orc::SymbolResolver to JITSymbolResolver adapter.
The new orc::SymbolResolver interface uses asynchronous queries for better
performance. (Asynchronous queries with bulk lookup minimize RPC/IPC overhead,
support parallel incoming queries, and expose more available work for
distribution). Existing ORC layers will soon be updated to use the
orc::SymbolResolver API rather than the legacy llvm::JITSymbolResolver API.
Because RuntimeDyld still uses JITSymbolResolver, this patch also includes an
adapter that wraps an orc::SymbolResolver with a JITSymbolResolver API.
llvm-svn: 323073
lookupFlags returns a SymbolFlagsMap for the requested symbols, along with a
set containing the SymbolStringPtr for any symbol not found in the VSO.
The JITSymbolFlags for each symbol will have been stripped of its transient
JIT-state flags (i.e. NotMaterialized, Materializing).
Calling lookupFlags does not trigger symbol materialization.
llvm-svn: 323060
ExternalSymbolMap now stores the string key (rather than using a StringRef),
as the object file backing the key may be removed at any time.
llvm-svn: 323001
Bulk queries reduce IPC/RPC overhead for cross-process JITing and expose
opportunities for parallel compilation.
The two new query methods are lookupFlags, which finds the flags for each of a
set of symbols; and lookup, which finds the address and flags for each of a
set of symbols. (See doxygen comments for more details.)
The existing JITSymbolResolver class is renamed LegacyJITSymbolResolver, and
modified to extend the new JITSymbolResolver class using the following scheme:
- lookupFlags is implemented by calling findSymbolInLogicalDylib for each of the
symbols, then returning the result of calling getFlags() on each of these
symbols. (Importantly: lookupFlags does NOT call getAddress on the returned
symbols, so lookupFlags will never trigger materialization, and lookupFlags will
never call findSymbol, so only symbols that are part of the logical dylib will
return results.)
- lookup is implemented by calling findSymbolInLogicalDylib for each symbol and
falling back to findSymbol if findSymbolInLogicalDylib returns a null result.
Assuming a symbol is found its getAddress method is called to materialize it and
the result (if getAddress succeeds) is stored in the result map, or the error
(if getAddress fails) is returned immediately from lookup. If any symbol is not
found then lookup returns immediately with an error.
This change will break any out-of-tree derivatives of JITSymbolResolver. This
can be fixed by updating those classes to derive from LegacyJITSymbolResolver
instead.
llvm-svn: 322913
ExecutionSession will represent a running JIT program.
VModuleKey is a unique key assigned to each module added as part of
an ExecutionSession. The Layer concept will be updated in future to
require a VModuleKey when a module is added.
llvm-svn: 322336
version being used on some of the green dragon builders (plus a clang-format).
Workaround: AsynchronousSymbolQuery and VSO want to work with
JITEvaluatedSymbols anyway, so just use them (instead of JITSymbol, which
happens to tickle the bug).
The libcxx bug being worked around was fixed in r276003, and there are plans to
update the offending builders.
llvm-svn: 322140
The original commit broke the builders due to a think-o in an assertion:
AsynchronousSymbolQuery's constructor needs to check the callback member
variables, not the constructor arguments.
llvm-svn: 321853
SymbolSource.
These new APIs are a first stab at tackling some current shortcomings of ORC,
especially in performance and threading support.
VSO (Virtual Shared Object) is a symbol table representing the symbol
definitions of a set of modules that behave as if they had been statically
linked together into a shared object or dylib. Symbol definitions, either
pre-defined addresses or lazy definitions, can be added and queries for symbol
addresses made. The table applies the same linkage strength rules that static
linkers do when constructing a dylib or shared object: duplicate definitions
result in errors, strong definitions override weak or common ones. This class
should improve symbol lookup speed by providing centralized symbol tables (as
compared to the findSymbol implementation in the in-tree ORC layers, which
maintain one symbol table per object file / module added).
AsynchronousSymbolQuery is a query for the addresses of a set of symbols.
Query results are returned via a callback once they become available. Querying
for a set of symbols, rather than one symbol at a time (as the current lookup
scheme does) the JIT has the opportunity to make better use of available
resources (e.g. by spawning multiple jobs to materialize the requested symbols
if possible). Returning results via a callback makes queries asynchronous, so
queries from multiple threads of JIT'd code can proceed simultaneously.
SymbolSource represents a source of symbol definitions. It is used when
adding lazy symbol definitions to a VSO. Symbol definitions can be materialized
when needed or discarded if a stronger definition is found. Materializing on
demand via SymbolSources should (eventually) allow us to remove the lazy
materializers from JITSymbol, which will in turn allow the removal of many
current error checks and reduce the number of RPC round-trips involved in
materializing remote symbols. Adding a discard function allows sources to
discard symbol definitions (or mark them as available_externally), reducing the
amount of redundant code generated by the JIT for ODR symbols.
llvm-svn: 321838
Summary:
This will let ORC JIT clients plug in custom logic for the mmap, munmap and
mprotect paths.
Reviewers: loladiro, dblaikie
Subscribers: mcrosier, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39300
llvm-svn: 317770
The overflow detection assertions were tautological due to truncation.
Adjust them to no longer be tautological.
Patch by Alex Langford!
llvm-svn: 316303
We want to be writing a 32bit value, so we should be writing 4 bytes
instead of 2.
