Commit Graph

709 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Joerg Sonnenberger dc383f07b0 Stop including sys/param.h from Unix.h 2020-02-25 15:35:04 +01:00
Joerg Sonnenberger 4e45ef4d77 Prefer PATH_MAX to MAXPATHLEN
The former is part of POSIX and requires less heavy headers. They are
practically functionally equivalent.
2020-02-25 01:37:29 +01:00
Alexandre Ganea 8404aeb56a [Support] On Windows, ensure hardware_concurrency() extends to all CPU sockets and all NUMA groups
The goal of this patch is to maximize CPU utilization on multi-socket or high core count systems, so that parallel computations such as LLD/ThinLTO can use all hardware threads in the system. Before this patch, on Windows, a maximum of 64 hardware threads could be used at most, in some cases dispatched only on one CPU socket.

== Background ==
Windows doesn't have a flat cpu_set_t like Linux. Instead, it projects hardware CPUs (or NUMA nodes) to applications through a concept of "processor groups". A "processor" is the smallest unit of execution on a CPU, that is, an hyper-thread if SMT is active; a core otherwise. There's a limit of 32-bit processors on older 32-bit versions of Windows, which later was raised to 64-processors with 64-bit versions of Windows. This limit comes from the affinity mask, which historically is represented by the sizeof(void*). Consequently, the concept of "processor groups" was introduced for dealing with systems with more than 64 hyper-threads.

By default, the Windows OS assigns only one "processor group" to each starting application, in a round-robin manner. If the application wants to use more processors, it needs to programmatically enable it, by assigning threads to other "processor groups". This also means that affinity cannot cross "processor group" boundaries; one can only specify a "preferred" group on start-up, but the application is free to allocate more groups if it wants to.

This creates a peculiar situation, where newer CPUs like the AMD EPYC 7702P (64-cores, 128-hyperthreads) are projected by the OS as two (2) "processor groups". This means that by default, an application can only use half of the cores. This situation could only get worse in the years to come, as dies with more cores will appear on the market.

== The problem ==
The heavyweight_hardware_concurrency() API was introduced so that only *one hardware thread per core* was used. Once that API returns, that original intention is lost, only the number of threads is retained. Consider a situation, on Windows, where the system has 2 CPU sockets, 18 cores each, each core having 2 hyper-threads, for a total of 72 hyper-threads. Both heavyweight_hardware_concurrency() and hardware_concurrency() currently return 36, because on Windows they are simply wrappers over std:🧵:hardware_concurrency() -- which can only return processors from the current "processor group".

== The changes in this patch ==
To solve this situation, we capture (and retain) the initial intention until the point of usage, through a new ThreadPoolStrategy class. The number of threads to use is deferred as late as possible, until the moment where the std::threads are created (ThreadPool in the case of ThinLTO).

When using hardware_concurrency(), setting ThreadCount to 0 now means to use all the possible hardware CPU (SMT) threads. Providing a ThreadCount above to the maximum number of threads will have no effect, the maximum will be used instead.
The heavyweight_hardware_concurrency() is similar to hardware_concurrency(), except that only one thread per hardware *core* will be used.

When LLVM_ENABLE_THREADS is OFF, the threading APIs will always return 1, to ensure any caller loops will be exercised at least once.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71775
2020-02-14 10:24:22 -05:00
Benjamin Kramer adcd026838 Make llvm::StringRef to std::string conversions explicit.
This is how it should've been and brings it more in line with
std::string_view. There should be no functional change here.

This is mostly mechanical from a custom clang-tidy check, with a lot of
manual fixups. It uncovers a lot of minor inefficiencies.

This doesn't actually modify StringRef yet, I'll do that in a follow-up.
2020-01-28 23:25:25 +01:00
Weverything 9f69157bf4 Fix header includes after 0697bcb66f 2020-01-24 18:32:54 -08:00
Alexandre Ganea a1f16998f3 [Support] Optionally call signal handlers when a function wrapped by the the CrashRecoveryContext fails
This patch allows for handling a failure inside a CrashRecoveryContext in the same way as the global exception/signal handler. A failure will have the same side-effect, such as cleanup of temporarty file, printing callstack, calling relevant signal handlers, and finally returning an exception code. This is an optional feature, disabled by default.
This is a support patch for D69825.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70568
2020-01-11 15:27:07 -05:00
Bruno Ricci 2fe45e029d
[Support][NFC] Make some helper functions "static" in Memory.inc 2020-01-09 17:46:21 +00:00
Vedant Kumar 9a3f892d01 [Signal] Allow one-shot SIGPIPE handler to be reached
As SIGPIPE is no longer in the IntSigs array, handle SIGPIPE before
handling any interrupt signals.

Thanks to Alexandre Ganea for pointing out the issue here.
2019-12-04 19:38:19 -08:00
Vedant Kumar 4624e83ce7 [Signal] Allow llvm clients to opt into one-shot SIGPIPE handling
Allow clients of the llvm library to opt-in to one-shot SIGPIPE
handling, instead of forcing them to undo llvm's SIGPIPE handler
registration (which is brittle).

The current behavior is preserved for all llvm-derived tools (except
lldb) by means of a default-`true` flag in the InitLLVM constructor.

This prevents "IO error" crashes in long-lived processes (lldb is the
motivating example) which both a) load llvm as a dynamic library and b)
*really* need to ignore SIGPIPE.

As llvm signal handlers can be installed when calling into libclang
(say, via RemoveFileOnSignal), thereby overriding a previous SIG_IGN for
SIGPIPE, there is no clean way to opt-out of "exit-on-SIGPIPE" in the
current model.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70277
2019-11-18 10:27:27 -08:00
Ed Maste b462cdff05 Avoid duplicate exe_path definition on recent FreeBSD 2019-11-18 08:51:22 -05:00
Ed Maste a0a38b81ea On FreeBSD use AT_EXECPATH from ELF auxiliary vectors for getExecutablePath
/proc/curproc/file and the KERN_PROC_PATHNAME sysctl may not return the
desired path if there are multiple hardlinks to the file, or if the path has
expired from the namecache.

Reviewed By:	theraven

Differential Revision:	https://reviews.llvm.org/D70198
2019-11-14 09:48:48 -05:00
kristina f42671239f [Support] Use /proc/self/exe for GNU Hurd
Use `/proc/self/exe` to get the current executable
path on GNU Hurd.

Patch by sthibaul (Samuel Thibault)

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69683
2019-11-01 17:27:27 +00:00
Vedant Kumar d0bd3fc88b Revert "Disable exit-on-SIGPIPE in lldb"
This reverts commit 32ce14e55e.

In post-commit review, Pavel pointed out that there's a simpler way to
ignore SIGPIPE in lldb that doesn't rely on llvm's handlers.
2019-10-24 13:19:49 -07:00
Sam McCall a9c3c176ad Reland "[Support] Add a way to run a function on a detached thread""
This reverts commit 7bc7fe6b78.
The immediate callers have been fixed to pass nullopt where appropriate.
2019-10-23 15:51:44 +02:00
Sam McCall 7bc7fe6b78 Revert "[Support] Add a way to run a function on a detached thread"
This reverts commit 40668abca4.
This causes clang tests to fail, as stacksize=0 is being explicitly passed and
is no longer a no-op.
2019-10-23 15:10:35 +02:00
Sam McCall 40668abca4 [Support] Add a way to run a function on a detached thread
This roughly mimics `std::thread(...).detach()` except it allows to
customize the stack size. Required for https://reviews.llvm.org/D50993.

I've decided against reusing the existing `llvm_execute_on_thread` because
it's not obvious what to do with the ownership of the passed
function/arguments:

1. If we pass possibly owning functions data to `llvm_execute_on_thread`,
   we'll lose the ability to pass small non-owning non-allocating functions
   for the joining case (as it's used now). Is it important enough?
2. If we use the non-owning interface in the new use case, we'll force
   clients to transfer ownership to the spawned thread manually, but
   similar code would still have to exist inside
   `llvm_execute_on_thread(_async)` anyway (as we can't just pass the same
   non-owning pointer to pthreads and Windows implementations, and would be
   forced to wrap it in some structure, and deal with its ownership.

Patch by Dmitry Kozhevnikov!

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51103
2019-10-23 12:48:38 +02:00
Vedant Kumar 32ce14e55e Disable exit-on-SIGPIPE in lldb
Occasionally, during test teardown, LLDB writes to a closed pipe.
Sometimes the communication is inherently unreliable, so LLDB tries to
avoid being killed due to SIGPIPE (it calls `signal(SIGPIPE, SIG_IGN)`).
However, LLVM's default SIGPIPE behavior overrides LLDB's, causing it to
exit with IO_ERR.

Opt LLDB out of the default SIGPIPE behavior. I expect that this will
resolve some LLDB test suite flakiness (tests randomly failing with
IO_ERR) that we've seen since r344372.

rdar://55750240

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69148

llvm-svn: 375288
2019-10-18 21:05:30 +00:00
Guillaume Chatelet ce56e1a1cc [Alignment][NFC] Move and type functions from MathExtras to Alignment
Summary:
This is patch is part of a series to introduce an Alignment type.
See this thread for context: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-July/133851.html
See this patch for the introduction of the type: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64790

Reviewers: courbet

Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68942

llvm-svn: 374773
2019-10-14 13:14:34 +00:00
Pavel Labath 1b30ea2c50 [Support] Improve readNativeFile(Slice) interface
Summary:
There was a subtle, but pretty important difference between the Slice
and regular versions of this function. The Slice function was
zero-initializing the rest of the buffer when the read syscall returned
less bytes than expected, while the regular function did not.

This patch removes the inconsistency by making both functions *not*
zero-initialize the buffer. The zeroing code is moved to the
MemoryBuffer class, which is currently the only user of this code. This
makes the API more consistent, and the code shorter.

While in there, I also refactor the functions to return the number of
bytes through the regular return value (via Expected<size_t>) instead of
a separate by-ref argument.

