This changes the ELFNix platform Orc runtime to use, when available,
the __unw_add_dynamic_eh_frame_section interface provided by libunwind
for registering .eh_frame sections loaded by JITLink. When libunwind
is not being used for unwinding, the ELFNix platform detects this and
defaults to the __register_frame interface provided by libgcc_s.
Reviewed By: lhames
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114961
This adds resolver, indirection and trampoline stubs for riscv64,
allowing lazy compilation to work.
It assumes hard float extension exists. I don't know the proper way to detect it as Triple doesn't provide the interface to check riscv +f +d abi.
I am also not sure if orclazy tests should be enabled because lli needs an additional -codemodel=melany for tests to pass.
Reviewed By: lhames
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122543
Removes a bogus dyn_cast_or_null that was breaking cast-expression handling when
parsing llvm.global_ctors.
The intent of this code was to identify Functions nested within cast
expressions, but the offending dyn_cast_or_null was actually blocking that:
Since a function is not a cast expression, we would set FuncC to null and break
the loop without finding the Function. The cast was not necessary either:
Functions are already Constants, and we didn't need to do anything
ConstantExpr-specific with FuncC, so we could just drop the cast.
Thanks to Jonas Hahnfeld for tracking this down.
http://llvm.org/PR54797
This patch removes the unintended resolution of locally scoped absolute symbols
(which was causing unexpected definition errors).
It stops using the JITSymbolFlags::Absolute flag (it isn't set or used elsewhere,
and causes mismatch-flags asserts), and adds JITSymbolFlags::Exported to default
scoped absolute symbols.
Finally, we now set the scope of absolute symbols correctly in
MachOLinkGraphBuilder.
Without this, EPCIndirectionUtils::getResolverBlockAddr (and lazy compilation
via EPC) won't work.
No test case: lli is still using LocalLazyCallThroughManager. I'll revisit this
soon when I look at adding lazy compilation support to the ORC runtime.
This patch updates the MachO platform (both the ORC MachOPlatform class and the
ORC-Runtime macho_platform.* files) to use allocation actions, rather than EPC
calls, to transfer the initializer information scraped from each linked object.
Interactions between the ORC and ORC-Runtime sides of the platform are
substantially redesigned to accomodate the change.
The high-level changes in this patch are:
1. The MachOPlatform::setupJITDylib method now calls into the runtime to set up
a dylib name <-> header mapping, and a dylib state object (JITDylibState).
2. The MachOPlatformPlugin builds an allocation action that calls the
__orc_rt_macho_register_object_platform_sections and
__orc_rt_macho_deregister_object_platform_sections functions in the runtime
to register the address ranges for all "interesting" sections in the object
being allocated (TLS data sections, initializers, language runtime metadata
sections, etc.).
3. The MachOPlatform::rt_getInitializers method (the entry point in the
controller for requests from the runtime for initializer information) is
replaced by MachOPlatform::rt_pushInitializers. The former returned a data
structure containing the "interesting" section address ranges, but these are
now handled by __orc_rt_macho_register_object_platform_sections. The new
rt_pushInitializers method first issues a lookup to trigger materialization
of the "interesting" sections, then returns the dylib dependence tree rooted
at the requested dylib for dlopen to consume. (The dylib dependence tree is
returned by rt_pushInitializers, rather than being handled by some dedicated
call, because rt_pushInitializers can alter the dependence tree).
The advantage of these changes (beyond the performance advantages of using
allocation actions) is that it moves more information about the materialized
portions of the JITDylib into the executor. This tends to make the runtime
easier to reason about, e.g. the implementation of dlopen in the runtime is now
recursive, rather than relying on recursive calls in the controller to build a
linear data structure for consumption by the runtime. This change can also make
some operations more efficient, e.g. JITDylibs can be dlclosed and then
re-dlopened without having to pull all initializers over from the controller
again.
In addition to the high-level changes, there are some low-level changes to ORC
and the runtime:
* In ORC, at ExecutionSession teardown time JITDylibs are now destroyed in
reverse creation order. This is on the assumption that the ORC runtime will be
loaded into an earlier dylib that will be used by later JITDylibs. This is a
short-term solution to crashes that arose during testing when the runtime was
torn down before its users. Longer term we will likely destroy dylibs in
dependence order.
* toSPSSerializable(Expected<T> E) is updated to explicitly initialize the T
value, allowing it to be used by Ts that have explicit constructors.
* The ORC runtime now (1) attempts to track ref-counts, and (2) distinguishes
not-yet-processed "interesting" sections from previously processed ones. (1)
is necessary for standard dlopen/dlclose emulation. (2) is intended as a step
towards better REPL support -- it should enable future runtime calls that
run only newly registered initializers ("dlopen_more", "dlopen_additions",
...?).
