Set up basic infrastructure for 64-bit ARM architecture support in JITLink. It allows for loading a minimal object file and resolving a single relocation. Advanced features like GOT and PLT handling or relaxations were intentionally left out for the moment.
This patch follows the idea to keep implementations for ARM (32-bit) and Aaarch64 (64-bit) separate, because:
* it might be easier to share code with the MachO "arm64" JITLink backend
* LLVM has individual targets for ARM and Aaarch64 as well
Reviewed By: lhames
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108986
All ExecutorProcessControl subclasses must provide a JITLinkMemoryManager object
that can be used to allocate memory in the executor process. The
EPCGenericJITLinkMemoryManager class provides an off-the-shelf
JITLinkMemoryManager implementation for JITs that do not need (or cannot
provide) a specialized JITLinkMemoryManager implementation. This simplifies the
process of creating new ExecutorProcessControl implementations.
This patch add the R_RISCV_GOT_HI20 and R_RISCV_CALL_PLT relocation support. And the basic got/plt was implemented. Because of riscv32 and riscv64 has different pointer size, the got entry size and instructions of plt entry is different. This patch is the basic support, the optimization pass at preFixup stage has not been implemented.
Reviewed By: lhames
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107688
This was already the case, but the recent change (957334382c) altered
the behavior on some of our bots where __unw_add_dynamic_fde is not
found. This restores the prior behavior on Darwin while also retaining
the new behavior from that change.
This patch supported the R_X86_64_32S relocation and add the Pointer32Signed generic edge kind.
Reviewed By: lhames
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108446
All ExecutorProcessControl subclasses must provide an
ExecutorProcessControl::MemoryAccess object that can be used to access executor
memory from the JIT process. The EPCGenericMemoryAccess class provides an
off-the-shelf MemoryAccess implementation for JITs that do not need (or cannot
provide) a specialized MemoryAccess implementation. This simplifies the process
of creating new ExecutorProcessControl implementations.
This prevents the async methods (which shoud be overridden by subclasses) from
hiding the blocking helper methods, avoiding a lot of 'using MemoryAccess::...'
boilerplate.
Accepts a vector of (SymbolStringPtr, ExecutorAddress*) pairs, looks up all the
symbols, then writes their address to each of the corresponding
ExecutorAddresses.
This idiom (looking up and recording addresses into a specific set of variables)
is used in MachOPlatform and the (temporarily reverted) ELFNixPlatform, and is
likely to be used in other places in the near future, so wrapping it in a
utility function should save us some boilerplate.
This patch optimize the GOTPCRELX Reloations, which is described in X86-64 psabi chapter B.2. And Not all optimization of this chapter is implemented.
1. Convert call and jmp has been implemented
2. Convert mov, but the optimization that when the symbol is defined in the lower 32-bit address space, memory operand in `mov` can be convertted into immediate operand has not been implemented.
3. Conver Test and Binop has not been implemented.
The new test file named ELF_got_plt_optimizations.s has been added, and I moved some test cases about optimization of got/plt from ELF_x86_64_small_pic_relocations.s to the new test file.
By referencing the lld, so, the optimization `Convert call and jmp` is not same as what psabi says, and I have explained it in the comment.
Reviewed By: lhames
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108280
This change adds support to ORCv2 and the Orc runtime library for static
initializers, C++ static destructors, and exception handler registration for
ELF-based platforms, at present Linux and FreeBSD on x86_64. It is based on the
MachO platform and runtime support introduced in bb5f97e3ad.
Patch by Peter Housel. Thanks very much Peter!
Reviewed By: lhames
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108081
libgcc and libunwind have different flavours of __register_frame. Both
flavours are already correctly handled, except that the code to handle
the libunwind flavour is guarded by __APPLE__. This change uses the
presence of __unw_add_dynamic_fde in libunwind instead to detect whether
libunwind is used, rather than hardcoding it as Apple vs. non-Apple.
Fixes PR44074.
Thanks to Albert Jin <albert.jin@gmail.com> and Chris Schafmeister
<chris.schaf@verizon.net> for identifying the problem.