Reviewers: aganea, rnk

Subscribers: kristina, Bigcheese, llvm-commits

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66471

llvm-svn: 369627
2019-08-22 08:13:30 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer 928071ae4e [Support] Replace sys::Mutex with their standard equivalents.
Only use a recursive mutex if it can be locked recursively.

llvm-svn: 369295
2019-08-19 19:49:57 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer 8d3a1523dd [Support] Base RWMutex on std::shared_timed_mutex (C++14)
This should have the same semantics. We use std::shared_mutex instead on
MSVC and C++17, std::shared_timed_mutex is less efficient than our
custom implementation on Windows, std::shared_mutex should be faster.

llvm-svn: 369018
2019-08-15 16:55:23 +00:00
Jonas Devlieghere 0eaee545ee [llvm] Migrate llvm::make_unique to std::make_unique
Now that we've moved to C++14, we no longer need the llvm::make_unique
implementation from STLExtras.h. This patch is a mechanical replacement
of (hopefully) all the llvm::make_unique instances across the monorepo.

llvm-svn: 369013
2019-08-15 15:54:37 +00:00
Jan Korous 14230f9926 [Support][NFC] Fix error message for posix_spawn_file_actions_addopen failed call
Seems like a copy-paste from couple lines above.

llvm-svn: 368899
2019-08-14 18:30:18 +00:00
Nico Weber 1919317929 Support: Remove needless allocation when getMainExecutable() calls readlink()
We built a StringRef from a string literal which we then converted to a
std::string to call c_str().  Just use a pointer to the string literal
instead of a StringRef.

No behavior change.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65890

llvm-svn: 368187
2019-08-07 17:00:19 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer ea134f221f [Support] Base SmartMutex on std::recursive_mutex
- Remove support for non-recursive mutexes. This was unused.
- The std::recursive_mutex is now created/destroyed unconditionally.
  Locking is still only done if threading is enabled.
- Alias SmartScopedLock to std::lock_guard.

This should make no semantic difference on the existing APIs.

llvm-svn: 368158
2019-08-07 11:59:57 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer 3d5360a439 Replace llvm::MutexGuard/UniqueLock with their standard equivalents
All supported platforms have <mutex> now, so we don't need our own
copies any longer. No functionality change intended.

llvm-svn: 368149
2019-08-07 10:57:25 +00:00
Fangrui Song d9b948b6eb Rename F_{None,Text,Append} to OF_{None,Text,Append}. NFC
F_{None,Text,Append} are kept for compatibility since r334221.

llvm-svn: 367800
2019-08-05 05:43:48 +00:00
Yi Kong 1755abe1fb Fix macOS build after r358716
COPYFILE_CLONE is only defined on newer macOS versions, using it without
check breaks build on systems running legacy OS and toolchain.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65317

llvm-svn: 367084
2019-07-26 05:17:14 +00:00
Jordan Rose 887d31ccee FileSystem: Check for DTTOIF alone, not _DIRENT_HAVE_D_TYPE
While 'd_type' is a non-standard extension to `struct dirent`, only
glibc signals its presence with a macro '_DIRENT_HAVE_D_TYPE'.
However, any platform with 'd_type' also includes a way to convert to
mode_t values using the macro 'DTTOIF', so we can check for that alone
and still be confident that the 'd_type' member exists.

(If this turns out to be wrong, I'll go back and set up an actual
CMake check.)

I couldn't think of how to write a test for this, because I couldn't
think of how to test that a 'stat' call doesn't happen without
controlling the filesystem or intercepting 'stat', and there's no good
cross-platform way to do that that I know of.

Follow-up (almost a year later) to r342089.

rdar://problem/50592673
https://reviews.llvm.org/D64940

llvm-svn: 366486
2019-07-18 20:05:11 +00:00
Jordan Rose be28cddeea Support for dumping current PrettyStackTrace on SIGINFO (Ctrl-T)
Support SIGINFO (and SIGUSR1 for POSIX purposes) to tell what
long-running jobs are doing, as inspired by BSD tools (including on
macOS), by dumping the current PrettyStackTrace.

This adds a new kind of signal handler for non-fatal "info" signals,
similar to the "interrupt" handler that already exists for SIGINT
(Ctrl-C). It then uses that handler to update a "generation count"
managed by the PrettyStackTrace infrastructure, which is then checked
whenever a PrettyStackTraceEntry is pushed or popped on each
thread. If the generation has changed---i.e. if the user has pressed
Ctrl-T---the stack trace is dumped, though unfortunately it can't
include the deepest entry because that one is currently being
constructed/destructed.

https://reviews.llvm.org/D63750

llvm-svn: 365911
2019-07-12 16:05:09 +00:00
Fangrui Song 6dc5962957 [llvm-objcopy] Don't change permissions of non-regular output files
There is currently an EPERM error when a regular user executes `llvm-objcopy a.o /dev/null`.
Worse, root can even change the mode bits of /dev/null.

Fix it by checking if the output file is special.

A new overload of llvm::sys::fs::setPermissions with FD as the parameter
is added. Users should provide `perm & ~umask` as the parameter if they
intend to respect umask.

The existing overload of llvm::sys::fs::setPermissions may be deleted if
we can find an implementation of fchmod() on Windows. fchmod() is
usually better than chmod() because it saves syscalls and can avoid race
condition.

Reviewed By: jakehehrlich, jhenderson

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64236

llvm-svn: 365753
2019-07-11 10:17:59 +00:00
Reid Kleckner cc418a3af4 [Support] Move llvm::MemoryBuffer to sys::fs::file_t
Summary:
On Windows, Posix integer file descriptors are a compatibility layer
over native file handles provided by the C runtime. There is a hard
limit on the maximum number of file descriptors that a process can open,
and the limit is 8192. LLD typically doesn't run into this limit because
it opens input files, maps them into memory, and then immediately closes
the file descriptor. This prevents it from running out of FDs.

For various reasons, I'd like to open handles to every input file and
keep them open during linking. That requires migrating MemoryBuffer over
to taking open native file handles instead of integer FDs.

Reviewers: aganea, Bigcheese

Reviewed By: aganea

Subscribers: smeenai, silvas, mehdi_amini, hiraditya, steven_wu, dexonsmith, dang, llvm-commits, zturner

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63453

llvm-svn: 365588
2019-07-10 00:34:13 +00:00
Sven van Haastregt 1bc2cccf18 Remove some autoconf references from docs and comments
The autoconf build system support has been removed a while ago, remove
some outdated references.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63608

llvm-svn: 365013
2019-07-03 09:57:59 +00:00
Sam McCall edf904efff getMainExecutable: handle realpath() failure, falling back to getprogpath().
Summary:
Previously, we'd pass a nullptr to std::string and crash().

This case happens when the binary is deleted while being used (e.g. rebuilding clangd).

Reviewers: kadircet

Subscribers: ilya-biryukov, kristina, llvm-commits

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64068

llvm-svn: 364936
2019-07-02 15:42:37 +00:00
Michal Gorny 638cc0a479 [llvm] [Support] Clean PrintStackTrace() ptr arithmetic up
Use '%tu' modifier for pointer arithmetic since we are using C++11
already.  Prefer static_cast<> over C-style cast.  Remove unnecessary
conversion of result, and add const qualifier to converted pointers,
to silence the following warning:

  In file included from /home/mgorny/llvm-project/llvm/lib/Support/Signals.cpp:220:0:
  /home/mgorny/llvm-project/llvm/lib/Support/Unix/Signals.inc: In function ‘void llvm::sys::PrintStackTrace(llvm::raw_ostream&)’:
  /home/mgorny/llvm-project/llvm/lib/Support/Unix/Signals.inc:546:53: warning: cast from type ‘const void*’ to type ‘char*’ casts away qualifiers [-Wcast-qual]
                                         (char*)dlinfo.dli_saddr));
                                                       ^~~~~~~~~

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63888

llvm-svn: 364912
2019-07-02 11:32:03 +00:00
Alex Brachet 3b715d67dd [Support] Add fs::getUmask() function and change fs::setPermissions
Summary: This patch changes fs::setPermissions to optionally set permissions while respecting the umask. It also adds the function fs::getUmask() which returns the current umask.

Reviewers: jhenderson, rupprecht, aprantl, lhames

Reviewed By: jhenderson, rupprecht

Subscribers: sanaanajjar231288, hiraditya, llvm-commits

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63583

llvm-svn: 364621
2019-06-28 03:21:00 +00:00
Keno Fischer 5f4ae7c457 [Support] Fix build under Emscripten
Summary:
Emscripten's libc doesn't define MNT_LOCAL, thus causing a build
failure in the fallback path. However, to the best of my knowledge,
it also doesn't support remote file system mounts, so we may simply
return `true` here (as we do for e.g. Fuchsia). With this fix, the
core LLVM libraries build correctly under emscripten (though some
of the tools and utils do not).

Reviewers: kripken
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63688

llvm-svn: 364143
2019-06-23 00:29:59 +00:00
Nemanja Ivanovic 009d08f313 [PowerPC] Set PROT_READ flag for MF_EXEC to prevent segfaults on PPC machines
The big endian PPC buildbots are all failing now due to calls to cache
invalidation in unit tests on data that has only the PROT_EXEC flag set.
This has been an issue all along on FreeBSD but it can affect Linux machines
depending on configuration.

This patch mitigates the issue the same way it is mitigated on FreeBSD.

Since this is needed to bring the buildbots back to green, I plan to commit this
and allow for post-commit review, but I thought I would also post it here for
ease of access/readability.

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62741

llvm-svn: 362412
2019-06-03 16:20:59 +00:00
Lang Hames 93d2bdda6b [Support] Renamed member 'Size' to 'AllocatedSize' in MemoryBlock and OwningMemoryBlock.
Rename member 'Size' to 'AllocatedSize' in order to provide a hint that the
allocated size may be different than the requested size. Comments are added to
clarify this point.  Updated the InMemoryBuffer in FileOutputBuffer.cpp to track
the requested buffer size.

Patch by Machiel van Hooren. Thanks Machiel!

https://reviews.llvm.org/D61599

llvm-svn: 361195
2019-05-20 20:53:05 +00:00
Xing Xue 2dee094a08 Fixes for builds that require strict X/Open and POSIX compatiblity
Summary:
- Use alternative to MAP_ANONYMOUS for allocating mapped memory if it isn't available
- Use strtok_r instead of strsep as part of getting program path
- Don't try to find the width of a terminal using "struct winsize" and TIOCGWINSZ on POSIX builds. These aren't defined under POSIX (even though some platforms make them available when they shouldn't), so just check if we are doing a X/Open or POSIX compliant build first.