Calls to JITDylib's getDFSLinkOrder and getReverseDFSLinkOrder methods (both
static an non-static versions) are now valid to make on defunct JITDylibs, but
will return an error if any JITDylib in the link order is defunct.
This means that platforms can safely lookup link orders by name in response to
jit-dlopen calls from the ORC runtime, even if the call names a defunct
JITDylib -- the call will just fail with an error.
This is a counterpart to Platform::setupJITDylib, and is called when JITDylib
instances are removed (via ExecutionSession::removeJITDylib).
Upcoming MachOPlatform patches will use this to clear per-JITDylib data when
JITDylibs are removed.
runFinalizeActions takes an AllocActions vector and attempts to run its finalize
actions. If any finalize action fails then all paired dealloc actions up to the
failing pair are run, and the error(s) returned. If all finalize actions succeed
then a vector containing the dealloc actions is returned.
runDeallocActions takes a vector<WrapperFunctionCall> containing dealloc action
calls and runs them all, returning any error(s).
These helpers are intended to simplify the implementation of
JITLinkMemoryManager::InFlightAlloc::finalize and
JITLinkMemoryManager::deallocate overrides by taking care of execution (and
potential roll-back) of allocation actions.
This re-applies 133f86e954, which was reverted in
c5965a411c while I investigated bot failures.
The original failure contained an arithmetic conversion think-o (on line 419 of
EHFrameSupport.cpp) that could cause failures on 32-bit platforms. The issue
should be fixed in this patch.
This adds a GetObjectFileInterface callback member to
StaticLibraryDefinitionGenerator, and adds an optional argument for initializing
that member to StaticLibraryDefinitionGenerator's named constructors. If not
supplied, it will default to getObjectFileInterface from ObjectFileInterface.h.
To enable testing a `-hidden-l<x>` option is added to the llvm-jitlink tool.
This allows archives to be loaded with all contained symbol visibilities demoted
to hidden.
The ObjectLinkingLayer::setOverrideObjectFlagsWithResponsibilityFlags method is
(belatedly) hooked up, and enabled in llvm-jitlink when `-hidden-l<x>` is used
so that the demotion is also applied at symbol resolution time (avoiding any
"mismatched symbol flags" crashes).
Also moves object interface building functions out of Mangling.h and in to the
new ObjectFileInterfaces.h header, and updates the llvm-jitlink tool to use
custom object interfaces rather than a custom link layer.
ObjectLayer::add overloads are added to match the old signatures (which
do not take a MaterializationUnit::Interface). These overloads use the
standard getObjectFileInterface function to build an interface.
Passing a MaterializationUnit::Interface explicitly makes it easier to alter
the effective interface of the object file being added, e.g. by changing symbol
visibility/linkage, or renaming symbols (in both cases the changes will need to
be mirrored by a JITLink pass at link time to update the LinkGraph to match the
explicit interface). Altering interfaces in this way can be useful when lazily
compiling (e.g. for renaming function bodies) or emulating linker options (e.g.
demoting all symbols to hidden visibility to emulate -load_hidden).
If all symbols in a lookup match before we reach the end of the search order
then bail out of the search-order loop early.
This should reduce unnecessary contention on the session lock and improve
readability of the debug logs.
Most of `MemoryBuffer` interfaces expose a `RequiresNullTerminator` parameter that's being used to:
* determine how to open a file (`mmap` vs `open`),
* assert newly initialized buffer indeed has an implicit null terminator.
This patch adds the paramater to the `SmallVectorMemoryBuffer` constructors, meaning:
* null terminator can now be added to `SmallVector`s that didn't have one before,
* `SmallVectors` that had a null terminator before keep it even after the move.
In line with existing code, the new parameter is defaulted to `true`. This patch makes sure all calls to the `SmallVectorMemoryBuffer` constructor set it to `false` to preserve the current semantics.
Reviewed By: dexonsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115331
MaterializationUnit::Interface holds the values that make up the interface
(for ORC's purposes) of a materialization unit: the symbol flags map and
initializer symbol.
Having a type for this will make functions that build materializer interfaces
more readable and maintainable.
In order to present a well-formed MachO debug object for debugger registration
the first block in each section must have a zero alignment offset (since there
is no way to represent a non-zero offset in a MachO section load command). This
patch updates the MachODebugObjectSynthesizer class to introduce a padding
padding block at the start of the section if necessary to guarantee a zero
alignment offset.
This allows JITDylibs to be removed from the ExecutionSession. Calling
ExecutionSession::removeJITDylib will disconnect the JITDylib from the
ExecutionSession and clear it (removing all trackers associated with it). The
JITDylib object will then be destroyed as soon as the last JITDylibSP pointing
at it is destroyed.