Patch by Alex Langford <apl@fb.com>.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38872
llvm-svn: 315964
This reverts commit SVN r313668. The original test case attempted to
write a pointer value into 16-bits, although the value may exceed the
range representable in 16-bits. Ensure that the symbol is located in
the address space such that its absolute address is representable in
16-bits. This should fix the assertion failure that was seen on the
Windows hosts.
llvm-svn: 313822
This reverts commit SVN r313654. Seems that it is triggering an
assertion on Windows specifically. Revert until I can build on Windows
and look into what is happening there.
llvm-svn: 313668
Add support for the R_AARCH64_ABS{16,32} relocations in the execution
engine. This is primarily used for DWARF debug information relocations
and needed by the LLVM JIT to support JITing for lldb.
Patch by Alex Langford!
llvm-svn: 313654
This patch introduces RemoteObjectClientLayer and RemoteObjectServerLayer,
which can be used to forward ORC object-layer operations from a JIT stack in
the client to a JIT stack (consisting only of object-layers) in the server.
This is a new way to support remote-JITing in LLVM. The previous approach
(supported by OrcRemoteTargetClient and OrcRemoteTargetServer) used a
remote-mapping memory manager that sat "beneath" the JIT stack and sent
fully-relocated binary blobs to the server. The main advantage of the new
approach is that relocatable objects can be cached on the server and re-used
(if the code that they represent hasn't changed), whereas fully-relocated blobs
can not (since the addresses they have been permanently bound to will change
from run to run).
llvm-svn: 312511
Calling grow may result in an error if, for example, this is a callback
manager for a remote target. We need to be able to return this error to the
callee.
llvm-svn: 312429
https://reviews.llvm.org/D36888
From that review description:
When an OrcMCJITReplacement object gets destructed, LazyEmitLayer may still
contain a shared_ptr of a module, which requires ShouldDelete in the deleter.
But ShouldDelete gets destructed before LazyEmitLayer due to the order of
declaration in OrcMCJITReplacement, which leads to a crash, when the destructor
of LazyEmitLayer is executed. Changing the order of declaration fixes this.
Patch by Moritz Kroll. Thanks Moritz!
llvm-svn: 312086
Expose the dependencies of LLVMExecutionEngine library as PUBLIC rather
than PRIVATE when building a shared library. This is necessary because
the library is not contained but exposes API of other LLVM libraries via
its headers.
This causes other libraries to fail to link if the linker verifies for
correctness of -l flags (i.e. fails on indirect dependencies). This e.g.
happens when building LLDB against shared LLVM:
lib64/liblldbExpression.a(IRExecutionUnit.cpp.o):(.data.rel.ro._ZTIN4llvm18MCJITMemoryManagerE[_ZTIN4llvm18MCJITMemoryManagerE]+0x10): undefined reference to `typeinfo for llvm::RuntimeDyld::MemoryManager'
lib64/liblldbExpression.a(IRExecutionUnit.cpp.o):(.data.rel.ro._ZTVN4llvm18MCJITMemoryManagerE[_ZTVN4llvm18MCJITMemoryManagerE]+0x60): undefined reference to `llvm::RuntimeDyld::MemoryManager::anchor()'
lib64/liblldbExpression.a(IRExecutionUnit.cpp.o):(.data.rel.ro._ZTVN12lldb_private15IRExecutionUnit13MemoryManagerE[_ZTVN12lldb_private15IRExecutionUnit13MemoryManagerE]+0x48): undefined reference to `llvm::RTDyldMemoryManager::deregisterEHFrames()'
lib64/liblldbExpression.a(IRExecutionUnit.cpp.o):(.data.rel.ro._ZTVN12lldb_private15IRExecutionUnit13MemoryManagerE[_ZTVN12lldb_private15IRExecutionUnit13MemoryManagerE]+0x60): undefined reference to `llvm::RuntimeDyld::MemoryManager::anchor()'
lib64/liblldbExpression.a(IRExecutionUnit.cpp.o):(.data.rel.ro._ZTVN12lldb_private15IRExecutionUnit13MemoryManagerE[_ZTVN12lldb_private15IRExecutionUnit13MemoryManagerE]+0xd0): undefined reference to `llvm::JITSymbolResolver::anchor()'
collect2: error: ld returned 1 exit status
Declaring the dependencies as PUBLIC guarantees that any package using
the ExecutionEngine library will also get explicit -l flags for
the dependent libraries guaranteeing that the symbols exposed in headers
could be resolved.
Patch originally written by NAKAMURA Takumi.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36211
llvm-svn: 310712
This patch adds support for thumb relocations to RuntimeDyldMachOARM, and adds
a target-specific flags field to JITSymbolFlags (so that on ARM we can record
whether each symbol is Thumb-mode code).
RuntimeDyldImpl::emitSection is modified to ensure that stubs memory is
correctly aligned based on the size returned by getStubAlignment().
llvm-svn: 310517
IMHO it is an antipattern to have a enum value that is Default.
At any given piece of code it is not clear if we have to handle
Default or if has already been mapped to a concrete value. In this
case in particular, only the target can do the mapping and it is nice
to make sure it is always done.
This deletes the two default enum values of CodeModel and uses an
explicit Optional<CodeModel> when it is possible that it is
unspecified.
llvm-svn: 309911