Author: daltenty

Reviewers: hubert.reinterpretcast, xingxue, andusy

Reviewed By: hubert.reinterpretcast

Subscribers: MaskRay, jsji, hiraditya, kristina, llvm-commits

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61326

llvm-svn: 360898
2019-05-16 14:02:13 +00:00
Lang Hames e4b4ab6d26 [Support] Add error handling to sys::Process::getPageSize().
This patch changes the return type of sys::Process::getPageSize to
Expected<unsigned> to account for the fact that the underlying syscalls used to
obtain the page size may fail (see below).

For clients who use the page size as an optimization only this patch adds a new
method, getPageSizeEstimate, which calls through to getPageSize but discards
any error returned and substitues a "reasonable" page size estimate estimate
instead. All existing LLVM clients are updated to call getPageSizeEstimate
rather than getPageSize.

On Unix, sys::Process::getPageSize is implemented in terms of getpagesize or
sysconf, depending on which macros are set. The sysconf call is documented to
return -1 on failure. On Darwin getpagesize is implemented in terms of sysconf
and may also fail (though the manpage documentation does not mention this).
These failures have been observed in practice when highly restrictive sandbox
permissions have been applied. Without this patch, the result is that
getPageSize returns -1, which wreaks havoc on any subsequent code that was
assuming a sane page size value.

<rdar://problem/41654857>

Reviewers: dblaikie, echristo

Subscribers: kristina, llvm-commits

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59107

llvm-svn: 360221
2019-05-08 02:11:07 +00:00
Adrian Prantl ccdefb24ad Guard __builtin_available() with __has_builtin to support older host compilers.
llvm-svn: 360174
2019-05-07 17:10:27 +00:00
Fangrui Song 7d0e8cb1e2 [Support] Don't check MAP_ANONYMOUS, just use MAP_ANON
Though being marked "deprecated" by the Linux man-pages project
(MAP_ANON is a synonym of MAP_ANONYMOUS), it is the mostly widely
available macro - many systems that don't provide MAP_ANONYMOUS have
MAP_ANON. MAP_ANON is also used here and there in compiler-rt.

llvm-svn: 359758
2019-05-02 05:58:09 +00:00
David Chisnall 714a4425de Try to use /proc on FreeBSD for getExecutablePath
Currently, clang's libTooling passes this function a fake argv0, which
means that no libTooling tools can find the standard headers on FreeBSD.
With this change, these will now work on any FreeBSD systems that have
procfs mounted.  This isn't the right fix for the libTooling issue, but
it does bring the FreeBSD implementation of getExecutablePath closer to
the Linux and macOS implementations.

llvm-svn: 359427
2019-04-29 09:24:51 +00:00
JF Bastien fb742da34c posix_spawn should retry upon EINTR
Summary:
We've seen cases of bots failing with:
  clang: error: unable to execute command: posix_spawn failed: Interrupted system call

Add a small retry loop to posix_spawn in case this happens. Don't retry too much in case there's some systemic problem going on, but retry a few times.
<rdar://problem/50181448>

Reviewers: Bigcheese, arphaman

Subscribers: jkorous, dexonsmith, kristina, llvm-commits

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61096

llvm-svn: 359152
2019-04-24 23:24:53 +00:00
Adrian Prantl c90ff5e123 Revert using fcopyfile(3) to implement sys::fs::copy_file(Twine, int) on macOS
It turns out that I mesread the man page and fcopyfile(3) does not
actually support COPYFILE_CLONE for files.

<rdar://problem/50148757>

llvm-svn: 359127
2019-04-24 19:08:43 +00:00
Adrian Prantl fac7875704 Implement sys::fs::copy_file using the macOS copyfile(3) API
to support APFS clones.

This patch adds a Darwin-specific implementation of
llvm::sys::fs::copy_file() that uses the macOS copyfile(3) API to
support APFS copy-on-write clones, which should be faster and much
more space efficient.

https://developer.apple.com/library/archive/documentation/FileManagement/Conceptual/APFS_Guide/ToolsandAPIs/ToolsandAPIs.html

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60802

This reapplies 358628 with an additional bugfix handling the case
where the destination file already exists. (Caught by the clang testsuite).

llvm-svn: 358716
2019-04-18 21:22:50 +00:00
Adrian Prantl 00d97ea202 Revert Implement sys::fs::copy_file using the macOS copyfile(3) API to support APFS clones.
This reverts r358628 (git commit 91a06bee78)
while investigating a crash reproducer bot failure.

llvm-svn: 358634
2019-04-18 01:21:10 +00:00
Adrian Prantl 91a06bee78 Implement sys::fs::copy_file using the macOS copyfile(3) API
to support APFS clones.

This patch adds a Darwin-specific implementation of
llvm::sys::fs::copy_file() that uses the macOS copyfile(3) API to
support APFS copy-on-write clones, which should be faster and much
more space efficient.

https://developer.apple.com/library/archive/documentation/FileManagement/Conceptual/APFS_Guide/ToolsandAPIs/ToolsandAPIs.html

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60802

llvm-svn: 358628
2019-04-18 00:01:05 +00:00
Kadir Cetinkaya 8fdc5abffe [llvm][Support] Provide interface to set thread priorities
Summary:
We have a multi-platform thread priority setting function(last piece
landed with D58683), I wanted to make this available to all llvm community,
there seem to be other users of such functionality with portability fixmes:
lib/Support/CrashRecoveryContext.cpp
tools/clang/tools/libclang/CIndex.cpp

Reviewers: gribozavr, ioeric

Subscribers: krytarowski, jfb, kristina, llvm-commits

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59130

llvm-svn: 358494
2019-04-16 14:32:43 +00:00
Hubert Tong 7f8b3bf247 [Support] On AIX, Check ENOTSUP on posix_fallocate instead of EOPNOTSUPP
Summary:
`posix_fallocate` can fail if the underlying filesystem does not support
it; and, on AIX, such a failure is reported by a return value of
`ENOTSUP`. The existing code checks only for `EOPNOTSUPP`, which may
share the same value as `ENOTSUP`, but is not required to.

Reviewers: xingxue, sfertile, jasonliu

Reviewed By: xingxue

Subscribers: kristina, jsji, llvm-commits

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60175

llvm-svn: 357662
2019-04-04 00:40:34 +00:00
Hubert Tong 24168852e8 [Support] Implement is_local_impl with AIX mntctl
Summary:
On AIX, we can determine whether a filesystem is remote using `mntctl`.

If the information is not found, then claim that the file is remote
(since that is the more restrictive case). Testing for the associated
interface is restored with a modified version of the unit test from
rL295768.

Reviewers: jasonliu, xingxue

Reviewed By: xingxue

Subscribers: jsji, apaprocki, Hahnfeld, zturner, krytarowski, kristina, llvm-commits

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58801

llvm-svn: 357333
2019-03-29 23:32:47 +00:00
Jonas Hahnfeld e59746f8f8 [Support] Treat truncation of fullpath as error
If the concatenation of arguments dir and bin has at least PATH_MAX
characters the call to snprintf will truncate. The result will usually
not exist, but if it does it's actually incorrect to return that the
path exists.
(Motivated by GCC compiler warning about format truncation.)

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58835

llvm-svn: 356036
2019-03-13 10:37:56 +00:00
Hubert Tong 72db2abcc7 Use AIX version detection at LLVM run-time
Summary:
AIX compilers define macros based on the version of the operating
system.

This patch implements updating of versionless AIX triples to include the
host AIX version. Also, the host triple detection in the build system is
adjusted to strip the AIX version information so that the run-time
detection is preferred.

Reviewers: xingxue, stefanp, nemanjai, jasonliu

Reviewed By: xingxue

Subscribers: mgorny, kristina, jdoerfert, llvm-commits

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58798

llvm-svn: 355995
2019-03-13 00:12:43 +00:00
Michal Gorny 2d8be64401 [llvm] [Support] Revert "Reimplement getMainExecutable() using sysctl on NetBSD"
This apparently does not work reliably after all (non-reentrant?)
and causes test failures such as:

http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/netbsd-amd64/builds/19254/steps/run%20unit%20tests/logs/FAIL%3A%20libc%2B%2B%3A%3Asize.pass.cpp

llvm-svn: 355302
2019-03-04 04:53:50 +00:00
Michal Gorny 8f04766d13 [llvm] [Support] Reimplement getMainExecutable() using sysctl on NetBSD
Use sysctl() to implement getMainExecutable() on NetBSD, rather than
trying to guess the correct path from argv[0].  This is one
of the fixes to recent clang-check-mac-libcxx-fixed-compilation-db.cpp
test failure on NetBSD.

This has been historically done on both FreeBSD and NetBSD in r303015,
and reverted in r303285 due to buggy implementation on FreeBSD.
However, FWIK the NetBSD implementation does not suffer from the same
bugs and is more reliable than playing with argv[0].

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56975

llvm-svn: 355283
2019-03-03 10:06:40 +00:00
Alexandre Ganea 68c4827660 Fix non-Windows platforms build break introduced by r355065. Fixes:
In file included from /home/buildbots/ppc64le-lld-multistage-test/ppc64le-lld-multistage-test/llvm/lib/Support/Memory.cpp:14:
/home/buildbots/ppc64le-lld-multistage-test/ppc64le-lld-multistage-test/llvm/include/llvm/Support/Memory.h:38:14: error: private field 'Flags' is not used [-Werror,-Wunused-private-field]
    unsigned Flags = 0;
             ^
1 error generated.

llvm-svn: 355066
2019-02-28 03:03:07 +00:00
Alexandre Ganea b05ba93578 [Memory] Add basic support for large/huge memory pages
This patch introduces Memory::MF_HUGE_HINT which indicates that allocateMappedMemory() shall return a pointer to a large memory page.
However the flag is a hint because we're not guaranteed in any way that we will get back a large memory page. There are several restrictions:

- Large/huge memory pages aren't enabled by default on modern OSes (Windows 10 and Linux at least), and should be manually enabled/reserved.
- Once enabled, it should be kept in mind that large pages are physical only, they can't be swapped.
- Memory fragmentation can affect the availability of large pages, especially after running the OS for a long time and/or running along many other applications.

