174 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Nico Weber
a278250b0f Revert "Cleanup codegen includes"
This reverts commit 7f230feeeac8a67b335f52bd2e900a05c6098f20.
Breaks CodeGenCUDA/link-device-bitcode.cu in check-clang,
and many LLVM tests, see comments on https://reviews.llvm.org/D121169
2022-03-10 07:59:22 -05:00
serge-sans-paille
7f230feeea Cleanup codegen includes
after:  1061034926
before: 1063332844

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121169
2022-03-10 10:00:30 +01:00
John Brawn
dc9f65be45 [AArch64][SVE] Fix handling of stack protection with SVE
Fix a couple of things that were causing stack protection to not work
correctly in functions that have scalable vectors on the stack:
 * Use TypeSize when determining if accesses to a variable are
   considered out-of-bounds so that the behaviour is correct for
   scalable vectors.
 * When stack protection is enabled move the stack protector location
   to the top of the SVE locals, so that any overflow in them (or the
   other locals which are below that) will be detected.

Fixes: https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/51137

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111631
2021-12-14 11:30:48 +00:00
Kazu Hirata
7ca14f6044 [llvm] Use range-based for loops (NFC) 2021-11-18 09:09:52 -08:00
Amara Emerson
cfef1803dd [GlobalISel] Port over the SelectionDAG stack protector codegen feature.
This is a port of the feature that allows the StackProtector pass to omit
checking code for stack canary checks, and rely on SelectionDAG to do it at a
later stage. The reasoning behind this seems to be to prevent the IR checking
instructions from hindering tail-call optimizations during codegen.

Here we allow GlobalISel to also use that scheme. Doing so requires that we
do some analysis using some factored-out code to determine where to generate
code for the epilogs.

Not every case is handled in this patch since we don't have support for all
targets that exercise different stack protector schemes.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98200
2021-10-04 21:33:44 -07:00
Kazu Hirata
48719e3b18 [CodeGen] Use make_early_inc_range (NFC) 2021-09-18 09:29:24 -07:00
Nick Desaulniers
033138ea45 [IR] make stack-protector-guard-* flags into module attrs
D88631 added initial support for:

- -mstack-protector-guard=
- -mstack-protector-guard-reg=
- -mstack-protector-guard-offset=

flags, and D100919 extended these to AArch64. Unfortunately, these flags
aren't retained for LTO. Make them module attributes rather than
TargetOptions.

Link: https://github.com/ClangBuiltLinux/linux/issues/1378

Reviewed By: tejohnson

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102742
2021-05-21 15:53:30 -07:00
Philip Reames
4824d876f0 Revert "Allow invokable sub-classes of IntrinsicInst"
This reverts commit d87b9b81ccb95217181ce75515c6c68bbb408ca4.

Post commit review raised concerns, reverting while discussion happens.
2021-04-20 15:38:38 -07:00
Philip Reames
d87b9b81cc Allow invokable sub-classes of IntrinsicInst
It used to be that all of our intrinsics were call instructions, but over time, we've added more and more invokable intrinsics. According to the verifier, we're up to 8 right now. As IntrinsicInst is a sub-class of CallInst, this puts us in an awkward spot where the idiomatic means to check for intrinsic has a false negative if the intrinsic is invoked.

This change switches IntrinsicInst from being a sub-class of CallInst to being a subclass of CallBase. This allows invoked intrinsics to be instances of IntrinsicInst, at the cost of requiring a few more casts to CallInst in places where the intrinsic really is known to be a call, not an invoke.

After this lands and has baked for a couple days, planned cleanups:
    Make GCStatepointInst a IntrinsicInst subclass.
    Merge intrinsic handling in InstCombine and use idiomatic visitIntrinsicInst entry point for InstVisitor.
    Do the same in SelectionDAG.
    Do the same in FastISEL.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99976
2021-04-20 15:03:49 -07:00
Tim Northover
5e3d9fcc3a StackProtector: ensure protection does not interfere with tail call frame.
The IR stack protector pass must insert stack checks before the call instead of
between it and the return.

