Commit Graph

7936 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
hselasky
1c16f8c6e5 Remove the "load drivers" logic from libibverbs.
The "load drivers" logic in the libibverbs configuration file is relevant
for Linux only.

MFC after:	3 days
Sponsored by:	Mellanox Technologies
2018-04-22 06:11:46 +00:00
emaste
0a9663efa7 lldb: propagate error to user if memory read fails
Previously, an attempt to read an unreadable access reported zeros:

(lldb) memory read -format hex -size 8 0
0x00000000: 0x0000000000000000 0x0000000000000000
0x00000010: 0x0000000000000000 0x0000000000000000
...

Now, if DoReadMemory encounters error then return 0 (bytes read) so we
report the error to the user:

(lldb) memory read -format hex -size 8 0
error: Bad address

LLVM PR:	37190

MFC after:	1 week
Sponsored by:	The FreeBSD Foundation
2018-04-21 00:34:46 +00:00
dim
f13397cb22 Recommit r332501, with an additional upstream fix for "Cannot lower
EFLAGS copy that lives out of a basic block!" errors on i386.

Pull in r325446 from upstream clang trunk (by me):

  [X86] Add 'sahf' CPU feature to frontend

  Summary:
  Make clang accept `-msahf` (and `-mno-sahf`) flags to activate the
  `+sahf` feature for the backend, for bug 36028 (Incorrect use of
  pushf/popf enables/disables interrupts on amd64 kernels).  This was
  originally submitted in bug 36037 by Jonathan Looney
  <jonlooney@gmail.com>.

  As described there, GCC also uses `-msahf` for this feature, and the
  backend already recognizes the `+sahf` feature. All that is needed is
  to teach clang to pass this on to the backend.

  The mapping of feature support onto CPUs may not be complete; rather,
  it was chosen to match LLVM's idea of which CPUs support this feature
  (see lib/Target/X86/X86.td).

  I also updated the affected test case (CodeGen/attr-target-x86.c) to
  match the emitted output.

  Reviewers: craig.topper, coby, efriedma, rsmith

  Reviewed By: craig.topper

  Subscribers: emaste, cfe-commits

  Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43394

Pull in r328944 from upstream llvm trunk (by Chandler Carruth):

  [x86] Expose more of the condition conversion routines in the public
  API for X86's instruction information. I've now got a second patch
  under review that needs these same APIs. This bit is nicely
  orthogonal and obvious, so landing it. NFC.

Pull in r329414 from upstream llvm trunk (by Craig Topper):

  [X86] Merge itineraries for CLC, CMC, and STC.

  These are very simple flag setting instructions that appear to only
  be a single uop. They're unlikely to need this separation.

Pull in r329657 from upstream llvm trunk (by Chandler Carruth):

  [x86] Introduce a pass to begin more systematically fixing PR36028
  and similar issues.

  The key idea is to lower COPY nodes populating EFLAGS by scanning the
  uses of EFLAGS and introducing dedicated code to preserve the
  necessary state in a GPR. In the vast majority of cases, these uses
  are cmovCC and jCC instructions. For such cases, we can very easily
  save and restore the necessary information by simply inserting a
  setCC into a GPR where the original flags are live, and then testing
  that GPR directly to feed the cmov or conditional branch.

  However, things are a bit more tricky if arithmetic is using the
  flags.  This patch handles the vast majority of cases that seem to
  come up in practice: adc, adcx, adox, rcl, and rcr; all without
  taking advantage of partially preserved EFLAGS as LLVM doesn't
  currently model that at all.

  There are a large number of operations that techinaclly observe
  EFLAGS currently but shouldn't in this case -- they typically are
  using DF.  Currently, they will not be handled by this approach.
  However, I have never seen this issue come up in practice. It is
  already pretty rare to have these patterns come up in practical code
  with LLVM. I had to resort to writing MIR tests to cover most of the
  logic in this pass already.  I suspect even with its current amount
  of coverage of arithmetic users of EFLAGS it will be a significant
  improvement over the current use of pushf/popf. It will also produce
  substantially faster code in most of the common patterns.