Memory::allocateMappedMemory() will fallback to 4KB pages if it can't allocate 2MB large pages (if Memory::MF_HUGE_HINT is provided)

Currently, Memory::MF_HUGE_HINT only works on Windows. The hint will be ignored on Linux, 4KB pages will always be returned.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58718

llvm-svn: 355065
2019-02-28 02:47:34 +00:00
Brad Smith 01227fea9e Add OpenBSD support to be able to get the thread name
llvm-svn: 353367
2019-02-07 02:06:58 +00:00
Peter Collingbourne 02fc3c696c build: Remove the cmake check for malloc.h.
As far as I can tell, malloc.h is only being used here to provide
a definition of mallinfo (malloc itself is declared in stdlib.h via
cstdlib). We already have a macro for whether mallinfo is available,
so switch to using that instead.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57807

llvm-svn: 353329
2019-02-06 19:20:47 +00:00
Rui Ueyama 7c8fc8142e MemoryBlock: Do not automatically extend a given size to a multiple of page size.
Previously, MemoryBlock automatically extends a requested buffer size to a
multiple of page size because (I believe) doing it was thought to be harmless
and with that you could get more memory (on average 2KiB on 4KiB-page systems)
"for free".

That programming interface turned out to be error-prone. If you request N
bytes, you usually expect that a resulting object returns N for `size()`.
That's not the case for MemoryBlock.

Looks like there is only one place where we take the advantage of
allocating more memory than the requested size. So, with this patch, I
simply removed the automatic size expansion feature from MemoryBlock
and do it on the caller side when needed. MemoryBlock now always
returns a buffer whose size is equal to the requested size.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56941

llvm-svn: 351916
2019-01-23 02:03:26 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 2946cd7010 Update the file headers across all of the LLVM projects in the monorepo
to reflect the new license.

We understand that people may be surprised that we're moving the header
entirely to discuss the new license. We checked this carefully with the
Foundation's lawyer and we believe this is the correct approach.

Essentially, all code in the project is now made available by the LLVM
project under our new license, so you will see that the license headers
include that license only. Some of our contributors have contributed
code under our old license, and accordingly, we have retained a copy of
our old license notice in the top-level files in each project and
repository.

llvm-svn: 351636
2019-01-19 08:50:56 +00:00
Eli Friedman f457470286 [Support] Fix GNU/kFreeBSD build
Patch by James Clarke.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55296

llvm-svn: 349434
2018-12-18 01:38:20 +00:00
Argyrios Kyrtzidis 5167c1389b [Support/FileSystem] Add sub-second precision for atime/mtime of sys::fs::file_status on unix platforms
Summary:
getLastAccessedTime() and getLastModificationTime() provided times in nanoseconds but with only 1 second resolution, even when the underlying file system could provide more precise times than that.
These changes add sub-second precision for unix platforms that support improved precision.

Also add some comments to make sure people are aware that the resolution of times can vary across different file systems.

Reviewers: labath, zturner, aaron.ballman, kristina

Reviewed By: aaron.ballman, kristina

Subscribers: lebedev.ri, mgorny, kristina, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54826

llvm-svn: 347530
2018-11-26 00:03:39 +00:00
Jonas Devlieghere b23f430ec9 [FileSystem] Add expand_tilde function
In D54435 there was some discussion about the expand_tilde flag for
real_path that I wanted to expose through the VFS. The consensus is that
these two things should be separate functions. Since we already have the
code for this I went ahead and added a function expand_tilde that does
just that.

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54448

llvm-svn: 346776
2018-11-13 18:23:32 +00:00
David Carlier b79eee487d Fix DragonFlyBSD build
Reviewers: rnk, thakis

Reviewed By: krytarowski

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54363

llvm-svn: 346577
2018-11-10 01:01:03 +00:00
Reid Kleckner 5fa1e35bcc Commit missing comment edit and use correct cast to fix std::min overload
llvm-svn: 345105
2018-10-23 23:44:44 +00:00
Reid Kleckner 1500effacd [hurd] Make getMainExecutable get the real binary path
On GNU/Hurd, llvm-config is returning bogus value, such as:

$ llvm-config-6.0 --includedir
/usr/include

while it should be:
$ llvm-config-6.0 --includedir
/usr/lib/llvm-6.0/include

This is because getMainExecutable does not get the actual installation
path. On GNU/Hurd, /proc/self/exe is indeed a symlink to the path that
was used to start the program, and not the eventual binary file. Llvm's
getMainExecutable thus needs to run realpath over it to get the actual
place where llvm was installed (/usr/lib/llvm-6.0/bin/llvm-config), and
not /usr/bin/llvm-config-6.0. This will not change the result on Linux,
where /proc/self/exe already points to the eventual file.

Patch by Samuel Thibault!

While making changes here, I reformatted this block a bit to reduce
indentation and match 2 space indent style.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53557

llvm-svn: 345104
2018-10-23 23:35:43 +00:00
Sylvestre Ledru f4719c4d2c Add support for GNU Hurd in Path.inc and other places
Summary: Patch by Svante Signell & myself

Reviewers: rnk, JDevlieghere, efriedma

Reviewed By: efriedma

Subscribers: efriedma, JDevlieghere, krytarowski, llvm-commits, kristina

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53409

llvm-svn: 345007
2018-10-23 07:13:47 +00:00
Nick Desaulniers 727891c918 [Support] exit with custom return code for SIGPIPE
Summary:
We tell the user to file a bug report on LLVM right now, and
SIGPIPE isn't LLVM's fault so our error message is wrong.

Allows frontends to detect SIGPIPE from writing to closed readers.
This can be seen commonly from piping into head, tee, or split.

Fixes PR25349, rdar://problem/14285346, b/77310947

Reviewers: jfb

Reviewed By: jfb

Subscribers: majnemer, kristina, llvm-commits, thakis, srhines

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53000

llvm-svn: 344372
2018-10-12 17:22:07 +00:00
Nico Weber d4ed32c526 Remove dead function user_cache_directory()
It's been unused since it was added almost 3 years ago in
https://reviews.llvm.org/D13801

Motivated by https://reviews.llvm.org/rL342002 since it removes one of the
functions keeping a ref to SHGetKnownFolderPath.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52184

llvm-svn: 342485
2018-09-18 15:06:16 +00:00
Kristina Brooks 3a55d1ef27 [Support] sys::fs::directory_entry includes the file_type.
This is available on most platforms (Linux/Mac/Win/BSD) with no extra syscalls.
On other platforms (e.g. Solaris) we stat() if this information is requested.

This will allow switching clang's VFS to efficiently expose (path, type) when
traversing a directory. Currently it exposes an entire Status, but does so by
calling fs::status() on all platforms.
Almost all callers only need the path, and all callers only need (path, type).

Patch by sammccall (Sam McCall)

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51918

llvm-svn: 342089
2018-09-12 22:08:10 +00:00
Hans Wennborg 0a0e411204 Use a lambda for calls to ::open in RetryAfterSignal
In Bionic, open can be overloaded for _FORTIFY_SOURCE support, causing
compile errors of RetryAfterSignal due to overload resolution. Wrapping
the call in a lambda avoids this.

Based on a patch by Chih-Wei Huang <cwhuang@linux.org.tw>!

llvm-svn: 340751
2018-08-27 15:55:39 +00:00
Jordan Rupprecht 97ea485041 [Support] NFC: Allow modifying access/modification times independently in sys::fs::setLastModificationAndAccessTime.
Summary:
Add an overload to sys::fs::setLastModificationAndAccessTime that allows setting last access and modification times separately. This will allow tools to use this API when they want to preserve both the access and modification times from an input file, which may be different.

Also note that both the POSIX (futimens/futimes) and Windows (SetFileTime) APIs take the two timestamps in the order of (1) access (2) modification time, so this renames the method to "setLastAccessAndModificationTime" to make it clear which timestamp is which.

For existing callers, the 1-arg overload just sets both timestamps to the same thing.

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50521

llvm-svn: 339628
2018-08-13 23:03:45 +00:00
Tim Northover 43d64b0b36 [Support] Build fix for Haiku when checking for a local filesystem
Haiku does not expose information about local versus remote mounts, so just
return false, like Cygwin.

Patch by Niels Sascha Reedijk.

llvm-svn: 337389
2018-07-18 13:42:18 +00:00
Brad Smith 8c17d5921d Add OpenBSD support to the Threading code
llvm-svn: 335426
2018-06-23 22:02:59 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer 1193bbf6b7 Fix namespaces. No functionality change.
llvm-svn: 334890
2018-06-16 13:37:52 +00:00
Peter Collingbourne 881ba10465 LTO: Keep file handles open for memory mapped files.
On Windows we've observed that if you open a file, write to it, map it into
memory and close the file handle, the contents of the memory mapping can
sometimes be incorrect. That was what we did when adding an entry to the
ThinLTO cache using the TempFile and MemoryBuffer classes, and it was causing
intermittent build failures on Chromium's ThinLTO bots on Windows. More
details are in the associated Chromium bug (crbug.com/786127).

We can prevent this from happening by keeping a handle to the file open while
the mapping is active. So this patch changes the mapped_file_region class to
duplicate the file handle when mapping the file and close it upon unmapping it.

One gotcha is that the file handle that we keep open must not have been
created with FILE_FLAG_DELETE_ON_CLOSE, as otherwise the operating system
will prevent other processes from opening the file. We can achieve this
by avoiding the use of FILE_FLAG_DELETE_ON_CLOSE altogether.  Instead,
we use SetFileInformationByHandle with FileDispositionInfo to manage the
delete-on-close bit. This lets us remove the hack that we used to use to
clear the delete-on-close bit on a file opened with FILE_FLAG_DELETE_ON_CLOSE.

A downside of using SetFileInformationByHandle/FileDispositionInfo as
opposed to FILE_FLAG_DELETE_ON_CLOSE is that it prevents us from using
CreateFile to open the file while the flag is set, even within the same
process. This doesn't seem to matter for almost every client of TempFile,
except for LockFileManager, which calls sys::fs::create_link to create a
hard link from the lock file, and in the process of doing so tries to open
the file. To prevent this change from breaking LockFileManager I changed it
to stop using TempFile by effectively reverting r318550.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48051

llvm-svn: 334630
2018-06-13 18:03:14 +00:00
Zachary Turner 08426e1f9f Refactor ExecuteAndWait to take StringRefs.
This simplifies some code which had StringRefs to begin with, and
makes other code more complicated which had const char* to begin
with.