Similarly, SDAG one should recognize that ADJCALLFRAME instructions could be
part of the terminal sequence of a tail call. In this case because such call
frames cannot be nested in LLVM the stack protection code must skip over the
whole sequence (or risk clobbering argument registers).
2021-04-13 15:14:57 +01:00
Hongtao Yu
1cb47a063e [CSSPGO] Unblock optimizations with pseudo probe instrumentation.
The IR/MIR pseudo probe intrinsics don't get materialized into real machine instructions and therefore they don't incur runtime cost directly. However, they come with indirect cost by blocking certain optimizations. Some of the blocking are intentional (such as blocking code merge) for better counts quality while the others are accidental. This change unblocks perf-critical optimizations that do not affect counts quality. They include:

1. IR InstCombine, sinking load operation to shorten lifetimes.
2. MIR LiveRangeShrink, similar to #1
3. MIR TwoAddressInstructionPass, i.e, opeq transform
4. MIR function argument copy elision
5. IR stack protection. (though not perf-critical but nice to have).

Reviewed By: wmi

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95982
2021-02-10 12:43:17 -08:00
Roman Lebedev
4de3bdd65f
[NFC] StackProtector: be consistent and to initialize DominatorTreeWrapperPass
We already ask for it, so it might be good to ensure that it is
actually initialized before us. Doesn't seem to matter in practice though.
2021-01-27 18:32:35 +03:00
Fangrui Song
8c4e55762d [docs][unittest][Go][StackProtector] Migrate deprecated DebugInfo::get to DILocation::get 2020-12-15 14:17:04 -08:00
Nick Desaulniers
bc044a88ee [Inline] prevent inlining on stack protector mismatch
It's common for code that manipulates the stack via inline assembly or
that has to set up its own stack canary (such as the Linux kernel) would
like to avoid stack protectors in certain functions. In this case, we've
been bitten by numerous bugs where a callee with a stack protector is
inlined into an attribute((no_stack_protector)) caller, which
generally breaks the caller's assumptions about not having a stack
protector. LTO exacerbates the issue.

While developers can avoid this by putting all no_stack_protector
functions in one translation unit together and compiling those with
-fno-stack-protector, it's generally not very ergonomic or as
ergonomic as a function attribute, and still doesn't work for LTO. See also:
https://lore.kernel.org/linux-pm/20200915172658.1432732-1-rkir@google.com/
https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/20200918201436.2932360-30-samitolvanen@google.com/T/#u

SSP attributes can be ordered by strength. Weakest to strongest, they
are: ssp, sspstrong, sspreq.  Callees with differing SSP attributes may be
inlined into each other, and the strongest attribute will be applied to the
caller. (No change)

After this change:
* A callee with no SSP attributes will no longer be inlined into a
  caller with SSP attributes.
* The reverse is also true: a callee with an SSP attribute will not be
  inlined into a caller with no SSP attributes.
* The alwaysinline attribute overrides these rules.

Functions that get synthesized by the compiler may not get inlined as a
result if they are not created with the same stack protector function
attribute as their callers.

Alternative approach to https://reviews.llvm.org/D87956.

Fixes pr/47479.

Signed-off-by: Nick Desaulniers <ndesaulniers@google.com>

Reviewed By: rnk, MaskRay

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91816
2020-12-02 11:00:16 -08:00
Nick Desaulniers
f4c6080ab8 Revert "[IR] add fn attr for no_stack_protector; prevent inlining on mismatch"
This reverts commit b7926ce6d7a83cdf70c68d82bc3389c04009b841.

Going with a simpler approach.
2020-11-17 17:27:14 -08:00
Nick Desaulniers
b7926ce6d7 [IR] add fn attr for no_stack_protector; prevent inlining on mismatch
It's currently ambiguous in IR whether the source language explicitly
did not want a stack a stack protector (in C, via function attribute
no_stack_protector) or doesn't care for any given function.

It's common for code that manipulates the stack via inline assembly or
that has to set up its own stack canary (such as the Linux kernel) would
like to avoid stack protectors in certain functions. In this case, we've
been bitten by numerous bugs where a callee with a stack protector is
inlined into an __attribute__((__no_stack_protector__)) caller, which
generally breaks the caller's assumptions about not having a stack
protector. LTO exacerbates the issue.

