InProcessMemoryManager used to make separate memory allocation calls for each
permission level (RW, RX, RO), which could lead to target-out-of-range errors
if data and code were placed too far apart (this was the source of failures in
the JITLink/AArch64 testcase when it was first landed).
This patch updates InProcessMemoryManager to allocate a single slab which is
subdivided between text and data. This should guarantee that accesses remain
in-range provided that individual object files do not exceed 1Mb in size.
This patch also re-enables the JITLink/AArch64 testcase.
llvm-svn: 374948
In the Atom model the symbols, content and relocations of a relocatable object
file are represented as a graph of atoms, where each Atom represents a
contiguous block of content with a single name (or no name at all if the
content is anonymous), and where edges between Atoms represent relocations.
If more than one symbol is associated with a contiguous block of content then
the content is broken into multiple atoms and layout constraints (represented by
edges) are introduced to ensure that the content remains effectively contiguous.
These layout constraints must be kept in mind when examining the content
associated with a symbol (it may be spread over multiple atoms) or when applying
certain relocation types (e.g. MachO subtractors).
This patch replaces the Atom model in JITLink with a blocks-and-symbols model.
The blocks-and-symbols model represents relocatable object files as bipartite
graphs, with one set of nodes representing contiguous content (Blocks) and
another representing named or anonymous locations (Symbols) within a Block.
Relocations are represented as edges from Blocks to Symbols. This scheme
removes layout constraints (simplifying handling of MachO alt-entry symbols,
and hopefully ELF sections at some point in the future) and simplifies some
relocation logic.
llvm-svn: 373689