In the end, I think this makes for a more idiomatic and platform
agnostic API.  Not all platforms launch process with null terminated
c-string arrays for the environment pointer and argv, but the api
was designed that way because it allowed easy pass-through for
posix-based platforms.  There's a little additional overhead now
since on posix based platforms we'll be takign StringRefs which
were constructed from null terminated strings and then copying
them to null terminate them again, but from a readability and
usability standpoint of the API user, I think this API signature
is strictly better.

llvm-svn: 334518
2018-06-12 17:43:52 +00:00
Pavel Labath b2c73c4cc0 Fix build errors on some configurations
It's been reported
<http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-commits/Week-of-Mon-20180611/559616.html>
that template argument deduction for RetryAfterSignal fails if open is
not prefixed with "::".

This should help us build correctly on those platforms and explicitly
specifying the namespace is more correct anyway.

llvm-svn: 334403
2018-06-11 13:30:47 +00:00
Zachary Turner 15243d5a6d Attempt 3: Resubmit "[Support] Expose flattenWindowsCommandLine."
I took some liberties and quoted fewer characters than before,
based on an article from MSDN which says that only certain characters
cause an arg to require quoting.  This seems to be incorrect, though,
and worse it seems to be a difference in Windows version.  The bot
that fails is Windows 7, and I can't reproduce the failure on Win
10.  But it's definitely related to quoting and special characters,
because both tests that fail have a * in the argument, which is one
of the special characters that would cause an argument to be quoted
before but not any longer after the new patch.

Since I don't have Win 7, all I can do is just guess that I need to
restore the old quoting rules.  So this patch does that in hopes that
it fixes the problem on Windows 7.

llvm-svn: 334375
2018-06-10 20:57:14 +00:00
Fangrui Song 69d6418d60 Cleanup. NFC
llvm-svn: 334357
2018-06-10 04:53:14 +00:00
Zachary Turner 071a09053a Revert "Resubmit "[Support] Expose flattenWindowsCommandLine.""
This reverts commit 65243b6d19143cb7a03f68df0169dcb63e8b4632.

Seems like it's not a flake.  It might have something to do with
the '*' character being in a command line.

llvm-svn: 334356
2018-06-10 03:16:25 +00:00
Zachary Turner 5e119768a1 Resubmit "[Support] Expose flattenWindowsCommandLine."
There were a few linux compilation failures, but other than that
I think this was just a flake that caused the tests to fail.  I'm
going to resubmit and see if the failures go away, if not I'll
revert again.

llvm-svn: 334355
2018-06-10 02:46:11 +00:00
Alexander Kornienko f084913223 commandLineFitsWithinSystemLimits Overestimates System Limits
Summary:
The function `llvm::sys::commandLineFitsWithinSystemLimits` appears to be overestimating the system limits. This issue was discovered while attempting to enable response files in the Swift compiler. When the compiler submits its frontend jobs, those jobs are subjected to the system limits on command line length. `commandLineFitsWithinSystemLimits` is used to determine if the job's arguments need to be wrapped in a response file. There are some cases where the argument size for the job passes `commandLineFitsWithinSystemLimits`, but actually exceeds the real system limit, and the job fails.

`clang` also uses this function to decide whether or not to wrap it's job arguments in response files. See: https://github.com/llvm-mirror/clang/blob/master/lib/Driver/Driver.cpp#L1341. Clang will also fail for response files who's size falls within a certain range. I wrote a script that should find a failure point for `clang++`. All that is needed to run it is Python 2.7, and a simple "hello world" program for `test.cc`. It should run on Linux and on macOS. The script is available here: https://gist.github.com/dabelknap/71bd083cd06b91c5b3cef6a7f4d3d427. When it hits a failure point, you should see a `clang: error: unable to execute command: posix_spawn failed: Argument list too long`.

The proposed solution is to mirror the behavior of `xargs` in `commandLinefitsWithinSystemLimits`. `xargs` defaults to 128k for the command line length size (See: https://fossies.org/dox/findutils-4.6.0/buildcmd_8c_source.html#l00551). It adjusts this depending on the value of `ARG_MAX`.

Reviewers: alexfh

Reviewed By: alexfh

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Tags: #clang

Patch by Austin Belknap!

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47795

llvm-svn: 334295
2018-06-08 15:19:16 +00:00
Zachary Turner 66ef5d3cd6 Clean up some code in Program.
NFC here, this just raises some platform specific ifdef hackery
out of a class and creates proper platform-independent typedefs
for the relevant things.  This allows these typedefs to be
reused in other places without having to reinvent this preprocessor
logic.

llvm-svn: 334294
2018-06-08 15:16:25 +00:00
Zachary Turner 6edfecb883 Add a file open flag that disables O_CLOEXEC.
O_CLOEXEC is the right default, but occasionally you don't
want this.  This is especially true for tools like debuggers
where you might need to spawn the child process with specific
files already open, but it's occasionally useful in other
scenarios as well, like when you want to do some IPC between
parent and child.

llvm-svn: 334293
2018-06-08 15:15:56 +00:00
Zachary Turner 9d2cfa6ccc Expose a single global file open function.
This one allows much more flexibility than the standard
openFileForRead / openFileForWrite functions.  Since there is now
just one "real" function that does the work, all other implementations
simply delegate to this one.

llvm-svn: 334246
2018-06-07 23:25:13 +00:00
Zachary Turner 1f67a3cba9 [FileSystem] Split up the OpenFlags enumeration.
This breaks the OpenFlags enumeration into two separate
enumerations: OpenFlags and CreationDisposition.  The first
controls the behavior of the API depending on whether or not
the target file already exists, and is not a flags-based
enum.  The second controls more flags-like values.

This yields a more easy to understand API, while also allowing
flags to be passed to the openForRead api, where most of the
values didn't make sense before.  This also makes the apis more
testable as it becomes easy to enumerate all the configurations
which make sense, so I've added many new tests to exercise all
the different values.

llvm-svn: 334221
2018-06-07 19:58:58 +00:00
Petr Hosek fc9b29bd61 [Support] Use zx_cache_flush on Fuchsia to flush instruction cache
Fuchsia doesn't use __clear_cache, instead it provide zx_cache_flush
system call. Use it to flush instruction cache.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47753

llvm-svn: 334068
2018-06-06 06:26:18 +00:00
Zachary Turner 63db25ba0d [Support] Add functions that operate on native file handles on Windows.
Windows' CRT has a limit of 512 open file descriptors, and fds which are
generated by converting a HANDLE via _get_osfhandle count towards this
limit as well.

Regardless, often you find yourself marshalling back and forth between
native HANDLE objects and fds anyway. If we know from the getgo that
we're going to need to work directly with the handle, we can cut out the
marshalling layer while also not contributing to filling up the CRT's
very limited handle table.

On Unix these functions just delegate directly to the existing set of
functions since an fd *is* the native file type. It would be nice, very
long term, if we could convert most uses of fds to file_t.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47688

llvm-svn: 333945
2018-06-04 19:38:11 +00:00
Petr Hosek f92ca01e42 [Support] Avoid normalization in sys::getDefaultTargetTriple
The return value of sys::getDefaultTargetTriple, which is derived from
-DLLVM_DEFAULT_TRIPLE, is used to construct tool names, default target,
and in the future also to control the search path directly; as such it
should be used textually, without interpretation by LLVM.

Normalization of this value may lead to unexpected results, for example
if we configure LLVM with -DLLVM_DEFAULT_TARGET_TRIPLE=x86_64-linux-gnu,
normalization will transform that value to x86_64--linux-gnu. Driver will
use that value to search for tools prefixed with x86_64--linux-gnu- which
may be confusing. This is also inconsistent with the behavior of the
--target flag which is taken as-is without any normalization and overrides
the value of LLVM_DEFAULT_TARGET_TRIPLE.

Users of sys::getDefaultTargetTriple already perform their own
normalization as needed, so this change shouldn't impact existing logic.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47153

llvm-svn: 333307
2018-05-25 20:39:37 +00:00
Nico Weber 41597b92b1 Revert 332750, llvm part (see comment on D46910).
llvm-svn: 332823
2018-05-20 23:03:17 +00:00
Petr Hosek 24b61ac832 [Support] Avoid normalization in sys::getDefaultTargetTriple
The return value of sys::getDefaultTargetTriple, which is derived from
-DLLVM_DEFAULT_TRIPLE, is used to construct tool names, default target,
and in the future also to control the search path directly; as such it
should be used textually, without interpretation by LLVM.

Normalization of this value may lead to unexpected results, for example
if we configure LLVM with -DLLVM_DEFAULT_TARGET_TRIPLE=x86_64-linux-gnu,
normalization will transform that value to x86_64--linux-gnu. Driver will
use that value to search for tools prefixed with x86_64--linux-gnu- which
may be confusing. This is also inconsistent with the behavior of the
--target flag which is taken as-is without any normalization and overrides
the value of LLVM_DEFAULT_TARGET_TRIPLE.

Users of sys::getDefaultTargetTriple already perform their own
normalization as needed, so this change shouldn't impact existing logic.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46910

llvm-svn: 332750
2018-05-18 18:33:07 +00:00
JF Bastien aa1333a91f Signal handling should be signal-safe
Summary:
Before this patch, signal handling wasn't signal safe. This leads to real-world
crashes. It used ManagedStatic inside of signals, this can allocate and can lead
to unexpected state when a signal occurs during llvm_shutdown (because
llvm_shutdown destroys the ManagedStatic). It also used cl::opt without custom
backing storage. Some de-allocation was performed as well. Acquiring a lock in a
signal handler is also a great way to deadlock.

We can't just disable signals on llvm_shutdown because the signals might do
useful work during that shutdown. We also can't just disable llvm_shutdown for
programs (instead of library uses of clang) because we'd have to then mark the
pointers as not leaked and make sure all the ManagedStatic uses are OK to leak
and remain so.

Move all of the code to lock-free datastructures instead, and avoid having any
of them in an inconsistent state. I'm not trying to be fancy, I'm not using any
explicit memory order because this code isn't hot. The only purpose of the
atomics is to guarantee that a signal firing on the same or a different thread
doesn't see an inconsistent state and crash. In some cases we might miss some
state (for example, we might fail to delete a temporary file), but that's fine.

Note that I haven't touched any of the backtrace support despite it not
technically being totally signal-safe. When that code is called we know
something bad is up and we don't expect to continue execution, so calling
something that e.g. sets errno is the least of our problems.

A similar patch should be applied to lib/Support/Windows/Signals.inc, but that
can be done separately.

Fix r332428 which I reverted in r332429. I originally used double-wide CAS
because I was lazy, but some platforms use a runtime function for that which
thankfully failed to link (it would have been bad for signal handlers
otherwise). I use a separate flag to guard the data instead.

