This change originally landed as part of
e6f1f06245 (D129120), which caused a
Fuchsia buildbot regression in ExecutionEngine tests.
I am resubmitting the backed out parts in smaller pieces after a careful
review.
Bulk remove many of the more trivial uses of ManagedStatic in the llvm
directory, either by defining a new getter function or, in many cases,
moving the static variable directly into the only function that uses it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129120
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.
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.
Adds explicit narrowing casts to JITLinkMemoryManager.cpp.
Honors -slab-address option in llvm-jitlink.cpp, which was accidentally
dropped in the refactor.
This effectively reverts commit 6641d29b70.
This commit substantially refactors the JITLinkMemoryManager API to: (1) add
asynchronous versions of key operations, (2) give memory manager implementations
full control over link graph address layout, (3) enable more efficient tracking
of allocated memory, and (4) support "allocation actions" and finalize-lifetime
memory.
Together these changes provide a more usable API, and enable more powerful and
efficient memory manager implementations.
To support these changes the JITLinkMemoryManager::Allocation inner class has
been split into two new classes: InFlightAllocation, and FinalizedAllocation.
The allocate method returns an InFlightAllocation that tracks memory (both
working and executor memory) prior to finalization. The finalize method returns
a FinalizedAllocation object, and the InFlightAllocation is discarded. Breaking
Allocation into InFlightAllocation and FinalizedAllocation allows
InFlightAllocation subclassses to be written more naturally, and FinalizedAlloc
to be implemented and used efficiently (see (3) below).
In addition to the memory manager changes this commit also introduces a new
MemProt type to represent memory protections (MemProt replaces use of
sys::Memory::ProtectionFlags in JITLink), and a new MemDeallocPolicy type that
can be used to indicate when a section should be deallocated (see (4) below).
Plugin/pass writers who were using sys::Memory::ProtectionFlags will have to
switch to MemProt -- this should be straightworward. Clients with out-of-tree
memory managers will need to update their implementations. Clients using
in-tree memory managers should mostly be able to ignore it.
Major features:
(1) More asynchrony:
The allocate and deallocate methods are now asynchronous by default, with
synchronous convenience wrappers supplied. The asynchronous versions allow
clients (including JITLink) to request and deallocate memory without blocking.
(2) Improved control over graph address layout:
Instead of a SegmentRequestMap, JITLinkMemoryManager::allocate now takes a
reference to the LinkGraph to be allocated. The memory manager is responsible
for calculating the memory requirements for the graph, and laying out the graph
(setting working and executor memory addresses) within the allocated memory.
This gives memory managers full control over JIT'd memory layout. For clients
that don't need or want this degree of control the new "BasicLayout" utility can
be used to get a segment-based view of the graph, similar to the one provided by
SegmentRequestMap. Once segment addresses are assigned the BasicLayout::apply
method can be used to automatically lay out the graph.
(3) Efficient tracking of allocated memory.
The FinalizedAlloc type is a wrapper for an ExecutorAddr and requires only
64-bits to store in the controller. The meaning of the address held by the
FinalizedAlloc is left up to the memory manager implementation, but the
FinalizedAlloc type enforces a requirement that deallocate be called on any
non-default values prior to destruction. The deallocate method takes a
vector<FinalizedAlloc>, allowing for bulk deallocation of many allocations in a
single call.
Memory manager implementations will typically store the address of some
allocation metadata in the executor in the FinalizedAlloc, as holding this
metadata in the executor is often cheaper and may allow for clean deallocation
even in failure cases where the connection with the controller is lost.
(4) Support for "allocation actions" and finalize-lifetime memory.
Allocation actions are pairs (finalize_act, deallocate_act) of JITTargetAddress
triples (fn, arg_buffer_addr, arg_buffer_size), that can be attached to a
finalize request. At finalization time, after memory protections have been
applied, each of the "finalize_act" elements will be called in order (skipping
any elements whose fn value is zero) as
((char*(*)(const char *, size_t))fn)((const char *)arg_buffer_addr,
(size_t)arg_buffer_size);
At deallocation time the deallocate elements will be run in reverse order (again
skipping any elements where fn is zero).
The returned char * should be null to indicate success, or a non-null
heap-allocated string error message to indicate failure.
These actions allow finalization and deallocation to be extended to include
operations like registering and deregistering eh-frames, TLS sections,
initializer and deinitializers, and language metadata sections. Previously these
operations required separate callWrapper invocations. Compared to callWrapper
invocations, actions require no extra IPC/RPC, reducing costs and eliminating
a potential source of errors.
Finalize lifetime memory can be used to support finalize actions: Sections with
finalize lifetime should be destroyed by memory managers immediately after
finalization actions have been run. Finalize memory can be used to support
finalize actions (e.g. with extra-metadata, or synthesized finalize actions)
without incurring permanent memory overhead.
Removing the 'ess' suffix improves the ergonomics without sacrificing clarity.
Since this class is likely to be used more frequently in the future it's worth
some short term pain to fix this now.
Replace the existing WrapperFunctionResult type in
llvm/include/ExecutionEngine/Orc/Shared/TargetProcessControlTypes.h with a
version adapted from the ORC runtime's implementation.
Also introduce the SimplePackedSerialization scheme (also adapted from the ORC
runtime's implementation) for wrapper functions to avoid manual serialization
and deserialization for calls to runtime functions involving common types.
Add a new ObjectLinkingLayer plugin `DebugObjectManagerPlugin` and infrastructure to handle creation of `DebugObject`s as well as their registration in OrcTargetProcess. The current implementation only covers ELF on x86-64, but the infrastructure is not limited to that.
The journey starts with a new `LinkGraph` / `JITLinkContext` pair being created for a `MaterializationResponsibility` in ORC's `ObjectLinkingLayer`. It sends a `notifyMaterializing()` notification, which is forwarded to all registered plugins. The `DebugObjectManagerPlugin` aims to create a `DebugObject` form the provided target triple and object buffer. (Future implementations might create `DebugObject`s from a `LinkGraph` in other ways.) On success it will track it as the pending `DebugObject` for the `MaterializationResponsibility`.
This patch only implements the `ELFDebugObject` for `x86-64` targets. It follows the RuntimeDyld approach for debug object setup: it captures a copy of the input object, parses all section headers and prepares to patch their load-address fields with their final addresses in target memory. It instructs the plugin to report the section load-addresses once they are available. The plugin overrides `modifyPassConfig()` and installs a JITLink post-allocation pass to capture them.
Once JITLink emitted the finalized executable, the plugin emits and registers the `DebugObject`. For emission it requests a new `JITLinkMemoryManager::Allocation` with a single read-only segment, copies the object with patched section load-addresses over to working memory and triggers finalization to target memory. For registration, it notifies the `DebugObjectRegistrar` provided in the constructor and stores the previously pending`DebugObject` as registered for the corresponding MaterializationResponsibility.
The `DebugObjectRegistrar` registers the `DebugObject` with the target process. `llvm-jitlink` uses the `TPCDebugObjectRegistrar`, which calls `llvm_orc_registerJITLoaderGDBWrapper()` in the target process via `TargetProcessControl` to emit a `jit_code_entry` compatible with the GDB JIT interface [1]. So far the implementation only supports registration and no removal. It appears to me that it wouldn't raise any new design questions, so I left this as an addition for the near future.
[1] https://sourceware.org/gdb/current/onlinedocs/gdb/JIT-Interface.html
Reviewed By: lhames
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97335