  This patch also removes all of the old lowering for EFLAGS copies,
  and the hack that forced us to use a frame pointer when EFLAGS copies
  were found anywhere in a function so that the dynamic stack
  adjustment wasn't a problem. None of this is needed as we now lower
  all of these copies directly in MI and without require stack
  adjustments.

  Lots of thanks to Reid who came up with several aspects of this
  approach, and Craig who helped me work out a couple of things
  tripping me up while working on this.

  Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45146

Pull in r329673 from upstream llvm trunk (by Chandler Carruth):

  [x86] Model the direction flag (DF) separately from the rest of
  EFLAGS.

  This cleans up a number of operations that only claimed te use EFLAGS
  due to using DF. But no instructions which we think of us setting
  EFLAGS actually modify DF (other than things like popf) and so this
  needlessly creates uses of EFLAGS that aren't really there.

  In fact, DF is so restrictive it is pretty easy to model. Only STD,
  CLD, and the whole-flags writes (WRFLAGS and POPF) need to model
  this.

  I've also somewhat cleaned up some of the flag management instruction
  definitions to be in the correct .td file.

  Adding this extra register also uncovered a failure to use the
  correct datatype to hold X86 registers, and I've corrected that as
  necessary here.

  Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45154

Pull in r330264 from upstream llvm trunk (by Chandler Carruth):

  [x86] Fix PR37100 by teaching the EFLAGS copy lowering to rewrite
  uses across basic blocks in the limited cases where it is very
  straight forward to do so.

  This will also be useful for other places where we do some limited
  EFLAGS propagation across CFG edges and need to handle copy rewrites
  afterward. I think this is rapidly approaching the maximum we can and
  should be doing here. Everything else begins to require either heroic
  analysis to prove how to do PHI insertion manually, or somehow
  managing arbitrary PHI-ing of EFLAGS with general PHI insertion.
  Neither of these seem at all promising so if those cases come up,
  we'll almost certainly need to rewrite the parts of LLVM that produce
  those patterns.

  We do now require dominator trees in order to reliably diagnose
  patterns that would require PHI nodes. This is a bit unfortunate but
  it seems better than the completely mysterious crash we would get
  otherwise.

  Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45673

Together, these should ensure clang does not use pushf/popf sequences to
save and restore flags, avoiding problems with unrelated flags (such as
the interrupt flag) being restored unexpectedly.

Requested by:	jtl
PR:		225330
MFC after:	1 week
2018-04-20 18:20:55 +00:00
lidl
22b34e384b top: fix warnings from clang/gcc
Add includes for <curses.h> and <termcap.h> where necessary, and
rename a few internal functions to have a "top_" prefix to avoid
clashes with standard names from curses.h/termcap.h headers.

Top now compiles without warnings on both gcc and clang.

Reviewed by:	emaste, imp, jhb
MFC after:	3 days
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15115
2018-04-18 13:17:14 +00:00
trasz
3aa26aed8b Don't put multiple names on a single .Nm line. This fixes apropos(1)
output, from this:

strnlen, strlen, strlen,(3) - find length of string                                                                                                                                                     │·······

... to this:

strlen, strnlen(3) - find length of string

PR:		223525
MFC after:	2 weeks
2018-04-17 09:05:46 +00:00
eadler
e476e18531 amd: correct formatting of 'SEE ALSO' 2018-04-14 21:54:22 +00:00
dim
5a917c072a Revert r332501 for now, as it can cause build failures on i386.
Reported upstream as <https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=37133>.

Reported by:	emaste, ci.freebsd.org
PR:		225330
2018-04-14 14:57:32 +00:00
dim
dde78cf895 Pull in r325446 from upstream clang trunk (by me):
[X86] Add 'sahf' CPU feature to frontend

  Summary:
  Make clang accept `-msahf` (and `-mno-sahf`) flags to activate the
  `+sahf` feature for the backend, for bug 36028 (Incorrect use of
  pushf/popf enables/disables interrupts on amd64 kernels).  This was
  originally submitted in bug 36037 by Jonathan Looney
  <jonlooney@gmail.com>.

