to use -fsanitize=function on Darwin and
possibly on other platforms. It fixes an issue with the way RTTI is stored into
function prologue data.
On Darwin, addresses stored in prologue data can't require run-time fixups and
must be PC-relative. Run-time fixups are undesirable because they necessitate
writable text segments, which can lead to security issues. And absolute
addresses are undesirable because they break PIE mode.
The fix is to create a private global which points to the RTTI, and then to
encode a PC-relative reference to the global into prologue data.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37597
llvm-svn: 313096
Because it is common to treat vector types as an array of their elements, or
even some other type that's not the element type, and thus index into them, we
can't use struct-path TBAA for these accesses. Even though we already treat all
vector types as equivalent to 'char', we were using field-offset information
for them with TBAA, and this renders undefined the intra-value indexing we
intend to allow. Note that, although 'char' is universally aliasing, with path
TBAA, we can still differentiate between access to s.a and s.b in
struct { char a, b; } s;. We can't use this capability as-is for vector types.
Fixes PR33967.
llvm-svn: 312447
Summary:
An implementation of ubsan runtime library suitable for use in production.
Minimal attack surface.
* No stack traces.
* Definitely no C++ demangling.
* No UBSAN_OPTIONS=log_file=/path (very suid-unfriendly). And no UBSAN_OPTIONS in general.
* as simple as possible
Minimal CPU and RAM overhead.
* Source locations unnecessary in the presence of (split) debug info.
* Values and types (as in A+B overflows T) can be reconstructed from register/stack dumps, once you know what type of error you are looking at.
* above two items save 3% binary size.
When UBSan is used with -ftrap-function=abort, sometimes it is hard to reason about failures. This library replaces abort with a slightly more informative message without much extra overhead. Since ubsan interface in not stable, this code must reside in compiler-rt.
Reviewers: pcc, kcc
Subscribers: srhines, mgorny, aprantl, krytarowski, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36810
llvm-svn: 312029
expressions
C++ allows us to reference static variables through member expressions. Prior to
this commit, non-integer static variables that were referenced using a member
expression were always emitted using lvalue loads. The old behaviour introduced
an inconsistency between regular uses of static variables and member expressions
uses. For example, the following program compiled and linked successfully:
struct Foo {
constexpr static const char *name = "foo";
};
int main() {
return Foo::name[0] == 'f';
}
but this program failed to link because "Foo::name" wasn't found:
struct Foo {
constexpr static const char *name = "foo";
};
int main() {
Foo f;
return f.name[0] == 'f';
}
This commit ensures that constant static variables referenced through member
expressions are emitted in the same way as ordinary static variable references.
rdar://33942261
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36876
llvm-svn: 311772
of class fails to map class static variable.
If the global variable is captured and it has several redeclarations,
sometimes it may lead to a compiler crash. Patch fixes this by working
only with canonical declarations.
llvm-svn: 311479