<rdar://problem/28010281>

Reviewers: dexonsmith

Subscribers: steven_wu, llvm-commits
llvm-svn: 332496
2018-05-16 17:25:35 +00:00
Fangrui Song 2cafed76d3 [Unix] Indent ChangeStd{in,out}ToBinary.
llvm-svn: 332432
2018-05-16 06:43:27 +00:00
JF Bastien b8931c1cf4 Revert "Signal handling should be signal-safe"
Some bots don't have double-pointer width compare-and-exchange. Revert for now.q

llvm-svn: 332429
2018-05-16 04:36:37 +00:00
JF Bastien 253aa8b099 Signal handling should be signal-safe
Summary:
Before this patch, signal handling wasn't signal safe. This leads to real-world
crashes. It used ManagedStatic inside of signals, this can allocate and can lead
to unexpected state when a signal occurs during llvm_shutdown (because
llvm_shutdown destroys the ManagedStatic). It also used cl::opt without custom
backing storage. Some de-allocation was performed as well. Acquiring a lock in a
signal handler is also a great way to deadlock.

We can't just disable signals on llvm_shutdown because the signals might do
useful work during that shutdown. We also can't just disable llvm_shutdown for
programs (instead of library uses of clang) because we'd have to then mark the
pointers as not leaked and make sure all the ManagedStatic uses are OK to leak
and remain so.

Move all of the code to lock-free datastructures instead, and avoid having any
of them in an inconsistent state. I'm not trying to be fancy, I'm not using any
explicit memory order because this code isn't hot. The only purpose of the
atomics is to guarantee that a signal firing on the same or a different thread
doesn't see an inconsistent state and crash. In some cases we might miss some
state (for example, we might fail to delete a temporary file), but that's fine.

Note that I haven't touched any of the backtrace support despite it not
technically being totally signal-safe. When that code is called we know
something bad is up and we don't expect to continue execution, so calling
something that e.g. sets errno is the least of our problems.

A similar patch should be applied to lib/Support/Windows/Signals.inc, but that
can be done separately.

<rdar://problem/28010281>

Reviewers: dexonsmith

Subscribers: aheejin, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46858

llvm-svn: 332428
2018-05-16 04:30:00 +00:00
JF Bastien 9f62b4c8a8 [NFC] pull a function into its own lambda
As requested in D46858, pulling this function into its own lambda makes it
easier to read that part of the code and reason as to what's going on because
the scope it can be called from is extremely limited. We want to keep it as a
function because it's called from the two subsequent lines.

llvm-svn: 332325
2018-05-15 04:23:48 +00:00
JF Bastien 93bce5108b [NFC] Update comments
Don't prepend function or data name before each comment. Split into its own NFC patch as requested in D46858.

llvm-svn: 332323
2018-05-15 04:06:28 +00:00
Petr Hosek 87f1343a73 [Support] Support building LLVM for Fuchsia
These are necessary changes to support building LLVM for Fuchsia.
While these are not sufficient to run on Fuchsia, they are still
useful when cross-compiling LLVM libraries and runtimes for Fuchsia.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46345

llvm-svn: 331423
2018-05-03 01:38:49 +00:00
Adrian Prantl 4dfcc4a788 Remove @brief commands from doxygen comments, too.
This is a follow-up to r331272.

We've been running doxygen with the autobrief option for a couple of
years now. This makes the \brief markers into our comments
redundant. Since they are a visual distraction and we don't want to
encourage more \brief markers in new code either, this patch removes
them all.

Patch produced by
  for i in $(git grep -l '\@brief'); do perl -pi -e 's/\@brief //g' $i & done

https://reviews.llvm.org/D46290

llvm-svn: 331275
2018-05-01 16:10:38 +00:00
Nico Weber 432a38838d IWYU for llvm-config.h in llvm, additions.
See r331124 for how I made a list of files missing the include.
I then ran this Python script:

    for f in open('filelist.txt'):
        f = f.strip()
        fl = open(f).readlines()

        found = False
        for i in xrange(len(fl)):
            p = '#include "llvm/'
            if not fl[i].startswith(p):
                continue
            if fl[i][len(p):] > 'Config':
                fl.insert(i, '#include "llvm/Config/llvm-config.h"\n')
                found = True
                break
        if not found:
            print 'not found', f
        else:
            open(f, 'w').write(''.join(fl))

and then looked through everything with `svn diff | diffstat -l | xargs -n 1000 gvim -p`
and tried to fix include ordering and whatnot.

No intended behavior change.

llvm-svn: 331184
2018-04-30 14:59:11 +00:00
Nico Weber e7c4af32c6 Remove a dead #ifdef.
Unix/Threading.inc should never be included on _WIN32. See also
https://reviews.llvm.org/D30526#1082292

llvm-svn: 331151
2018-04-30 00:08:06 +00:00
Nico Weber 712e8d29c4 s/LLVM_ON_WIN32/_WIN32/, llvm
LLVM_ON_WIN32 is set exactly with MSVC and MinGW (but not Cygwin) in
HandleLLVMOptions.cmake, which is where _WIN32 defined too.  Just use the
default macro instead of a reinvented one.

See thread "Replacing LLVM_ON_WIN32 with just _WIN32" on llvm-dev and cfe-dev.
No intended behavior change.

This moves over all uses of the macro, but doesn't remove the definition
of it in (llvm-)config.h yet.

llvm-svn: 331127
2018-04-29 00:45:03 +00:00
Pavel Labath 8f5a456eb2 [cmake] Improve pthread_[gs]etname_np detection code
Summary:
Due to some android peculiarities, in some build configurations
(statically linked executables targeting older releases) we could detect
the presence of these functions (because they are present in libc.a,
where check_library_exists searches), but then fail to build because the
headers did not include the definition.

This attempts to remedy that by upgrading the check_library_exists to
check_symbol_exists, which will check that the function is declared too.

I am hoping that a more thorough check will make the messy #ifdef we
have accumulated in the code obsolete, so I optimistically try to remove
them.

Reviewers: zturner, kparzysz, danalbert

Subscribers: srhines, mgorny, krytarowski, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45359

llvm-svn: 330251
2018-04-18 13:13:27 +00:00
Rui Ueyama e6ac9f5ec3 Rename sys::Process::GetArgumentVector -> sys::windows::GetCommandLineArguments
GetArgumentVector (or GetCommandLineArguments) is very Windows-specific.
I think it doesn't make much sense to provide that function from sys::Process.

I also made a change so that the function takes a BumpPtrAllocator
instead of a SpecificBumpPtrAllocator. The latter is the class to call
dtors, but since char * is trivially destructible, we should use the
former class.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45641

llvm-svn: 330216
2018-04-17 21:09:16 +00:00
Nico Weber f3db8e3c70 Remove HAVE_DIRENT_H.
The autoconf manual: "This macro is obsolescent, as all current systems with
directory libraries have <dirent.h>. New programs need not use this macro."

llvm-svn: 328989
2018-04-02 17:17:29 +00:00
Zachary Turner adad33011f [Support] Add WriteThroughMemoryBuffer.
This is like MemoryBuffer (read-only) and WritableMemoryBuffer
(writable private), but where the underlying file can be modified
after writing.  This is useful when you want to open a file, make
some targeted edits, and then write it back out.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44230

llvm-svn: 327057
2018-03-08 20:34:47 +00:00
Serge Pavlov 76d8ccee2e Report fatal error in the case of out of memory
This is the second part of recommit of r325224. The previous part was
committed in r325426, which deals with C++ memory allocation. Solution
for C memory allocation involved functions `llvm::malloc` and similar.
This was a fragile solution because it caused ambiguity errors in some
cases. In this commit the new functions have names like `llvm::safe_malloc`.

The relevant part of original comment is below, updated for new function
names.

Analysis of fails in the case of out of memory errors can be tricky on
Windows. Such error emerges at the point where memory allocation function
fails, but manifests itself when null pointer is used. These two points
may be distant from each other. Besides, next runs may not exhibit
allocation error.

In some cases memory is allocated by a call to some of C allocation
functions, malloc, calloc and realloc. They are used for interoperability
with C code, when allocated object has variable size and when it is
necessary to avoid call of constructors. In many calls the result is not
checked for null pointer. To simplify checks, new functions are defined
in the namespace 'llvm': `safe_malloc`, `safe_calloc` and `safe_realloc`.
They behave as corresponding standard functions but produce fatal error if
allocation fails. This change replaces the standard functions like 'malloc'
in the cases when the result of the allocation function is not checked
for null pointer.

Finally, there are plain C code, that uses malloc and similar functions. If
the result is not checked, assert statement is added.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43010

llvm-svn: 325551
2018-02-20 05:41:26 +00:00
Zachary Turner 2061ad2f83 Silence warning about unused private variable.
llvm-svn: 325275
2018-02-15 18:46:59 +00:00
Serge Pavlov 4500001905 Revert r325224 "Report fatal error in the case of out of memory"
It caused fails on some buildbots.

llvm-svn: 325227
2018-02-15 09:45:59 +00:00
Serge Pavlov ce719a0def Specify namespace for realloc
llvm-svn: 325226
2018-02-15 09:35:36 +00:00
Serge Pavlov 431502a675 Report fatal error in the case of out of memory
Analysis of fails in the case of out of memory errors can be tricky on
Windows. Such error emerges at the point where memory allocation function
fails, but manifests itself when null pointer is used. These two points
may be distant from each other. Besides, next runs may not exhibit
allocation error.

Usual programming practice does not require checking result of 'operator
new' because it throws 'std::bad_alloc' in the case of allocation error.
However, LLVM is usually built with exceptions turned off, so 'new' can
return null pointer. This change installs custom new handler, which causes
fatal error in the case of out of memory. The handler is installed
automatically prior to call to 'main' during construction of a static
object defined in 'lib/Support/ErrorHandling.cpp'. If the application does
not use this file, the handler may be installed manually by a call to
'llvm::install_out_of_memory_new_handler', declared in
'include/llvm/Support/ErrorHandling.h".

There are calls to C allocation functions, malloc, calloc and realloc.
They are used for interoperability with C code, when allocated object has
variable size and when it is necessary to avoid call of constructors. In
many calls the result is not checked against null pointer. To simplify
checks, new functions are defined in the namespace 'llvm' with the
same names as these C function. These functions produce fatal error if
allocation fails. User should use 'llvm::malloc' instead of 'std::malloc'
in order to use the safe variant. This change replaces 'std::malloc'
in the cases when the result of allocation function is not checked against
null pointer.

