Instrumentation passes now use attributes
address_safety/thread_safety/memory_safety which are added by Clang frontend.
Clang parses the blacklist file and adds the attributes accordingly.
Currently blacklist is still used in ASan module pass to disable instrumentation
for certain global variables. We should fix this as well by collecting the
set of globals we're going to instrument in Clang and passing it to ASan
in metadata (as we already do for dynamically-initialized globals and init-order
checking).
This change also removes -tsan-blacklist and -msan-blacklist LLVM commandline
flags in favor of -fsanitize-blacklist= Clang flag.
llvm-svn: 210038
Clang knows about the sanitizer blacklist and it makes no sense to
add global to the list of llvm.asan.dynamically_initialized_globals if it
will be blacklisted in the instrumentation pass anyway. Instead, we should
do as much blacklisting as possible (if not all) in the frontend.
llvm-svn: 209790
Don't assume that dynamically initialized globals are all initialized from
_GLOBAL__<module_name>I_ function. Instead, scan the llvm.global_ctors and
insert poison/unpoison calls to each function there.
Patch by Nico Weber!
llvm-svn: 209780
Most importantly, it gives debug location info to the coverage callback.
This change also removes 2 cases of unnecessary setDebugLoc when IRBuilder
is created with the same debug location.
llvm-svn: 208767
definition below all of the header #include lines, lib/Transforms/...
edition.
This one is tricky for two reasons. We again have a couple of passes
that define something else before the includes as well. I've sunk their
name macros with the DEBUG_TYPE.
Also, InstCombine contains headers that need DEBUG_TYPE, so now those
headers #define and #undef DEBUG_TYPE around their code, leaving them
well formed modular headers. Fixing these headers was a large motivation
for all of these changes, as "leaky" macros of this form are hard on the
modules implementation.
llvm-svn: 206844
Also updated as many loops as I could find using df_begin/idf_begin -
strangely I found no uses of idf_begin. Is that just used out of tree?
Also a few places couldn't use df_begin because either they used the
member functions of the depth first iterators or had specific ordering
constraints (I added a comment in the latter case).
Based on a patch by Jim Grosbach. (Jim - you just had iterator_range<T>
where you needed iterator_range<idf_iterator<T>>)
llvm-svn: 206016
This compiles with no changes to clang/lld/lldb with MSVC and includes
overloads to various functions which are used by those projects and llvm
which have OwningPtr's as parameters. This should allow out of tree
projects some time to move. There are also no changes to libs/Target,
which should help out of tree targets have time to move, if necessary.
llvm-svn: 203083
I am really sorry for the noise, but the current state where some parts of the
code use TD (from the old name: TargetData) and other parts use DL makes it
hard to write a patch that changes where those variables come from and how
they are passed along.
llvm-svn: 201827
r201608 made llvm corretly handle private globals with MachO. r201622 fixed
a bug in it and r201624 and r201625 were changes for using private linkage,
assuming that llvm would do the right thing.
They all got reverted because r201608 introduced a crash in LTO. This patch
includes a fix for that. The issue was that TargetLoweringObjectFile now has
to be initialized before we can mangle names of private globals. This is
trivially true during the normal codegen pipeline (the asm printer does it),
but LTO has to do it manually.
llvm-svn: 201700
flag from clang, and disable zero-base shadow support on all platforms
where it is not the default behavior.
- It is completely unused, as far as we know.
- It is ABI-incompatible with non-zero-base shadow, which means all
objects in a process must be built with the same setting. Failing to
do so results in a segmentation fault at runtime.
- It introduces a backward dependency of compiler-rt on user code,
which is uncommon and complicates testing.
This is the LLVM part of a larger change.
llvm-svn: 199371