While developers can avoid this by putting all no_stack_protector
functions in one translation unit together and compiling those with
-fno-stack-protector, it's generally not very ergonomic or as
ergonomic as a function attribute, and still doesn't work for LTO. See also:
https://lore.kernel.org/linux-pm/20200915172658.1432732-1-rkir@google.com/
https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/20200918201436.2932360-30-samitolvanen@google.com/T/#u

Typically, when inlining a callee into a caller, the caller will be
upgraded in its level of stack protection (see adjustCallerSSPLevel()).
By adding an explicit attribute in the IR when the function attribute is
used in the source language, we can now identify such cases and prevent
inlining.  Block inlining when the callee and caller differ in the case that one
contains `nossp` when the other has `ssp`, `sspstrong`, or `sspreq`.

Fixes pr/47479.

Reviewed By: void

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87956
2020-10-23 11:55:39 -07:00
Xiang1 Zhang
7c3fea7721 [X86] Support customizing stack protector guard
Reviewed By: nickdesaulniers, MaskRay

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88631
2020-10-22 10:08:14 +08:00
Amara Emerson
2878ecc90f [StackProtector] Fix crash with vararg due to not checking LocationSize validity.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87074
2020-09-03 00:08:48 -07:00
Nadav Rotem
df880b7730 [StackProtector] Speed up RequiresStackProtector
Speed up the method RequiresStackProtector by checking the intrinsic
value of the call. The original code calls getName() that returns an
allocating std::string on each check. This change removes about 96072
std::string instances when compiling sqlite3.c; The function was
discovered with a Facebook-internal performance tool.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84620
2020-07-27 10:07:47 -07:00
John Brawn
c09368313c [StackProtector] Catch direct out-of-bounds when checking address-takenness
With -fstack-protector-strong we check if a non-array variable has its address
taken in a way that could cause a potential out-of-bounds access. However what
we don't catch is when the address is directly used to create an out-of-bounds
memory access.

Fix this by examining the offsets of GEPs that are ultimately derived from
allocas and checking if the resulting address is out-of-bounds, and by checking
that any memory operations using such addresses are not over-large.

Fixes PR43478.

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75695
2020-03-17 12:09:07 +00:00
Reid Kleckner
05da2fe521 Sink all InitializePasses.h includes
This file lists every pass in LLVM, and is included by Pass.h, which is
very popular. Every time we add, remove, or rename a pass in LLVM, it
caused lots of recompilation.

I found this fact by looking at this table, which is sorted by the
number of times a file was changed over the last 100,000 git commits
multiplied by the number of object files that depend on it in the
current checkout:
  recompiles    touches affected_files  header
  342380        95      3604    llvm/include/llvm/ADT/STLExtras.h
  314730        234     1345    llvm/include/llvm/InitializePasses.h
  307036        118     2602    llvm/include/llvm/ADT/APInt.h
  213049        59      3611    llvm/include/llvm/Support/MathExtras.h
  170422        47      3626    llvm/include/llvm/Support/Compiler.h
  162225        45      3605    llvm/include/llvm/ADT/Optional.h
  158319        63      2513    llvm/include/llvm/ADT/Triple.h
  140322        39      3598    llvm/include/llvm/ADT/StringRef.h
  137647        59      2333    llvm/include/llvm/Support/Error.h
  131619        73      1803    llvm/include/llvm/Support/FileSystem.h

Before this change, touching InitializePasses.h would cause 1345 files
to recompile. After this change, touching it only causes 550 compiles in
an incremental rebuild.

Reviewers: bkramer, asbirlea, bollu, jdoerfert

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70211
2019-11-13 16:34:37 -08:00
Paul Robinson
ed1f3f36ae [SSP] [3/3] cmpxchg and addrspacecast instructions can now
trigger stack protectors.  Fixes PR42238.