  As described there, GCC also uses `-msahf` for this feature, and the
  backend already recognizes the `+sahf` feature. All that is needed is
  to teach clang to pass this on to the backend.

  The mapping of feature support onto CPUs may not be complete; rather,
  it was chosen to match LLVM's idea of which CPUs support this feature
  (see lib/Target/X86/X86.td).

  I also updated the affected test case (CodeGen/attr-target-x86.c) to
  match the emitted output.

  Reviewers: craig.topper, coby, efriedma, rsmith

  Reviewed By: craig.topper

  Subscribers: emaste, cfe-commits

  Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43394

Pull in r328944 from upstream llvm trunk (by Chandler Carruth):

  [x86] Expose more of the condition conversion routines in the public
  API for X86's instruction information. I've now got a second patch
  under review that needs these same APIs. This bit is nicely
  orthogonal and obvious, so landing it. NFC.

Pull in r329414 from upstream llvm trunk (by Craig Topper):

  [X86] Merge itineraries for CLC, CMC, and STC.

  These are very simple flag setting instructions that appear to only
  be a single uop. They're unlikely to need this separation.

Pull in r329657 from upstream llvm trunk (by Chandler Carruth):

  [x86] Introduce a pass to begin more systematically fixing PR36028
  and similar issues.

  The key idea is to lower COPY nodes populating EFLAGS by scanning the
  uses of EFLAGS and introducing dedicated code to preserve the
  necessary state in a GPR. In the vast majority of cases, these uses
  are cmovCC and jCC instructions. For such cases, we can very easily
  save and restore the necessary information by simply inserting a
  setCC into a GPR where the original flags are live, and then testing
  that GPR directly to feed the cmov or conditional branch.

  However, things are a bit more tricky if arithmetic is using the
  flags.  This patch handles the vast majority of cases that seem to
  come up in practice: adc, adcx, adox, rcl, and rcr; all without
  taking advantage of partially preserved EFLAGS as LLVM doesn't
  currently model that at all.

  There are a large number of operations that techinaclly observe
  EFLAGS currently but shouldn't in this case -- they typically are
  using DF.  Currently, they will not be handled by this approach.
  However, I have never seen this issue come up in practice. It is
  already pretty rare to have these patterns come up in practical code
  with LLVM. I had to resort to writing MIR tests to cover most of the
  logic in this pass already.  I suspect even with its current amount
  of coverage of arithmetic users of EFLAGS it will be a significant
  improvement over the current use of pushf/popf. It will also produce
  substantially faster code in most of the common patterns.

  This patch also removes all of the old lowering for EFLAGS copies,
  and the hack that forced us to use a frame pointer when EFLAGS copies
  were found anywhere in a function so that the dynamic stack
  adjustment wasn't a problem. None of this is needed as we now lower
  all of these copies directly in MI and without require stack
  adjustments.

  Lots of thanks to Reid who came up with several aspects of this
  approach, and Craig who helped me work out a couple of things
  tripping me up while working on this.

  Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45146

Pull in r329673 from upstream llvm trunk (by Chandler Carruth):

  [x86] Model the direction flag (DF) separately from the rest of
  EFLAGS.

  This cleans up a number of operations that only claimed te use EFLAGS
  due to using DF. But no instructions which we think of us setting
  EFLAGS actually modify DF (other than things like popf) and so this
  needlessly creates uses of EFLAGS that aren't really there.

  In fact, DF is so restrictive it is pretty easy to model. Only STD,
  CLD, and the whole-flags writes (WRFLAGS and POPF) need to model
  this.

  I've also somewhat cleaned up some of the flag management instruction
  definitions to be in the correct .td file.

  Adding this extra register also uncovered a failure to use the
  correct datatype to hold X86 registers, and I've corrected that as
  necessary here.

  Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45154

Together, these should ensure clang does not use pushf/popf sequences to
save and restore flags, avoiding problems with unrelated flags (such as
the interrupt flag) being restored unexpectedly.

Requested by:	jtl
PR:		225330
MFC after:	1 week
2018-04-14 12:07:05 +00:00
brooks
26c165ead9 Remove support for the Arcnet protocol.
While Arcnet has some continued deployment in industrial controls, the
lack of drivers for any of the PCI, USB, or PCIe NICs on the market
suggests such users aren't running FreeBSD.

Evidence in the PR database suggests that the cm(4) driver (our sole
Arcnet NIC) was broken in 5.0 and has not worked since.

PR:		182297
Reviewed by:	jhibbits, vangyzen
Relnotes:	yes
Sponsored by:	DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D15057
2018-04-13 21:18:04 +00:00
br
0c2c623a27 Import OpenCSD -- an ARM CoreSight(tm) Trace Decode Library.
Sponsored by:	DARPA, AFRL
2018-04-04 12:55:31 +00:00
dim
c9cf819d23 Pull in r328738 from upstream lld trunk (by Rafael Espindola):
Strip @VER suffices from the LTO output.

  This fixes pr36623.

  The problem is that we have to parse versions out of names before LTO
  so that LTO can use that information.

  When we get the LTO produced .o files, we replace the previous symbols
  with the LTO produced ones, but they still have @ in their names.

  We could just trim the name directly, but calling parseSymbolVersion
  to do it is simpler.

This is a follow-up to r331366, since we discovered that lld could
append version strings to symbols twice, when using Link Time
Optimization.

MFC after:	3 months
X-MFC-With:	r327952
2018-03-29 13:55:23 +00:00
philip
bfc16a9069 Import tzdata 2018d
Changes: https://github.com/eggert/tz/blob/2018d/NEWS

MFC after:	3 days
2018-03-24 04:52:29 +00:00
dim
d50c586f85 Pull in r327101 from upstream llvm trunk (by Rafael Espindola):
Don't treat .symver as a regular alias definition.

  This patch starts simplifying the handling of .symver.

  For now it just moves the responsibility for creating an alias down to
  the streamer. With that the asm streamer can pass a .symver unchanged,
  which is nice since gas cannot parse "foo@bar = zed".

  In a followup I hope to move the handling down to the writer so that
  we don't need special hacks for avoiding breaking names with @@@ on
  windows.

Pull in r327160 from upstream llvm trunk (by Rafael Espindola):

  Delay creating an alias for @@@.

  With this we only create an alias for @@@ once we know if it should
  use @ or @@. This avoids last minutes renames and hacks to handle MS
  names.

  This only handles the ELF writer. LTO still has issues with @@@
  aliases.

Pull in r327928 from upstream llvm trunk (by Vitaly Buka):

  Object: Move attribute calculation into RecordStreamer. NFC

  Summary: Preparation for D44274

  Reviewers: pcc, espindola

  Subscribers: hiraditya

  Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44276

Pull in r327930 from upstream llvm trunk (by Vitaly Buka):

  Object: Fix handling of @@@ in .symver directive

  Summary:
  name@@@nodename is going to be replaced with name@@nodename if symbols is
  defined in the assembled file, or name@nodename if undefined.
  https://sourceware.org/binutils/docs/as/Symver.html

  Fixes PR36623

  Reviewers: pcc, espindola

  Subscribers: mehdi_amini, hiraditya

  Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44274

Together, these changes fix handling of @@@ in .symver directives when
doing Link Time Optimization.

Reported by:	Shawn Webb <shawn.webb@hardenedbsd.org>
MFC after:	3 months
X-MFC-With:	r327952
2018-03-22 18:58:34 +00:00
jhb
7be611b88d Add support for MIPS to LLVM's libunwind.
This is originally based on a patch from David Chisnall for soft-float
N64 but has since been updated to support O32, N32, and hard-float ABIs.
The soft-float O32, N32, and N64 support has been committed upstream.
The hard-float changes are still in review upstream.

