This commit decouples the MIR printer and the MIR printing pass so
that it will be possible to move the MIR printer into a separate
machine IR library later on.
Reviewers: Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
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This commit creates a dummy LLVM IR function with one basic block and an unreachable
instruction for each parsed machine function when the MIR file doesn't have LLVM IR.
This change is required as the machine function analysis pass creates machine
functions only for the functions that are defined in the current LLVM module.
Reviewers: Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10135
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This commit reports an error when the MIR parser encounters a machine
function with the name that is the same as the name of a different
machine function.
Reviewers: Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10130
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constants in commented-out part of LLVMAttribute enum. Add tests that verify
that the safestack attribute is only allowed as a function attribute.
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This patch adds the safe stack instrumentation pass to LLVM, which separates
the program stack into a safe stack, which stores return addresses, register
spills, and local variables that are statically verified to be accessed
in a safe way, and the unsafe stack, which stores everything else. Such
separation makes it much harder for an attacker to corrupt objects on the
safe stack, including function pointers stored in spilled registers and
return addresses. You can find more information about the safe stack, as
well as other parts of or control-flow hijack protection technique in our
OSDI paper on code-pointer integrity (http://dslab.epfl.ch/pubs/cpi.pdf)
and our project website (http://levee.epfl.ch).
The overhead of our implementation of the safe stack is very close to zero
(0.01% on the Phoronix benchmarks). This is lower than the overhead of
stack cookies, which are supported by LLVM and are commonly used today,
yet the security guarantees of the safe stack are strictly stronger than
stack cookies. In some cases, the safe stack improves performance due to
better cache locality.
Our current implementation of the safe stack is stable and robust, we
used it to recompile multiple projects on Linux including Chromium, and
we also recompiled the entire FreeBSD user-space system and more than 100
packages. We ran unit tests on the FreeBSD system and many of the packages
and observed no errors caused by the safe stack. The safe stack is also fully
binary compatible with non-instrumented code and can be applied to parts of
a program selectively.
This patch is our implementation of the safe stack on top of LLVM. The
patches make the following changes:
- Add the safestack function attribute, similar to the ssp, sspstrong and
sspreq attributes.
- Add the SafeStack instrumentation pass that applies the safe stack to all
functions that have the safestack attribute. This pass moves all unsafe local
variables to the unsafe stack with a separate stack pointer, whereas all
safe variables remain on the regular stack that is managed by LLVM as usual.
- Invoke the pass as the last stage before code generation (at the same time
the existing cookie-based stack protector pass is invoked).
- Add unit tests for the safe stack.
Original patch by Volodymyr Kuznetsov and others at the Dependable Systems
Lab at EPFL; updates and upstreaming by myself.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6094
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This commit connects the machine function analysis pass (which creates machine
functions) to the MIR parser, which will initialize the machine functions
with the state from the MIR file and reconstruct the machine IR.
This commit introduces a new interface called 'MachineFunctionInitializer',
which can be used to provide custom initialization for the machine functions.
This commit also introduces a new diagnostic class called
'DiagnosticInfoMIRParser' which is used for MIR parsing errors.
This commit modifies the default diagnostic handling in LLVMContext - now the
the diagnostics are printed directly into llvm::errs() so that the MIR parsing
errors can be printed with colours.
Reviewers: Justin Bogner
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9928
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Use the same argument names as the members.
Use default member initializes.
Extracted from a patch by Karl Schimpf.
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Summary:
NFC: no one uses AnalyzeBranchPredicate yet.
Add TargetInstrInfo::AnalyzeBranchPredicate and implement for x86. A
later change adding support for page-fault based implicit null checks
depends on this.
Reviewers: reames, ab, atrick
Reviewed By: atrick
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10200
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Summary:
TargetInstrInfo::getLdStBaseRegImmOfs to
TargetInstrInfo::getMemOpBaseRegImmOfs and implement for x86. The
implementation only handles a few easy cases now and will be made more
sophisticated in the future.
This is NFCI: the only user of `getLdStBaseRegImmOfs` (now
`getmemOpBaseRegImmOfs`) is `LoadClusterMotion` and `LoadClusterMotion`
is disabled for x86.
Reviewers: reames, ab, MatzeB, atrick
Reviewed By: MatzeB, atrick
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10199
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Summary:
This instruction encodes a loading operation that may fault, and a label
to branch to if the load page-faults. The locations of potentially
faulting loads and their "handler" destinations are recorded in a
FaultMap section, meant to be consumed by LLVM's clients.
Nothing generates FAULTING_LOAD_OP instructions yet, but they will be
used in a future change.
The documentation (FaultMaps.rst) needs improvement and I will update
this diff with a more expanded version shortly.
Depends on D10196
Reviewers: rnk, reames, AndyAyers, ab, atrick, pgavlin
Reviewed By: atrick, pgavlin
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10197
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LLVM targeting aarch64 doesn't correctly produce aligned accesses for non-aligned
data at -O0/fast-isel (-mno-unaligned-access).
The root cause seems to be in fast-isel not producing unaligned access correctly
for -mno-unaligned-access.
The patch just aborts fast-isel for loads and stores when -mno-unaligned-access is
present.
The regression test is updated to check this new test case (-mno-unaligned-access
together with fast-isel).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10360
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LLVMDisposeMessage is just a thing wrapper around free at the moment, but it's
the proper API to use here.
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The plugin now save the bitcode before and after optimizations and the
.o that is passed to the linker.
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Summary:
This affects other tools so the previous C++ API has been retained as a
deprecated function for the moment. Clang has been updated with a trivial
patch (not covered by the pre-commit review) to avoid breaking -Werror builds.
Other in-tree tools will be fixed with similar trivial patches.
This continues the patch series to eliminate StringRef forms of GNU triples
from the internals of LLVM that began in r239036.
Reviewers: rengolin
Reviewed By: rengolin
Subscribers: llvm-commits, rengolin
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10366
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This patch fixes a compilation time issue, when MachineSink faces PHIs
with a huge number of operands. This can happen for example in goto table
based interpreters, where some basic blocks can have several of those PHIs,
each one with several hundreds operands. MachineSink was spending a
significant time re-building and re-sorting the list of successors of
the current MachineBasicBlock. The computing and sorting of the current
MachineBasicBlock successors is now cached.
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Summary:
ValueTracking used to overwrite the analysis results computed from
assumes and dominating conditions. This patch fixes this issue.
Test Plan: test/Analysis/ValueTracking/assume.ll
Reviewers: hfinkel, majnemer
Reviewed By: majnemer
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10283
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Re-commit after adding "-aarch64-neon-syntax=generic" to fix the failure on OS X.
This patch was firstly committed in r239514, then reverted in r239544 because of a syntax incompatible failure on OS X.
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- Who defines ${LLVM_SOURCE_DIR} ?
- Would windows_version_resource.rc be available in an *installed* llvm tree?
I suggest it may be installed in ${PREFIX}/share.
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