Add test coverage for llvm.memset, as proxy for all llvm.mem*
intrinsics. There are two issues here: (1) they could be lowered to a
libc call, which could be intercepted, and do Bad Stuff; (2) with a
non-constant size, they could overwrite the current stack frame.

The test was mostly written by Matt Arsenault in r363169, which was
later reverted; I tweaked what he had and added the llvm.memset part.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67845

llvm-svn: 373220
2019-09-30 15:11:23 +00:00
Paul Robinson
527815f5b0 [SSP] [2/3] Refactor an if/dyn_cast chain to switch on opcode. NFC
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67844

llvm-svn: 373219
2019-09-30 15:08:38 +00:00
Paul Robinson
14945186c2 [SSP] [1/3] Revert "StackProtector: Use PointerMayBeCaptured"
"Captured" and "relevant to Stack Protector" are not the same thing.

This reverts commit f29366b1f594f48465c5a2754bcffac6d70fd0b1.
aka r363169.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67842

llvm-svn: 373216
2019-09-30 15:01:35 +00:00
Matt Arsenault
f29366b1f5 StackProtector: Use PointerMayBeCaptured
This was using its own, outdated list of possible captures. This was
at minimum not catching cmpxchg and addrspacecast captures.

One change is now any volatile access is treated as capturing. The
test coverage for this pass is quite inadequate, but this required
removing volatile in the lifetime capture test.

Also fixes some infrastructure issues to allow running just the IR
pass.

Fixes bug 42238.

llvm-svn: 363169
2019-06-12 14:23:33 +00:00
Fangrui Song
2c5c12c041 Change some dyn_cast to more apropriate isa. NFC
llvm-svn: 357773
2019-04-05 16:16:23 +00:00
James Y Knight
14359ef1b6 [opaque pointer types] Pass value type to LoadInst creation.
This cleans up all LoadInst creation in LLVM to explicitly pass the
value type rather than deriving it from the pointer's element-type.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57172

llvm-svn: 352911
2019-02-01 20:44:24 +00:00
James Y Knight
7976eb5838 [opaque pointer types] Pass function types to CallInst creation.
This cleans up all CallInst creation in LLVM to explicitly pass a
function type rather than deriving it from the pointer's element-type.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57170

llvm-svn: 352909
2019-02-01 20:43:25 +00:00
James Y Knight
13680223b9 [opaque pointer types] Add a FunctionCallee wrapper type, and use it.
Recommit r352791 after tweaking DerivedTypes.h slightly, so that gcc
doesn't choke on it, hopefully.

Original Message:
The FunctionCallee type is effectively a {FunctionType*,Value*} pair,
and is a useful convenience to enable code to continue passing the
result of getOrInsertFunction() through to EmitCall, even once pointer
types lose their pointee-type.

Then:
- update the CallInst/InvokeInst instruction creation functions to
  take a Callee,
- modify getOrInsertFunction to return FunctionCallee, and
- update all callers appropriately.

One area of particular note is the change to the sanitizer
code. Previously, they had been casting the result of
`getOrInsertFunction` to a `Function*` via
`checkSanitizerInterfaceFunction`, and storing that. That would report
an error if someone had already inserted a function declaraction with
a mismatching signature.

However, in general, LLVM allows for such mismatches, as
`getOrInsertFunction` will automatically insert a bitcast if
needed. As part of this cleanup, cause the sanitizer code to do the
same. (It will call its functions using the expected signature,
however they may have been declared.)

Finally, in a small number of locations, callers of
`getOrInsertFunction` actually were expecting/requiring that a brand
new function was being created. In such cases, I've switched them to
Function::Create instead.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57315

llvm-svn: 352827
2019-02-01 02:28:03 +00:00
James Y Knight
fadf25068e Revert "[opaque pointer types] Add a FunctionCallee wrapper type, and use it."
This reverts commit f47d6b38c7a61d50db4566b02719de05492dcef1 (r352791).

