Teach UBSan to detect when a value with the _Nonnull type annotation
assumes a null value. Call expressions, initializers, assignments, and
return statements are all checked.
Because _Nonnull does not affect IRGen, the new checks are disabled by
default. The new driver flags are:
-fsanitize=nullability-arg (_Nonnull violation in call)
-fsanitize=nullability-assign (_Nonnull violation in assignment)
-fsanitize=nullability-return (_Nonnull violation in return stmt)
-fsanitize=nullability (all of the above)
This patch builds on top of UBSan's existing support for detecting
violations of the nonnull attributes ('nonnull' and 'returns_nonnull'),
and relies on the compiler-rt support for those checks. Eventually we
will need to update the diagnostic messages in compiler-rt (there are
FIXME's for this, which will be addressed in a follow-up).
One point of note is that the nullability-return check is only allowed
to kick in if all arguments to the function satisfy their nullability
preconditions. This makes it necessary to emit some null checks in the
function body itself.
Testing: check-clang and check-ubsan. I also built some Apple ObjC
frameworks with an asserts-enabled compiler, and verified that we get
valid reports.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30762
llvm-svn: 297700
Summary:
(This is a move-only refactoring patch. There are no functionality changes.)
This patch splits apart the Clang driver's tool and toolchain implementation
files. Each target platform toolchain is moved to its own file, along with the
closest-related tools. Each target platform toolchain has separate headers and
implementation files, so the hierarchy of classes is unchanged.
There are some remaining shared free functions, mostly from Tools.cpp. Several
of these move to their own architecture-specific files, similar to r296056. Some
of them are only used by a single target platform; since the tools and
toolchains are now together, some helpers now live in a platform-specific file.
The balance are helpers related to manipulating argument lists, so they are now
in a new file pair, CommonArgs.h and .cpp.
I've tried to cluster the code logically, which is fairly straightforward for
most of the target platforms and shared architectures. I think I've made
reasonable choices for these, as well as the various shared helpers; but of
course, I'm happy to hear feedback in the review.
There are some particular things I don't like about this patch, but haven't been
able to find a better overall solution. The first is the proliferation of files:
there are several files that are tiny because the toolchain is not very
different from its base (usually the Gnu tools/toolchain). I think this is
mostly a reflection of the true complexity, though, so it may not be "fixable"
in any reasonable sense. The second thing I don't like are the includes like
"../Something.h". I've avoided this largely by clustering into the current file
structure. However, a few of these includes remain, and in those cases it
doesn't make sense to me to sink an existing file any deeper.
Reviewers: rsmith, mehdi_amini, compnerd, rnk, javed.absar
Subscribers: emaste, jfb, danalbert, srhines, dschuff, jyknight, nemanjai, nhaehnle, mgorny, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30372
llvm-svn: 297250
Summary:
Sanitizers aren't supported on NVPTX -- don't try to run them.
This lets you e.g. pass -fsanitize=address and get asan on your host
code.
Reviewers: kcc
Subscribers: cfe-commits, tra, jhen
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24640
llvm-svn: 281680
This reverts commit r275895 in order to address some post-commit review
feedback from Eric Christopher (see: the list thread for r275895).
llvm-svn: 276936
Compute an effective target triple exactly once in ConstructJob(), and
then simply pass around references to it. This eliminates wasteful
re-computation of effective triples (e.g in getARMFloatABI()).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22290
llvm-svn: 275895
The reason is that this (a) seems to work just fine and (b) useful when building stuff with
sanitizer+coverage, but need to exclude the sanitizer for a particular source file.
llvm-svn: 272717
It makes compiler-rt tests fail if the gold plugin is enabled.
Revert "Rework interface for bitset-using features to use a notion of LTO visibility."
Revert "Driver: only produce CFI -fvisibility= error when compiling."
Revert "clang/test/CodeGenCXX/cfi-blacklist.cpp: Exclude ms targets. They would be non-cfi."
llvm-svn: 267871
The -fvisibility= flag only affects compile jobs, so there's no need to
error out because of it if we aren't compiling (e.g. if we are only linking).
llvm-svn: 267824
Bitsets, and the compiler features they rely on (vtable opt, CFI),
only have visibility within the LTO'd part of the linkage unit. Therefore,
only enable these features for classes with hidden LTO visibility. This
notion is based on object file visibility or (on Windows)
dllimport/dllexport attributes.
We provide the [[clang::lto_visibility_public]] attribute to override the
compiler's LTO visibility inference in cases where the class is defined
in the non-LTO'd part of the linkage unit, or where the ABI supports
calling classes derived from abstract base classes with hidden visibility
in other linkage units (e.g. COM on Windows).
If the cross-DSO CFI mode is enabled, bitset checks are emitted even for
classes with public LTO visibility, as that mode uses a separate mechanism
to cause bitsets to be exported.
This mechanism replaces the whole-program-vtables blacklist, so remove the
-fwhole-program-vtables-blacklist flag.
Because __declspec(uuid()) now implies [[clang::lto_visibility_public]], the
support for the special attr:uuid blacklist entry is removed.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18635
llvm-svn: 267784
Summary:
Adds a framework to enable the instrumentation pass for the new
EfficiencySanitizer ("esan") family of tools. Adds a flag for esan's
cache fragmentation tool via -fsanitize=efficiency-cache-frag.
Adds appropriate tests for the new flag.