GeneratorsMutex should prevent lookups from proceeding through the
generators of a single JITDylib concurrently (since this could
result in redundant attempts to generate definitions). Mutation of
the generators list itself should be done under the session lock.
This keeps the tracker alive for the lifetime of the MR. This is needed so that
we can check whether the tracker has become defunct before posting results (or
failure) for the MR.
We were adding all defined weak symbols to the materialization
responsibility, but local symbols will not be in the symbol table, so it
failed to materialize due to the "missing" symbol.
Local weak symbols come up in practice when using `ld -r` with a hidden
weak symbol.
rdar://85574696
This reapplies e1933a0488 (which was reverted in
f55ba3525e due to bot failures, e.g.
https://lab.llvm.org/buildbot/#/builders/117/builds/2768).
The bot failures were due to a missing symbol error: We use the input object's
mangling to decide how to mangle the debug-info registration function name. This
caused lookup of the registration function to fail when the input object
mangling didn't match the host mangling.
Disbaling the test on non-Darwin platforms is the easiest short-term solution.
I have filed https://llvm.org/PR52503 with a proposed longer term solution.
This commit adds a new plugin, GDBJITDebugInfoRegistrationPlugin, that checks
for objects containing debug info and registers any debug info found via the
GDB JIT registration API.
To enable this registration without redundantly representing non-debug sections
this plugin synthesizes a new embedded object within a section of the LinkGraph.
An allocation action is used to make the registration call.
Currently MachO only. ELF users can still use the DebugObjectManagerPlugin. The
two are likely to be merged in the near future.
Similar to how the other swift sections are registered by the ORC
runtime's macho platform, add the __swift5_types section, which contains
type metadata. Add a simple test that demonstrates that the swift
runtime recognized the registered types.
rdar://85358530
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113811
If a tool wants to introduce new indirections via stubs at link-time in
ORC, it can cause fidelity issues around the address of the function if
some references to the function do not have relocations. This is known
to happen inside the body of the function itself on x86_64 for example,
where a PC-relative address is formed, but without a relocation.
```
_foo:
leaq -7(%rip), %rax ## form pointer to '_foo' without relocation
_bar:
leaq (%rip), %rax ## uses X86_64_RELOC_SIGNED to '_foo'
```
The consequence of introducing a stub for such a function at link time
is that if it forms a pointer to itself without relocation, it will not
have the same value as a pointer from outside the function. If the
function pointer is used as a key, this can cause problems.
This utility provides best-effort support for adding such missing
relocations using MCDisassembler and MCInstrAnalysis to identify the
problematic instructions. Currently it is only implemented for x86_64.
Note: the related issue with call/jump instructions is not handled
here, only forming function pointers.
rdar://83514317
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113038
MachOPlatform used to make an EPC-call (registerObjectSections) to register the
eh-frame and thread-data sections for each linked object with the ORC runtime.
Now that JITLinkMemoryManager supports allocation actions we can use these
instead of an EPC call. This saves us one EPC-call per object linked, and
manages registration/deregistration in the executor, rather than the controller
process. In the future we may use this to allow JIT'd code in the executor to
outlive the controller object while still being able to be cleanly destroyed.
Since the code for allocation actions must be available when the actions are
run, and since the eh-frame registration code lives in the ORC runtime itself,
this change required that MachO eh-frame support be split out of
macho_platform.cpp and into its own macho_ehframe_registration.cpp file that has
no other dependencies. During bootstrap we start by forcing emission of
macho_ehframe_registration.cpp so that eh-frame registration is guaranteed to be
available for the rest of the bootstrap process. Then we load the rest of the
MachO-platform runtime support, erroring out if there is any attempt to use
TLVs. Once the bootstrap process is complete all subsequent code can use all
features.
This type has been moved up into the llvm::orc::shared namespace.
This type was originally put in the detail:: namespace on the assumption that
few (if any) LLVM source files would need to use it. In practice it has been
needed in many places, and will continue to be needed until/unless
OrcTargetProcess is fully merged into the ORC runtime.
The new name better suits the type.
This patch also changes the signature of the run method (it now returns a
WrapperFunctionResult), and adds runWithSPSRet methods that deserialize the
function result using SPS.
Together these chages bring this type into close alignment with its ORC runtime
counterpart.
SPSExecutorAddr will now be serializable to/from ExecutorAddr, rather than
uint64_t. This improves type safety when working with serialized addresses.
Also updates the SupportFunctionCall to use an ExecutorAddrRange (rather than
a separate ExecutorAddr addr and uint64_t size field), and updates the
tpctypes::*Write data structures to use ExecutorAddr rather than
JITTargetAddress.