Global values imply flags such as readable, writable, executable for the
sections that they will be placed in. Currently MC places all such
entries into the same section, using the first set of flags seen. This
can lead to situations in LTO where a writable global is placed in the
same named section as a readable global from another file, and the
section may not be marked writable.
D72194 ensures that mergeable globals with explicit sections are placed
in separate sections with compatible entry size, by emitting the
`unique` assembly syntax where appropriate. This change extends that
approach to include section flags, so that globals with different
section flags are emitted in separate unique sections.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100944
This patch introduces new operations on jitlink::Blocks: setMutableContent,
getMutableContent and getAlreadyMutableContent. The setMutableContent method
will set the block content data and size members and flag the content as
mutable. The getMutableContent method will return a mutable copy of the existing
content value, auto-allocating and populating a new mutable copy if the existing
content is marked immutable. The getAlreadyMutableMethod asserts that the
existing content is already mutable and returns it.
setMutableContent should be used when updating the block with totally new
content backed by mutable memory. It can be used to change the size of the
block. The argument value should *not* be shared with any other block.
getMutableContent should be used when clients want to modify the existing
content and are unsure whether it is mutable yet.
getAlreadyMutableContent should be used when clients want to modify the existing
content and know from context that it must already be immutable.
These operations reduce copy-modify-update boilerplate and unnecessary copies
introduced when clients couldn't me sure whether the existing content was
mutable or not.
Don't run tasks until their corresponding thread has been added to the running
threads vector. This is an extention to fda4300da82, which doesn't seem to have
been enough to fix the synchronization issues on its own.
The implementation and intent behind freeing the triple string here is the same
as LLVMGetDefaultTargetTriple (and any other owned c string returned from the C
API), so we should use LLVMDisposeMessage for to free the string for
consistency.
Patch by Mats Larsen -- thanks Mats!
Reviewed By: lhames
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102957
Now that gtest has been updated to 1.10 which supports GTEST_SKIP, we can use
that over return;
Patch by Mats Larsen. Thanks Mats!
Reviewed By: lhames, ikudrin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102710
This is separate from (but builds on) the support added in ec6b71df70a for
emitting LinkGraphs in the context of an active materialization. This commit
makes LinkGraphs a first-class data structure with features equivalent to
object files within ObjectLinkingLayer.
The transferDefinedSymbol operation updates a Symbol's target block, offset,
and size. This can be convenient when you want to redefine the content of some
symbol(s) pointing at a block, while retaining the original block in the graph.
Generalizing this API allows work to be distributed more evenly. In particular,
query callbacks can now be dispatched (rather than running immediately on the
thread that satisfied the query). This avoids the pathalogical case where an
operation on one thread satisfies many queries simultaneously, causing large
amounts of work to be run on that thread while other threads potentially sit
idle.
As mentioned before in D78813, currently the XCOFF backend does not
support writing 64-bit object files, which the ORC JIT tests will try to
exercise if we are on AIX. This patch disables the tests on AIX for now.
This is consistent with what's been done, for example, regarding
`armv7`.
Reviewed By: lhames
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101971
This can be useful for clients constructing custom JIT stacks: If the C API
for your custom stack exposes API to obtain a reference to an object layer
(e.g. LLVMOrcLLJITGetObjLinkingLayer) then the newly added
LLVMOrcObjectLayerAddObjectFile and LLVMOrcObjectLayerAddObjectFileWithRT
functions can be used to add objects directly to that layer.
This test was removed in 51495fd285 due to broken bots. Its reintroduction is
expected to trigger failures on some builders. The test has been modified to
print error messages in full, which should aid in tracking these down.
The https://lab.llvm.org/buildbot/#/builders/107 builder is failing on this
testcase, but doesn't produce a helpful error message yet. Disabling for now
until I have time to dig in further.
This reapplies 8740360093b, which was reverted in bbddadd46e4 due to buildbot
errors.
This version checks that a JIT instance can be safely constructed, skipping
tests if it can not be. To enable this it introduces new C API to retrieve and
set the target triple for a JITTargetMachineBuilder.
Adds utilities for creating anonymous pointers and jump stubs to x86_64.h. These
are used by the GOT and Stubs builder, but may also be used by pass writers who
want to create pointer stubs for indirection.
This patch also switches the underlying type for LinkGraph content from
StringRef to ArrayRef<char>. This avoids any confusion when working with buffers
that contain null bytes in the middle like, for example, a newly added null
pointer content array. ;)
Unreachable code should be self-documented as unreachable.