Enable LLVM_LIBUNWIND on mips when building with a suitable (C+11-capable)
toolchain.  This has been tested with external GCC for all ABIs and
O32 and N64 with clang.

Reviewed by:	emaste
Obtained from:	CheriBSD (original N64 patch)
Sponsored by:	DARPA / AFRL
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14701
2018-03-20 15:44:17 +00:00
cem
d7bc82aa93 blacklist: Fix minor memory leak in configuration parsing error case
Ordinarily, the continue clause of the for-loop would free 'line.'  In this
case we instead return early, missing the free.  Add an explicit free to
avoid the leak.

Reported by:	Coverity
Sponsored by:	Dell EMC Isilon
2018-03-20 00:16:24 +00:00
br
c27a7c453c Import Intel Processor Trace decoder library from
vendor/processor-trace/24982c1a6fce48f1e416461d42899805f74fbb26

Sponsored by:	DARPA, AFRL
2018-03-19 18:59:15 +00:00
cem
c033b5978e elftoolchain nm(1): Initialize allocated memory before use
In out of memory scenarios (where one of these allocations failed but
other(s) did not), nm(1) could reference the uninitialized value of these
allocations (undefined behavior).

Always initialize any successful allocations as the most expedient
resolution of the issue.  However, I would encourage upstream elftoolchain
contributors to clean up the error path to just abort immediately, rather
than proceeding sloppily when one allocation fails.

Reported by:	Coverity
Sponsored by:	Dell EMC Isilon
2018-03-16 22:25:33 +00:00
cem
27f566329c telnetd(8): Fix dereference of uninitialized value 'IF'
Reported by:	Coverity
Sponsored by:	Dell EMC Isilon
2018-03-16 20:59:56 +00:00
dim
c85e8aea72 Pull in r321999 from upstream clang trunk (by Ivan A. Kosarev):
[CodeGen] Fix TBAA info for accesses to members of base classes

  Resolves:
  Bug 35724 - regression (r315984): fatal error: error in backend:
  Broken function found (Did not see access type in access path!)
  https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=35724

  Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41547

This fixes "Did not see access type in access path" fatal errors when
building the devel/gdb port (version 8.1).

Reported by:	jbeich
PR:		226658
MFC after:	3 months
X-MFC-With:	r327952
2018-03-16 18:04:13 +00:00
dim
18672e1082 Pull in r327638 from upstream llvm trunk (by Matthew Simpson):
[ConstantFolding, InstSimplify] Handle more vector GEPs

  This patch addresses some additional cases where the compiler crashes
  upon encountering vector GEPs. This should fix PR36116.

  Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44219
  Reference: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=36116

This fixes an assertion when building the emulators/snes9x port.

Reported by:	jbeich
PR:		225471
MFC after:	3 months
X-MFC-With:	r327952
2018-03-16 17:50:44 +00:00
dim
14bd3707e0 Pull in r326882 from upstream llvm trunk (by Sjoerd Meijer):
[ARM] Fix for PR36577

  Don't PerformSHLSimplify if the given node is used by a node that
  also uses a constant because we may get stuck in an infinite combine
  loop.

  bugzilla: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=36577

  Patch by Sam Parker.

  Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44097

This fixes a hang when compiling one particular file in java/openjdk8
for armv6 and armv7.

Reported by:	swills
PR:		226388
2018-03-09 09:21:22 +00:00
dim
ef58aa56fe Upgrade our copies of clang, llvm, lld, lldb, compiler-rt and libc++ to
6.0.0 release (upstream r326565).

Release notes for llvm, clang and lld will be available here soon:
<http://releases.llvm.org/6.0.0/docs/ReleaseNotes.html>
<http://releases.llvm.org/6.0.0/tools/clang/docs/ReleaseNotes.html>
<http://releases.llvm.org/6.0.0/tools/lld/docs/ReleaseNotes.html>

Relnotes:	yes
MFC after:	3 months
X-MFC-With:	r327952
PR:		224669
2018-03-04 17:06:37 +00:00
brooks
ca6208b512 Fix build post r330299 2018-03-02 23:31:55 +00:00
brooks
da9d8a0895 Don't declare union semun in userspace unless _WANT_SEMUN is defined.
POSIX explicitly states that the application must declare union semun.
This makes no sense, but it is what it is.  This brings us into line
with Linux, MacOS/Darwin, and NetBSD.