Finally, there are plain C code, that uses malloc and similar functions. If
the result is not checked, assert statements are added.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43010

llvm-svn: 325224
2018-02-15 09:20:26 +00:00
Sam McCall 6358064d02 Fix off-by-one in set_thread_name which causes truncation to fail on Linux
llvm-svn: 325069
2018-02-13 23:23:59 +00:00
Petr Hosek cc7a8f14bd Fallback option for colorized output when terminfo isn't available
Try to detect the terminal color support by checking the value of the
TERM environment variable. This is not great, but it's better than
nothing when terminfo library isn't available, which may still be the
case on some Linux distributions.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42055

llvm-svn: 322962
2018-01-19 17:10:55 +00:00
Davide Italiano 4762c069de [Support] Use realpath(3) instead of trying to open a file.
If we don't have read permissions on the directory the call would
fail.

<rdar://problem/35871293>

llvm-svn: 322095
2018-01-09 17:27:45 +00:00
Peter Smith a939257a42 [ARM][AArch64] Workaround ARM/AArch64 peculiarity in clearing icache.
Certain ARM implementations treat icache clear instruction as a memory read,
and CPU segfaults on trying to clear cache on !PROT_READ page.
We workaround this in Memory::protectMappedMemory by adding
PROT_READ to affected pages, clearing the cache, and then setting
desired protection.

This fixes "AllocationTests/MappedMemoryTest.***/3" unit-tests on
affected hardware.

Reviewers: psmith, zatrazz, kristof.beyls, lhames

Reviewed By: lhames

Subscribers: llvm-commits, krytarowski, peter.smith, jgreenhalgh, aemerson,
             rengolin

Patch by maxim-kuvrykov! 

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40423

llvm-svn: 319166
2017-11-28 12:34:05 +00:00
Lang Hames afcb70d031 [Support] Support NetBSD PaX MPROTECT in sys::Memory.
Removes AllocateRWX, setWritable and setExecutable from sys::Memory and
standardizes on allocateMappedMemory / protectMappedMemory. The
allocateMappedMemory method is updated to request full permissions for memory
blocks so that they can be marked executable later.

llvm-svn: 318464
2017-11-16 23:04:44 +00:00
Davide Italiano 1f465aa64a [Support/UNIX] posix_fallocate() can fail with EINVAL.
According to the docs on opegroup.org, the function can return
EINVAL if:

The len argument is less than zero, or the offset argument is less
than zero, or the underlying file system does not support this
operation.

I'd say it's a peculiar choice (when EONOTSUPP is right there), but
let's keep POSIX happy for now. This was independently discovered
by Mark Millard (on FreeBSD/ZFS).

Quickly ack'ed by Rui on IRC.

llvm-svn: 317535
2017-11-07 00:47:04 +00:00
Sam McCall 0e142499a9 Temporary workaround for msan false positive.
llvm-svn: 317203
2017-11-02 12:29:47 +00:00
Keno Fischer 1c43ad0965 [DynamicLibrary] Fix build on musl libc
Summary:
On musl libc, stdin/out/err are defined as `FILE* const` globals,
and their address is not implicitly convertible to void *,
or at least gcc 6 doesn't allow it, giving errors like:

```
error: cannot initialize return object of type 'void *' with an rvalue of type 'FILE *const *' (aka '_IO_FILE *const *')
    EXPLICIT_SYMBOL(stderr);
    ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
```

Add an explicit cast to fix that problem.

Reviewers: marsupial, krytarowski, dim
Reviewed By: dim
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39297

llvm-svn: 316672
2017-10-26 16:44:13 +00:00
John Baldwin 3e94e441d6 Don't try to use a non-existent header on FreeBSD/mips.
Reviewers: dim

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38807

llvm-svn: 316581
2017-10-25 14:53:16 +00:00
Peter Collingbourne 0dfdb44797 Support: Have directory_iterator::status() return FindFirstFileEx/FindNextFile results on Windows.
This allows clients to avoid an unnecessary fs::status() call on each
directory entry. Because the information returned by FindFirstFileEx
is a subset of the information returned by a regular status() call,
I needed to extract a base class from file_status that contains only
that information.

On my machine, this reduces the time required to enumerate a ThinLTO
cache directory containing 520k files from almost 4 minutes to less
than 2 seconds.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38716

llvm-svn: 315378
2017-10-10 22:19:46 +00:00
Roman Lebedev 21b013ebc1 [Support] mapped_file_region::size() returns size_t
Fixup last commit, found by clang-stage1-cmake-RA-incremental bot.

llvm-svn: 314313
2017-09-27 16:08:33 +00:00
Roman Lebedev 7c983671f2 [Support] mapped_file_region: store size as size_t
Summary:
Found when testing stage-2 build with D38101.

```
In file included from /build/llvm/lib/Support/Path.cpp:1045:
/build/llvm/lib/Support/Unix/Path.inc:648:14: error: comparison 'uint64_t' (aka 'unsigned long') > 18446744073709551615 is always false [-Werror,-Wtautological-constant-compare]
  if (length > std::numeric_limits<size_t>::max()) {
      ~~~~~~ ^ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
```

`size_t` is `uint64_t` here, apparently, thus any `uint64_t` value
always fits into `size_t`.

Initial patch was to use some preprocessor logic to
not check if the size is known to fit at compile time.
But Zachary Turner suggested using this approach.

Reviewers: Bigcheese, rafael, zturner, mehdi_amini

Reviewed by (via email): zturner

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38132

llvm-svn: 314312
2017-09-27 15:59:16 +00:00
Alexander Kornienko 208eecd57f Convenience/safety fix for llvm::sys::Execute(And|No)Wait
Summary:
Change the type of the Redirects parameter of llvm::sys::ExecuteAndWait,
ExecuteNoWait and other APIs that wrap them from `const StringRef **` to
`ArrayRef<Optional<StringRef>>`, which is safer and simplifies the use of these
APIs (no more local StringRef variables just to get a pointer to).

Corresponding clang changes will be posted as a separate patch.

Reviewers: bkramer

Reviewed By: bkramer

Subscribers: vsk, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37563

llvm-svn: 313155
2017-09-13 17:03:37 +00:00
Alexander Kornienko 3ad84ee009 Minor style fixes in lib/Support/**/Program.(inc|cpp).
No functional changes intended.

llvm-svn: 312646
2017-09-06 16:28:33 +00:00
NAKAMURA Takumi a1e97a77f5 Untabify.
llvm-svn: 311875
2017-08-28 06:47:47 +00:00
Reid Kleckner af3e93ac93 [Support] Remove getPathFromOpenFD, it was unused
Summary:
It was added to support clang warnings about includes with case
mismatches, but it ended up not being necessary.

Reviewers: twoh, rafael

Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36328

llvm-svn: 310078
2017-08-04 17:43:49 +00:00
Erich Keane d8f61f8f7e Remove Bitrig: LLVM Changes
Bitrig code has been merged back to OpenBSD, thus the OS has been abandoned.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35707

llvm-svn: 308799
2017-07-21 22:48:47 +00:00
Frederich Munch 5fdd2cbae8 Allow clients to specify search order of DynamicLibraries.
Summary: Different JITs and other clients of LLVM may have different needs in how symbol resolution should occur.

Reviewers: v.g.vassilev, lhames, karies

Reviewed By: v.g.vassilev

Subscribers: pcanal, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33529

llvm-svn: 307849
2017-07-12 21:22:45 +00:00
Kamil Rytarowski affab3047e [Solaris] get rid of _RESTRICT_KYWD warning during the build
Summary:
(re)definition of _RESTRICT_KYWD rightfully causes a warning message during the Solaris build.
This hack is not needed if build compiler is properly configured (.e.g /usr/bin/gcc) so just remove it.

Reviewers: ro, mgorny, krytarowski, joerg

Reviewed By: joerg

Subscribers: quenelle, llvm-commits

Patch by Fedor Sergeev (Oracle).

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35054

llvm-svn: 307469
2017-07-08 11:27:56 +00:00
Alex Lorenz 3803df3dcd [Support] sys::getProcessTriple should return a macOS triple using
the system's version of macOS

sys::getProcessTriple returns LLVM_HOST_TRIPLE, whose system version might not
be the actual version of the system on which the compiler running. This commit
ensures that, for macOS, sys::getProcessTriple returns a triple with the
system's macOS version.

rdar://33177551

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34446

llvm-svn: 307372
2017-07-07 09:53:47 +00:00
Pavel Labath fe09f506b6 Recommit "[Support] Add RetryAfterSignal helper function"
The difference from the previous version is the use of decltype, as the
implementation of std::result_of in libc++ did not work correctly for
variadic function like open(2).

Original summary:
This function retries an operation if it was interrupted by a signal
(failed with EINTR). It's inspired by the TEMP_FAILURE_RETRY macro in
glibc, but I've turned that into a template function. I've also added a
fail-value argument, to enable the function to be used with e.g.
fopen(3), which is documented to fail for any reason that open(2) can
fail (which includes EINTR).

The main user of this function will be lldb, but there were also a
couple of uses within llvm that I could simplify using this function.

Reviewers: zturner, silvas, joerg

Subscribers: mgorny, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33895

llvm-svn: 306671
2017-06-29 13:15:31 +00:00
Pavel Labath efd57a8aec Revert "[Support] Add RetryAfterSignal helper function" and subsequent fix
The fix in r306003 uncovered a pretty fundamental problem that libc++
implementation of std::result_of does not handle the prototype of
open(2) correctly (presumably because it contains ...). This makes the
whole function unusable in its current form, so I am also reverting the
original commit (r305892), which introduced the function, at least until
I figure out a way to solve the libc++ issue.

llvm-svn: 306005
2017-06-22 14:18:55 +00:00
Pavel Labath 1f6aea2eb3 [Support] Add RetryAfterSignal helper function
Summary:
This function retries an operation if it was interrupted by a signal
(failed with EINTR). It's inspired by the TEMP_FAILURE_RETRY macro in
glibc, but I've turned that into a template function. I've also added a
fail-value argument, to enable the function to be used with e.g.
fopen(3), which is documented to fail for any reason that open(2) can
fail (which includes EINTR).

The main user of this function will be lldb, but there were also a
couple of uses within llvm that I could simplify using this function.