Reviewers: eugenis, vitalybuka, aizatsky, filcab
Subscribers: filcab, kubabrecka, llvm-commits, zhaoqin, kcc
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19169
llvm-svn: 267059
Over the last month we've been testing SafeStack extensively. As far as
we know, it works perfectly fine. That why I'd like to see us having
this enabled by default for CloudABI.
This change introduces a getDefaultSanitizers() function that toolchains
can use to specify which sanitizers are enabled by default. Once all
flags are processed, only flags that had no -fno-sanitize overrides are
enabled.
Extend the thests for CloudABI to test both the default case and the
case in which we want to explicitly disable SafeStack.
Reviewed by: eugenis, pcc
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18505
llvm-svn: 264787
This is part of a new statistics gathering feature for the sanitizers.
See clang/docs/SanitizerStats.rst for further info and docs.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16175
llvm-svn: 257971
Clang-side cross-DSO CFI.
* Adds a command line flag -f[no-]sanitize-cfi-cross-dso.
* Links a runtime library when enabled.
* Emits __cfi_slowpath calls is bitset test fails.
* Emits extra hash-based bitsets for external CFI checks.
* Sets a module flag to enable __cfi_check generation during LTO.
This mode does not yet support diagnostics.
llvm-svn: 255694
Since r249754 MemorySanitizer should work equally well for PIE and
non-PIE executables on Linux/x86_64.
Beware, with this change -fsanitize=memory no longer adds implicit
-fPIE -pie compiler/linker flags on Linux/x86_64.
This is a re-land of r250941, limited to Linux/x86_64 + a very minor
refactoring in SanitizerArgs.
llvm-svn: 250949
Since r249754 MemorySanitizer should work equally well for PIE and
non-PIE executables.
Beware, with this change -fsanitize=memory no longer adds implicit
-fPIE -pie compiler/linker flags, unless the target defaults to PIE.
llvm-svn: 250941
This recommits r250398 with fixes to the tests for bot failures.
Add "-target x86_64-unknown-linux" to the clang invocations that
check for the gold plugin.
llvm-svn: 250455
Rolling this back for now since there are a couple of bot failures on
the new tests I added, and I won't have a chance to look at them in detail
until later this afternoon. I think the new tests need some restrictions on
having the gold plugin available.
This reverts commit r250398.
llvm-svn: 250402
Summary:
Add clang support for -flto=thin option, which is used to set the
EmitFunctionSummary code gen option on compiles.
Add -flto=full as an alias to the existing -flto.
Add tests to check for proper overriding of -flto variants on the
command line, and convert grep tests to FileCheck.
Reviewers: dexonsmith, joker.eph
Subscribers: davidxl, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11908
llvm-svn: 250398
Summary:
This patch moves getCompilerRT() from the clang::driver::tools namespace to
the ToolChain class. This is needed for multilib toolchains that need to
place their libraries in Clang's resource directory with a layout that is
different from the default one.
Reviewers: atanasyan, rsmith
Subscribers: tberghammer, danalbert, srhines, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13339
llvm-svn: 249030
ARM EABI adds target attributes to the object file. Amongst the attributes that
are emitted is the VFP argument passing (Hard vs Soft). The linker is
responsible for checking these attributes and erroring on mismatches. This
causes problems for the compiler-rt builtins when targeting both hard and
soft. Because both of these options name the builtins compiler-rt component
the same (libclang_rt.builtins-arm.a or libclang_rt.builtins-arm-android). GCC
is able to get away with this as it does one target per toolchain. This
changes the naming convention for the ARM compiler-rt builtins to differentiate
between HF and Soft. Although this means that compiler-rt may be duplicated, it
enables supporting both variants from a single toolchain. A similar approach is
taken by the Darwin toolchain, naming the library to differentiate between the
calling conventions.
llvm-svn: 248649
Summary:
Do not include default sanitizer blacklists into -M/-MM/-MD/-MMD output.
Introduce a frontend option -fdepfile-entry, and only insert them
for the user-defined sanitizer blacklists. In frontend, grab ExtraDeps
from -fdepfile-entry, instead of -fsanitize-blacklist.
Reviewers: rsmith, pcc
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12544
llvm-svn: 246700
We now use the sanitizer special case list to decide which types to blacklist.
We also support a special blacklist entry for types with a uuid attribute,
which are generally COM types whose virtual tables are defined externally.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11096
llvm-svn: 242286
There are known issues, but the current implementation is good enough for
the check-cfi test suite.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11030
llvm-svn: 241728
On Windows the user may invoke the linker directly, so we might not have an
opportunity to add runtime library flags to the linker command line. Instead,
instruct the code generator to embed linker directive in the object file
that cause the required runtime libraries to be linked.
We might also want to do something similar for ASan, but it seems to have
its own special complexities which may make this infeasible.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10862
llvm-svn: 241225
Summary:
Namely, we must have proper C++ABI support in UBSan runtime. We don't
have a good way to check for that, so just assume that C++ABI support is
there whenever -fsanitize=vptr is supported (i.e. only on handful of
platforms).
Exact diagnostic is also tricky. It's not "cfi" that is unsupported,
just the diagnostic mode. So, I suggest to report that
"-fno-sanitize-trap=cfi-foobar" is incompatible with a given target
toolchain.
Test Plan: regression test suite
Reviewers: pcc
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10751
llvm-svn: 240716