Reviewed By: lhames
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106129
This patch unify optimizeELF_x86_64_GOTAndStubs and optimizeMachO_x86_64_GOTAndStubs into a pure optimize_x86_64_GOTAndStubs
Reviewed By: lhames
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108025
This patch uses a switch statement to map the ELF_x86_64's edge kind to generic edge kind, and merge the ELF_x86_64 's applyFixup function to the x86_64 's applyFixup function. Some edge kinds were not have corresponding generic edge kinds, so I added three generic edge kinds asa follows:
1. RequestGOTAndTransformToDelta64, which is similar to RequestGOTAndTransformToDelta32.
2. GOTDelta64. This generic kind is similar to Delta64, except the GOTDelta64 computes the delta relative to GOTSymbol
3. RequestGOTAndTransformToGOTDelta64. This edge kind was used to deal with ELF_x86_64's GOT64 edge kind, it request the fixGOTEdge function to change the target to GOT entry, and set the edge kind to generic edge kind GOTDelta64.
These added generic edge kinds may named haphazardly, or can't express its meaning well.
Reviewed By: lhames
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107967
Some files still contained the old University of Illinois Open Source
Licence header. This patch replaces that with the Apache 2 with LLVM
Exception licence.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107528
In RISCV's relocations, some relocations are comprised of two relocation types. For example, R_RISCV_PCREL_HI20 and R_RISCV_PCREL_LO12_I compose a PC relative relocation. In general the compiler will set a label in the position of R_RISCV_PCREL_HI20. So, to test the R_RISCV_PCREL_LO12_I relocation, we need decode instruction at position of the label points to R_RISCV_PCREL_HI20 plus 4 (the size of a riscv non-compress instruction).
Reviewed By: lhames
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105528
Wrapper function call and dispatch handler helpers are moved to
ExecutionSession, and existing EPC-based tools are re-written to take an
ExecutionSession argument instead.
Requiring an ExecutorProcessControl instance simplifies existing EPC based
utilities (which only need to take an ES now), and should encourage more
utilities to use the EPC interface. It also simplifies process termination,
since the session can automatically call ExecutorProcessControl::disconnect
(previously this had to be done manually, and carefully ordered with the
rest of JIT tear-down to work correctly).
This patch is the initial support, it implements translation from object file to JIT link graph, and very few relocations were supported. Currently, the test file ELF_pc_indirect.s is passed, the HelloWorld program(compiled with mno-relax flag) can be linked correctly and run on instruction emulator correctly.
In the downstream implementation, I have implemented the GOT, PLT function, and EHFrame and some optimization will be implement soon. I will organize the code in to patches, then gradually send it to upstream.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105429
By replacing a lambda expression with a functor class instance, this
patch works around an issue encountered on AIX where the IBM XL compiler
appears to make no progress for many hours.
Reviewed By: jsji
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106554
This reverts commit 6b2a96285b.
The ccache builders are still failing. Looks like they need to be updated to
get the llvm-zorg config change in 490633945677656ba75d42ff1ca9d4a400b7b243.
I'll re-apply this as soon as the builders are updated.
This reapplies commit a7733e9556 ("Re-apply
[ORC][ORC-RT] Add initial native-TLV support to MachOPlatform."), and
d4abdefc99 ("[ORC-RT] Rename macho_tlv.x86-64.s
to macho_tlv.x86-64.S (uppercase suffix)").
These patches were reverted in 48aa82cacb while I
investigated bot failures (e.g.
https://lab.llvm.org/buildbot/#/builders/109/builds/18981). The fix was to
disable building of the ORC runtime on buliders using ccache (which is the same
fix used for other compiler-rt projects containing assembly code). This fix was
commited to llvm-zorg in 490633945677656ba75d42ff1ca9d4a400b7b243.
This reverts commit d4abdefc99 ("[ORC-RT] Rename
macho_tlv.x86-64.s to macho_tlv.x86-64.S (uppercase suffix)", and
a7733e9556 ("Re-apply "[ORC][ORC-RT] Add initial
native-TLV support to MachOPlatform."), while I investigate failures on
ccache builders (e.g. https://lab.llvm.org/buildbot/#/builders/109/builds/18981)
Reapplies fe1fa43f16, which was reverted in
6d8c63946c, with fixes:
1. Remove .subsections_via_symbols directive from macho_tlv.x86-64.s (it's
not needed here anyway).
2. Return error from pthread_key_create to the MachOPlatform to silence unused
variable warning.
Adds code to LLVM (MachOPlatform) and the ORC runtime to support native MachO
thread local variables. Adding new TLVs to a JITDylib at runtime is supported.
On the LLVM side MachOPlatform is updated to:
1. Identify thread local variables in the LinkGraph and lower them to GOT
accesses to data in the __thread_data or __thread_bss sections.