Reviewers: zturner, silvas, joerg

Subscribers: mgorny, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33895

llvm-svn: 305892
2017-06-21 10:55:34 +00:00
Saleem Abdulrasool 8199dadab8 Support: chunk writing on Linux
This is a workaround for large file writes.  It has been witnessed that
write(2) failing with EINVAL (22) due to a large value (>2G).  Thanks to
James Knight for the help with coming up with a sane test case.

llvm-svn: 305846
2017-06-20 20:51:51 +00:00
Kamil Rytarowski a841233a76 Implement AllocateRWX and ReleaseRWX for NetBSD
Summary:
NetBSD ships with PaX MPROTECT disallowing RWX mappings.
There is a solution to bypass this restriction with double mapping
RX (code) and RW (data) using mremap(2) MAP_REMAPDUP.
The initial mapping must be mmap(2)ed with protection:
PROT_MPROTECT(PROT_EXEC).

This functionality to bypass PaX MPROTECT appeared in NetBSD-7.99.72.

This patch fixes 20 failing tests:
-    LLVM :: DebugInfo/debuglineinfo-macho.test
-    LLVM :: DebugInfo/debuglineinfo.test
-    LLVM :: ExecutionEngine/RuntimeDyld/Mips/ELF_Mips64r2N64_PIC_relocations.s
-    LLVM :: ExecutionEngine/RuntimeDyld/Mips/ELF_N32_relocations.s
-    LLVM :: ExecutionEngine/RuntimeDyld/Mips/ELF_N64R6_relocations.s
-    LLVM :: ExecutionEngine/RuntimeDyld/Mips/ELF_O32R6_relocations.s
-    LLVM :: ExecutionEngine/RuntimeDyld/Mips/ELF_O32_PIC_relocations.s
-    LLVM :: ExecutionEngine/RuntimeDyld/X86/COFF_i386.s
-    LLVM :: ExecutionEngine/RuntimeDyld/X86/COFF_x86_64.s
-    LLVM :: ExecutionEngine/RuntimeDyld/X86/ELF-relaxed.s
-    LLVM :: ExecutionEngine/RuntimeDyld/X86/ELF_STT_FILE.s
-    LLVM :: ExecutionEngine/RuntimeDyld/X86/ELF_x64-64_PC8_relocations.s
-    LLVM :: ExecutionEngine/RuntimeDyld/X86/ELF_x64-64_PIC_relocations.s
-    LLVM :: ExecutionEngine/RuntimeDyld/X86/ELF_x86-64_PIC-small-relocations.s
-    LLVM :: ExecutionEngine/RuntimeDyld/X86/ELF_x86-64_debug_frame.s
-    LLVM :: ExecutionEngine/RuntimeDyld/X86/ELF_x86_64_StubBuf.s
-    LLVM :: ExecutionEngine/RuntimeDyld/X86/MachO_empty_ehframe.s
-    LLVM :: ExecutionEngine/RuntimeDyld/X86/MachO_i386_DynNoPIC_relocations.s
-    LLVM :: ExecutionEngine/RuntimeDyld/X86/MachO_i386_eh_frame.s
-    LLVM :: ExecutionEngine/RuntimeDyld/X86/MachO_x86-64_PIC_relocations.s

Sponsored by <The NetBSD Foundation>

Reviewers: joerg, lhames

Reviewed By: joerg

Subscribers: sdardis, llvm-commits, arichardson

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33874

llvm-svn: 305650
2017-06-18 16:52:32 +00:00
NAKAMURA Takumi fc7f3b7514 [CMake] Introduce LLVM_TARGET_TRIPLE_ENV as an option to override LLVM_DEFAULT_TARGET_TRIPLE at runtime.
No behavior is changed if LLVM_TARGET_TRIPLE_ENV is blank or undefined.

If LLVM_TARGET_TRIPLE_ENV is "TEST_TARGET_TRIPLE" and $TEST_TARGET_TRIPLE is not blank,
llvm::sys::getDefaultTargetTriple() returns $TEST_TARGET_TRIPLE.
Lit resets config.target_triple and config.environment[LLVM_TARGET_TRIPLE_ENV] to change the default target.

Without changing LLVM_DEFAULT_TARGET_TRIPLE nor rebuilding, lit can be run;

  TEST_TARGET_TRIPLE=i686-pc-win32 bin/llvm-lit -sv path/to/test/
  TEST_TARGET_TRIPLE=i686-pc-win32 ninja check-clang-tools

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33662

llvm-svn: 305632
2017-06-17 03:19:08 +00:00
David Blaikie 602a5bbb32 Support: Don't set RLIMIT_AS on child processes when applying a memory limit
It doesn't seem relevant to set an address space limit - this isn't
important in any sense that I'm aware & it gets in the way of things
that use a lot of address space, like llvm-symbolizer.

This came up when I realized that bugpoint regression tests were much
slower with -gsplit-dwarf than plain -g. Turned out that bugpoint
subprocesses (opt, etc) were crashing and doing symbolization - but
bugpoint runs those subprocesses with a 400MB memory limit. So with
plain -g, mmaping the opt binary would exceed the memory limit, fail,
and thus be really fast - no symbolization occurred. Whereas with
-gsplit-dwarf, comically, having less to map in, it would succeed and
then spend lots of time symbolizing.

I've fixed at least the critical part of bugpoint's perf problem there
by adding an option to allow bugpoint to disable symbolization. Thus
improving the perfromance for -gsplit-dwarf and making the -g-esque
speed available without this quirk/accidental benefit.

llvm-svn: 305242
2017-06-12 22:16:49 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 6bda14b313 Sort the remaining #include lines in include/... and lib/....
I did this a long time ago with a janky python script, but now
clang-format has built-in support for this. I fed clang-format every
line with a #include and let it re-sort things according to the precise
LLVM rules for include ordering baked into clang-format these days.

I've reverted a number of files where the results of sorting includes
isn't healthy. Either places where we have legacy code relying on
particular include ordering (where possible, I'll fix these separately)
or where we have particular formatting around #include lines that
I didn't want to disturb in this patch.

This patch is *entirely* mechanical. If you get merge conflicts or
anything, just ignore the changes in this patch and run clang-format
over your #include lines in the files.

Sorry for any noise here, but it is important to keep these things
stable. I was seeing an increasing number of patches with irrelevant
re-ordering of #include lines because clang-format was used. This patch
at least isolates that churn, makes it easy to skip when resolving
conflicts, and gets us to a clean baseline (again).

llvm-svn: 304787
2017-06-06 11:49:48 +00:00
Frederich Munch ad12580012 Close DynamicLibraries in reverse order they were opened.
Summary: Matches C++ destruction ordering better and fixes possible problems of loaded libraries having inter-dependencies.

Reviewers: efriedma, v.g.vassilev, chapuni

Reviewed By: efriedma

Subscribers: mgorny, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33652

llvm-svn: 304720
2017-06-05 16:26:58 +00:00
Dimitry Andric f5d486f43d Fix building DynamicLibrary.cpp with musl libc
Summary:
The workaround added in rL301240 for stderr/out/in symbols being both
macros and globals is only necessary for glibc, and it does not compile
with musl libc. Alpine Linux has had the following fix for it:

https://git.alpinelinux.org/cgit/aports/plain/main/llvm4/llvm-fix-DynamicLibrary-to-build-with-musl-libc.patch

Adapt the fix in our DynamicLibrary.inc for Unix.

Reviewers: marsupial, chandlerc, krytarowski

Reviewed By: krytarowski

Subscribers: srhines, krytarowski, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33883

llvm-svn: 304707
2017-06-05 11:22:18 +00:00
Kamil Rytarowski 07c81b1856 [Solaris] Fix PR33228 - llvm::sys::fs::is_local_impl done right
Summary:
Solaris-specific implementation for llvm::sys::fs::is_local_impl.
FStype pattern matching might be a bit unreliable, but at least it fixes the build failure.



Reviewers: mgorny, nlopes, llvm-commits, krytarowski

Reviewed By: krytarowski

Subscribers: voskresensky.vladimir, krytarowski

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33695

llvm-svn: 304412
2017-06-01 12:57:00 +00:00
Dimitry Andric ebc8779301 Revert r303015, because it has the unintended side effect of breaking
driver-mode recognition in clang (this is because the sysctl method
always returns one and only one executable path, even for an executable
with multiple links):

Fix DynamicLibraryTest.cpp on FreeBSD and NetBSD

Summary:

After rL301562, on FreeBSD the DynamicLibrary unittests fail, because
the test uses getMainExecutable("DynamicLibraryTests", Ptr), and since
the path does not contain any slashes, retrieving the main executable
will not work.

Reimplement getMainExecutable() for FreeBSD and NetBSD using sysctl(3),
which is more reliable than fiddling with relative or absolute paths.

Also add retrieval of the original argv[] from the GoogleTest framework,
to use as a fallback for other OSes.

Reviewers: emaste, marsupial, hans, krytarowski

Reviewed By: krytarowski

Subscribers: krytarowski, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33171

llvm-svn: 303285
2017-05-17 19:33:10 +00:00
Dimitry Andric 4043373e84 Fix DynamicLibraryTest.cpp on FreeBSD and NetBSD
Summary:

After rL301562, on FreeBSD the DynamicLibrary unittests fail, because
the test uses getMainExecutable("DynamicLibraryTests", Ptr), and since
the path does not contain any slashes, retrieving the main executable
will not work.

Reimplement getMainExecutable() for FreeBSD and NetBSD using sysctl(3),
which is more reliable than fiddling with relative or absolute paths.

Also add retrieval of the original argv[] from the GoogleTest framework,
to use as a fallback for other OSes.

Reviewers: emaste, marsupial, hans, krytarowski

Reviewed By: krytarowski

Subscribers: krytarowski, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33171

llvm-svn: 303015
2017-05-14 18:35:38 +00:00
Serge Guelton f4dc59ba8e Remove spurious cast of nullptr. NFC.
Conversion rules allow automatic casting of nullptr to any pointer type.

llvm-svn: 302780
2017-05-11 08:53:00 +00:00
Joerg Sonnenberger ecfb876eac If posix_fallocate returns EOPNOTSUPP, fallback to ftruncate.
This can happen at least on NetBSD.

llvm-svn: 302263
2017-05-05 17:55:58 +00:00
Nuno Lopes 8b66b00ecd fix build on Cygwin
llvm-svn: 302246
2017-05-05 16:08:22 +00:00