Seems to run into compilation failures with GCC (but not clang, where
I tested it). Reverting while I investigate.

llvm-svn: 352800
2019-01-31 21:51:58 +00:00
James Y Knight
f47d6b38c7 [opaque pointer types] Add a FunctionCallee wrapper type, and use it.
The FunctionCallee type is effectively a {FunctionType*,Value*} pair,
and is a useful convenience to enable code to continue passing the
result of getOrInsertFunction() through to EmitCall, even once pointer
types lose their pointee-type.

Then:
- update the CallInst/InvokeInst instruction creation functions to
  take a Callee,
- modify getOrInsertFunction to return FunctionCallee, and
- update all callers appropriately.

One area of particular note is the change to the sanitizer
code. Previously, they had been casting the result of
`getOrInsertFunction` to a `Function*` via
`checkSanitizerInterfaceFunction`, and storing that. That would report
an error if someone had already inserted a function declaraction with
a mismatching signature.

However, in general, LLVM allows for such mismatches, as
`getOrInsertFunction` will automatically insert a bitcast if
needed. As part of this cleanup, cause the sanitizer code to do the
same. (It will call its functions using the expected signature,
however they may have been declared.)

Finally, in a small number of locations, callers of
`getOrInsertFunction` actually were expecting/requiring that a brand
new function was being created. In such cases, I've switched them to
Function::Create instead.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57315

llvm-svn: 352791
2019-01-31 20:35:56 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
2946cd7010 Update the file headers across all of the LLVM projects in the monorepo
to reflect the new license.

We understand that people may be surprised that we're moving the header
entirely to discuss the new license. We checked this carefully with the
Foundation's lawyer and we believe this is the correct approach.

Essentially, all code in the project is now made available by the LLVM
project under our new license, so you will see that the license headers
include that license only. Some of our contributors have contributed
code under our old license, and accordingly, we have retained a copy of
our old license notice in the top-level files in each project and
repository.

llvm-svn: 351636
2019-01-19 08:50:56 +00:00
Vedant Kumar
b264d69de7 [IR] Add Instruction::isLifetimeStartOrEnd, NFC
Instruction::isLifetimeStartOrEnd() checks whether an Instruction is an
llvm.lifetime.start or an llvm.lifetime.end intrinsic.

This was suggested as a cleanup in D55967.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56019

llvm-svn: 349964
2018-12-21 21:49:40 +00:00
Petr Pavlu
6bb80512db [GlobalISel] Fix insertion of stack-protector epilogue
* Tell the StackProtector pass to generate the epilogue instrumentation
  when GlobalISel is enabled because GISel currently does not implement
  the same deferred epilogue insertion as SelectionDAG.
* Update StackProtector::InsertStackProtectors() to find a stack guard
  slot by searching for the llvm.stackprotector intrinsic when the
  prologue was not created by StackProtector itself but the pass still
  needs to generate the epilogue instrumentation. This fixes a problem
  when the pass would abort because the stack guard AllocInst pointer
  was null when generating the epilogue -- test
  CodeGen/AArch64/GlobalISel/arm64-irtranslator-stackprotect.ll.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54518

llvm-svn: 347862
2018-11-29 13:22:53 +00:00
Matthias Braun
90ad6835dd CodeGen: Remove pipeline dependencies on StackProtector; NFC
This re-applies r336929 with a fix to accomodate for the Mips target
scheduling multiple SelectionDAG instances into the pass pipeline.

PrologEpilogInserter and StackColoring depend on the StackProtector analysis
being alive from the point it is run until PEI, which requires that they are all
scheduled in the same FunctionPassManager. Inserting a (machine) ModulePass
between StackProtector and PEI results in these passes being in separate
FunctionPassManagers and the StackProtector is not available for PEI.

PEI and StackColoring don't use much information from the StackProtector pass,
so transfering the required information to MachineFrameInfo is cleaner than
keeping the StackProtector pass around. This commit moves the SSP layout
information to MFI instead of keeping it in the pass.

This patch set (D37580, D37581, D37582, D37583, D37584, D37585, D37586, D37587)
is a first draft of the pagerando implementation described in
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2017-June/113794.html.

