Kostya Serebryany 3016056769 [asan] Change the way we report the alloca frame on stack-buff-overflow.
Before: the function name was stored by the compiler as a constant string
and the run-time was printing it.
Now: the PC is stored instead and the run-time prints the full symbolized frame.
This adds a couple of instructions into every function with non-empty stack frame,
but also reduces the binary size because we store less strings (I saw 2% size reduction).
This change bumps the asan ABI version to v3.

llvm part.

Example of report (now):
==31711==ERROR: AddressSanitizer: stack-buffer-overflow on address 0x7fffa77cf1c5 at pc 0x41feb0 bp 0x7fffa77cefb0 sp 0x7fffa77cefa8
READ of size 1 at 0x7fffa77cf1c5 thread T0
    #0 0x41feaf in Frame0(int, char*, char*, char*) stack-oob-frames.cc:20
    #1 0x41f7ff in Frame1(int, char*, char*) stack-oob-frames.cc:24
    #2 0x41f477 in Frame2(int, char*) stack-oob-frames.cc:28
    #3 0x41f194 in Frame3(int) stack-oob-frames.cc:32
    #4 0x41eee0 in main stack-oob-frames.cc:38
    #5 0x7f0c5566f76c (/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libc.so.6+0x2176c)
    #6 0x41eb1c (/usr/local/google/kcc/llvm_cmake/a.out+0x41eb1c)
Address 0x7fffa77cf1c5 is located in stack of thread T0 at offset 293 in frame
    #0 0x41f87f in Frame0(int, char*, char*, char*) stack-oob-frames.cc:12  <<<<<<<<<<<<<< this is new
  This frame has 6 object(s):
    [32, 36) 'frame.addr'
    [96, 104) 'a.addr'
    [160, 168) 'b.addr'
    [224, 232) 'c.addr'
    [288, 292) 's'
    [352, 360) 'd'




git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@177724 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
2013-03-22 10:37:20 +00:00
2013-03-19 23:10:26 +00:00
2013-03-22 09:04:01 +00:00
2013-03-19 16:04:02 +00:00
2012-10-09 23:48:34 +00:00
2013-03-18 17:47:33 +00:00
2013-03-18 17:47:33 +00:00
2013-02-22 19:19:41 +00:00

Low Level Virtual Machine (LLVM)
================================

This directory and its subdirectories contain source code for the Low Level
Virtual Machine, a toolkit for the construction of highly optimized compilers,
optimizers, and runtime environments.

LLVM is open source software. You may freely distribute it under the terms of
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Please see the documentation provided in docs/ for further
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started with LLVM and docs/README.txt for an overview of LLVM's
documentation setup.

If you're writing a package for LLVM, see docs/Packaging.rst for our
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LLVM backend for 6502
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