Found by the Rotten Green Tests project.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98518
This patch introduces generic x86-64 edge kinds, and refactors the MachO/x86-64
backend to use these edge kinds. This simplifies the implementation of the
MachO/x86-64 backend and makes it possible to write generic x86-64 passes and
utilities.
The new edge kinds are different from the original set used in the MachO/x86-64
backend. Several edge kinds that were not meaningfully distinguished in that
backend (e.g. the PCRelMinusN edges) have been merged into single edge kinds in
the new scheme (these edge kinds can be reintroduced later if we find a use for
them). At the same time, new edge kinds have been introduced to convey extra
information about the state of the graph. E.g. The Request*AndTransformTo**
edges represent GOT/TLVP relocations prior to synthesis of the GOT/TLVP
entries, and the 'Relaxable' suffix distinguishes edges that are candidates for
optimization from edges which should be left as-is (e.g. to enable runtime
redirection).
ELF/x86-64 will be refactored to use these generic edges at some point in the
future, and I anticipate a similar refactor to create a generic arm64 support
header too.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98305
Moves all headers from Orc/RPC to Orc/Shared, and from the llvm::orc::rpc
namespace into llvm::orc::shared. Also renames RPCTypeName to
SerializationTypeName and Function to RPCFunction.
In addition to being a more reasonable home for this code, this will make it
easier for the upcoming Orc runtime to re-use the Serialization system for
creating and parsing wrapper-function binary blobs.
Separates link graph creation from linking. This allows raw LinkGraphs to be
created and passed to a link. ObjectLinkingLayer is updated to support emission
of raw LinkGraphs in addition to object buffers.
Raw LinkGraphs can be created by in-memory compilers to bypass object encoding /
decoding (though this prevents caching, as LinkGraphs have do not have an
on-disk representation), and by utility code to add programatically generated
data structures to the JIT target process.
implementation.
This patch aims to improve support for out-of-process JITing using OrcV2. It
introduces two new class templates, OrcRPCTargetProcessControlBase and
OrcRPCTPCServer, which together implement the TargetProcessControl API by
forwarding operations to an execution process via an Orc-RPC Endpoint. These
utilities are used to implement out-of-process JITing from llvm-jitlink to
a new llvm-jitlink-executor tool.
This patch also breaks the OrcJIT library into three parts:
-- OrcTargetProcess: Contains code needed by the JIT execution process.
-- OrcShared: Contains code needed by the JIT execution and compiler
processes
-- OrcJIT: Everything else.
This break-up allows JIT executor processes to link against OrcTargetProcess
and OrcShared only, without having to link in all of OrcJIT. Clients executing
JIT'd code in-process should start linking against OrcTargetProcess as well as
OrcJIT.
In the near future these changes will enable:
-- Removal of the OrcRemoteTargetClient/OrcRemoteTargetServer class templates
which provided similar functionality in OrcV1.
-- Restoration of Chapter 5 of the Building-A-JIT tutorial series, which will
serve as a simple usage example for these APIs.
-- Implementation of lazy, cross-target compilation in lli's -jit-kind=orc-lazy
mode.
This patch moves definition generation out from the session lock, instead
running it under a per-dylib generator lock. It also makes the
DefinitionGenerator::tryToGenerate method optionally asynchronous: Generators
are handed an opaque LookupState object which can be captured to stop/restart
the lookup process.
The new scheme provides the following benefits and guarantees:
(1) Queries that do not need to attempt definition generation (because all
requested symbols matched against existing definitions in the JITDylib)
can proceed without being blocked by any running definition generators.
(2) Definition generators can capture the LookupState to continue their work
asynchronously. This allows generators to run for an arbitrary amount of
time without blocking a thread. Definition generators that do not need to
run asynchronously can return without capturing the LookupState to eliminate
unnecessary recursion and improve lookup performance.
(3) Definition generators still do not need to worry about concurrency or
re-entrance: Since they are still run under a (per-dylib) lock, generators
will never be re-entered concurrently, or given overlapping symbol sets to
generate.
Finally, the new system distinguishes between symbols that are candidates for
generation (generation candidates) and symbols that failed to match for a query
(due to symbol visibility). This fixes a bug where an unresolved symbol could
trigger generation of a duplicate definition for an existing hidden symbol.
MSVC doesn't seem to like capturing references to variables in lambdas passed to
the variable's constructor. This should fix the windows bots that have been
unable to build the new ResourceTracker unit test.