2. Merge and report the address range of __thread_data and thread_bss sections
to the runtime.
On the ORC runtime a MachOTLVManager class introduced which records the address
range of thread data/bss sections, and creates thread-local instances from the
initial data on demand. An orc-runtime specific tlv_get_addr implementation is
included which saves all register state then calls the MachOTLVManager to get
the address of the requested variable for the current thread.
LinkGraph::transferBlock can be used to move a block and all associated symbols
from one section to another.
LinkGraph::mergeSections moves all blocks and sections from a source section to
a destination section.
Adds support for MachO static initializers/deinitializers and eh-frame
registration via the ORC runtime.
This commit introduces cooperative support code into the ORC runtime and ORC
LLVM libraries (especially the MachOPlatform class) to support macho runtime
features for JIT'd code. This commit introduces support for static
initializers, static destructors (via cxa_atexit interposition), and eh-frame
registration. Near-future commits will add support for MachO native
thread-local variables, and language runtime registration (e.g. for Objective-C
and Swift).
The llvm-jitlink tool is updated to use the ORC runtime where available, and
regression tests for the new MachOPlatform support are added to compiler-rt.
Notable changes on the ORC runtime side:
1. The new macho_platform.h / macho_platform.cpp files contain the bulk of the
runtime-side support. This includes eh-frame registration; jit versions of
dlopen, dlsym, and dlclose; a cxa_atexit interpose to record static destructors,
and an '__orc_rt_macho_run_program' function that defines running a JIT'd MachO
program in terms of the jit- dlopen/dlsym/dlclose functions.
2. Replaces JITTargetAddress (and casting operations) with ExecutorAddress
(copied from LLVM) to improve type-safety of address management.
3. Adds serialization support for ExecutorAddress and unordered_map types to
the runtime-side Simple Packed Serialization code.
4. Adds orc-runtime regression tests to ensure that static initializers and
cxa-atexit interposes work as expected.
Notable changes on the LLVM side:
1. The MachOPlatform class is updated to:
1.1. Load the ORC runtime into the ExecutionSession.
1.2. Set up standard aliases for macho-specific runtime functions. E.g.
___cxa_atexit -> ___orc_rt_macho_cxa_atexit.
1.3. Install the MachOPlatformPlugin to scrape LinkGraphs for information
needed to support MachO features (e.g. eh-frames, mod-inits), and
communicate this information to the runtime.
1.4. Provide entry-points that the runtime can call to request initializers,
perform symbol lookup, and request deinitialiers (the latter is
implemented as an empty placeholder as macho object deinits are rarely
used).
1.5. Create a MachO header object for each JITDylib (defining the __mh_header
and __dso_handle symbols).
2. The llvm-jitlink tool (and llvm-jitlink-executor) are updated to use the
runtime when available.
3. A `lookupInitSymbolsAsync` method is added to the Platform base class. This
can be used to issue an async lookup for initializer symbols. The existing
`lookupInitSymbols` method is retained (the GenericIRPlatform code is still
using it), but is deprecated and will be removed soon.
4. JIT-dispatch support code is added to ExecutorProcessControl.
The JIT-dispatch system allows handlers in the JIT process to be associated with
'tag' symbols in the executor, and allows the executor to make remote procedure
calls back to the JIT process (via __orc_rt_jit_dispatch) using those tags.
The primary use case is ORC runtime code that needs to call bakc to handlers in
orc::Platform subclasses. E.g. __orc_rt_macho_jit_dlopen calling back to
MachOPlatform::rt_getInitializers using __orc_rt_macho_get_initializers_tag.
(The system is generic however, and could be used by non-runtime code).
The new ExecutorProcessControl::JITDispatchInfo struct provides the address
(in the executor) of the jit-dispatch function and a jit-dispatch context
object, and implementations of the dispatch function are added to
SelfExecutorProcessControl and OrcRPCExecutorProcessControl.
5. OrcRPCTPCServer is updated to support JIT-dispatch calls over ORC-RPC.
6. Serialization support for StringMap is added to the LLVM-side Simple Packed
Serialization code.
7. A JITLink::allocateBuffer operation is introduced to allocate writable memory
attached to the graph. This is used by the MachO header synthesis code, and will
be generically useful for other clients who want to create new graph content
from scratch.
At most these use the StringRef/Twine wrappers and don't have any implicit uses of std::string.
Move the include down to any cpp implementation where std::string is actually used.