Patch by Stephen Crane <sjc@immunant.com>

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49256

llvm-svn: 336964
2018-07-13 00:08:38 +00:00
Matthias Braun
f03f32d478 Revert "(HEAD -> master, origin/master, arcpatch-D37582) CodeGen: Remove pipeline dependencies on StackProtector; NFC"
This was triggering pass scheduling failures.

This reverts commit r336929.

llvm-svn: 336934
2018-07-12 19:27:01 +00:00
Matthias Braun
9436570cbd CodeGen: Remove pipeline dependencies on StackProtector; NFC
PrologEpilogInserter and StackColoring depend on the StackProtector analysis
being alive from the point it is run until PEI, which requires that they are all
scheduled in the same FunctionPassManager. Inserting a (machine) ModulePass
between StackProtector and PEI results in these passes being in separate
FunctionPassManagers and the StackProtector is not available for PEI.

PEI and StackColoring don't use much information from the StackProtector pass,
so transfering the required information to MachineFrameInfo is cleaner than
keeping the StackProtector pass around. This commit moves the SSP layout
information to MFI instead of keeping it in the pass.

This patch set (D37580, D37581, D37582, D37583, D37584, D37585, D37586, D37587)
is a first draft of the pagerando implementation described in
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2017-June/113794.html.

Patch by Stephen Crane <sjc@immunant.com>

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49256

llvm-svn: 336929
2018-07-12 18:33:32 +00:00
Adrian Prantl
5f8f34e459 Remove \brief commands from doxygen comments.
We've been running doxygen with the autobrief option for a couple of
years now. This makes the \brief markers into our comments
redundant. Since they are a visual distraction and we don't want to
encourage more \brief markers in new code either, this patch removes
them all.

Patch produced by

  for i in $(git grep -l '\\brief'); do perl -pi -e 's/\\brief //g' $i & done

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46290

llvm-svn: 331272
2018-05-01 15:54:18 +00:00
Matt Davis
13b8331054 [StackProtector] Ignore certain intrinsics when calculating sspstrong heuristic.
Summary:
The 'strong' StackProtector heuristic takes into consideration call instructions.
Certain intrinsics, such as lifetime.start, can cause the
StackProtector to protect functions that do not need to be protected.

Specifically, a volatile variable, (not optimized away), but belonging to a stack
allocation will encourage a llvm.lifetime.start to be inserted during
compilation. Because that intrinsic is a 'call' the strong StackProtector
will see that the alloca'd variable is being passed to a call instruction, and
insert a stack protector. In this case the intrinsic isn't really lowered to a
call. This can cause unnecessary stack checking, at the cost of additional
(wasted) CPU cycles.

In the future we should rely on TargetTransformInfo::isLoweredToCall, but as of
now that routine considers all intrinsics as not being lowerable. That needs
to be corrected, and such a change is on my list of things to get moving on.

As a side note, the updated stack-protector-dbginfo.ll test always seems to
pass.  I never see the dbg.declare/dbg.value reaching the
StackProtector::HasAddressTaken, but I don't see any code excluding dbg
intrinsic calls either, so I think it's the safest thing to do.

Reviewers: void, timshen

Reviewed By: timshen

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45331

llvm-svn: 329450
2018-04-06 20:14:13 +00:00
Hans Wennborg
5df9f0878b Re-commit r319490 "XOR the frame pointer with the stack cookie when protecting the stack"
The patch originally broke Chromium (crbug.com/791714) due to its failing to
specify that the new pseudo instructions clobber EFLAGS. This commit fixes
that.

> Summary: This strengthens the guard and matches MSVC.
>
> Reviewers: hans, etienneb
>
> Subscribers: hiraditya, JDevlieghere, vlad.tsyrklevich, llvm-commits
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40622

llvm-svn: 319824
2017-12-05 20:22:20 +00:00
Hans Wennborg
361d4392cf Revert r319490 "XOR the frame pointer with the stack cookie when protecting the stack"
This broke the Chromium build (crbug.com/791714). Reverting while investigating.

> Summary: This strengthens the guard and matches MSVC.
>
> Reviewers: hans, etienneb
>
> Subscribers: hiraditya, JDevlieghere, vlad.tsyrklevich, llvm-commits
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40622
>
> git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@319490 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8

llvm-svn: 319706
2017-12-04 22:21:15 +00:00
Reid Kleckner
ba4014e9dc XOR the frame pointer with the stack cookie when protecting the stack
Summary: This strengthens the guard and matches MSVC.

Reviewers: hans, etienneb

Subscribers: hiraditya, JDevlieghere, vlad.tsyrklevich, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40622

llvm-svn: 319490
2017-11-30 22:41:21 +00:00
David Blaikie
b3bde2ea50 Fix a bunch more layering of CodeGen headers that are in Target
All these headers already depend on CodeGen headers so moving them into
CodeGen fixes the layering (since CodeGen depends on Target, not the
other way around).

llvm-svn: 318490
2017-11-17 01:07:10 +00:00
Vivek Pandya
9590658fb8 [NFC] Convert OptimizationRemarkEmitter old emit() calls to new closure
parameterized emit() calls

Summary: This is not functional change to adopt new emit() API added in r313691.

Reviewed By: anemet

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38285

llvm-svn: 315476
2017-10-11 17:12:59 +00:00
Adam Nemet
0965da2055 Rename OptimizationDiagnosticInfo.* to OptimizationRemarkEmitter.*
Sync it up with the name of the class actually defined here.  This has been
bothering me for a while...

llvm-svn: 315249
2017-10-09 23:19:02 +00:00
Eugene Zelenko
6ac7a34816 [CodeGen] Fix some Clang-tidy modernize-use-using and Include What You Use warnings; other minor fixes (NFC).
llvm-svn: 304954
2017-06-07 23:53:32 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
6bda14b313 Sort the remaining #include lines in include/... and lib/....
I did this a long time ago with a janky python script, but now
clang-format has built-in support for this. I fed clang-format every
line with a #include and let it re-sort things according to the precise
LLVM rules for include ordering baked into clang-format these days.

I've reverted a number of files where the results of sorting includes
isn't healthy. Either places where we have legacy code relying on
particular include ordering (where possible, I'll fix these separately)
or where we have particular formatting around #include lines that
I didn't want to disturb in this patch.

This patch is *entirely* mechanical. If you get merge conflicts or
anything, just ignore the changes in this patch and run clang-format
over your #include lines in the files.

Sorry for any noise here, but it is important to keep these things
stable. I was seeing an increasing number of patches with irrelevant
re-ordering of #include lines because clang-format was used. This patch
at least isolates that churn, makes it easy to skip when resolving
conflicts, and gets us to a clean baseline (again).

llvm-svn: 304787
2017-06-06 11:49:48 +00:00
Matthias Braun
e89461a400 Remove some #include from StackProtector.h; NFC
llvm-svn: 304748
2017-06-05 22:59:21 +00:00
Matthias Braun
1527baab0c CodeGen: Rename DEBUG_TYPE to match passnames
Rename the DEBUG_TYPE to match the names of corresponding passes where
it makes sense. Also establish the pattern of simply referencing
DEBUG_TYPE instead of repeating the passname where possible.

llvm-svn: 303921
2017-05-25 21:26:32 +00:00
Francis Visoiu Mistrih
8b61764cbb [LegacyPassManager] Remove TargetMachine constructors
This provides a new way to access the TargetMachine through
TargetPassConfig, as a dependency.

The patterns replaced here are:

* Passes handling a null TargetMachine call
  `getAnalysisIfAvailable<TargetPassConfig>`.

* Passes not handling a null TargetMachine
  `addRequired<TargetPassConfig>` and call
  `getAnalysis<TargetPassConfig>`.

* MachineFunctionPasses now use MF.getTarget().

* Remove all the TargetMachine constructors.
* Remove INITIALIZE_TM_PASS.

This fixes a crash when running `llc -start-before prologepilog`.

PEI needs StackProtector, which gets constructed without a TargetMachine
by the pass manager. The StackProtector pass doesn't handle the case
where there is no TargetMachine, so it segfaults.

Related to PR30324.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33222

llvm-svn: 303360
2017-05-18 17:21:13 +00:00