In a ports exp-run a moderate number of ports fail due to a lack of
approprate autotools-like discovery mechanisms or local patches.  A
commit to address them will follow shortly.

PR:		224300, 224443 (exp-run)
Reviewed by:	emaste, jhb, kib
Exp-run by:	antoine
Sponsored by:	DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14492
2018-03-02 22:32:53 +00:00
sjg
490c4b4d3b Update to bmake-201802222
Fixes segfault in Var_Set if val is NULL
Don't treat .info as warning with -W
2018-03-02 01:53:50 +00:00
delphij
c828763bb5 MFV r330102: ntp 4.2.8p11 2018-02-28 07:59:55 +00:00
dim
044c6471dc Upgrade our copies of clang, llvm, lld, lldb, compiler-rt and libc++ to
6.0.0 (branches/release_60 r325932).  This corresponds to 6.0.0 rc3.

MFC after:	3 months
X-MFC-With:	r327952
PR:		224669
2018-02-25 13:20:32 +00:00
imp
f735e1eb15 Do not include float interfaces when using libsa.
We don't support float in the boot loaders, so don't include
interfaces for float or double in systems headers. In addition, take
the unusual step of spiking double and float to prevent any more
accidental seepage.
2018-02-23 04:04:25 +00:00
imp
c1023867ee When the LUA_FLOAT_TYPE != LUA_FLOAT_INT64, we can't reference float
or double so ifdef that code out when the numbers aren't float at all.

There's still references in the lmathlib.c, but we don't compile that
for the loader yet.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14472
2018-02-23 04:04:18 +00:00
delphij
e7657940ee MFV r329552: less v530.
MFC after:	2 weeks
2018-02-19 05:10:22 +00:00
dim
5308e413d2 Upgrade our copies of clang, llvm, lld, lldb, compiler-rt and libc++ to
6.0.0 (branches/release_60 r325330).

MFC after:	3 months
X-MFC-With:	r327952
PR:		224669
2018-02-16 20:45:32 +00:00
bdrewery
db51b6bdae nanosleep(2): Fix bogus incrementing of rmtp by tc_tick_sbt on [EINTR].
sbt is the time in the future that the tsleep_sbt() is expected to be completed
at.  sbtt is the current time.  Depending on the precision with sysctl
kern.timecounter.alloweddeviation the start time may be incremented by
tc_tick_sbt.  The same increment is needed for the current time of sbtt before
calculating the difference.  The impact of missing this increment is that rmtp
may increase by one tc_tick_sbt on every early [EINTR] return.  If the same
struct is passed in for rqtp as rmtp this can result in rqtp effectively
incrementing by tc_tick_sbt and sleeping longer than originally intended.

This problem was introduced in r247797.

Reviewed by:	kib, markj, vangyzen (all on an older version of the test)
MFC after:	2 weeks
Sponsored by:	Dell EMC
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14362
2018-02-14 18:43:50 +00:00
asomers
bda3956278 Fix Coverity CIDs in the sys/kern/sysv_test tests
CID 979810: strcpy => strlcpy
CID 1193367: don't leak a file descriptor
CID 1299856: Check the return value of read(2)

Reported by:	Coverity
Coverity CID:	978910 1193367 1299856
MFC after:	3 weeks
X-MFC-With:	328896
Sponsored by:	Spectra Logic Corp
2018-02-13 19:17:33 +00:00
dim
248f9affc9 Pull in r323998 from upstream clang trunk (by Richard Smith):
PR36157: When injecting an implicit function declaration in C89, find
  the right DeclContext rather than injecting it wherever we happen to
  be.

  This avoids creating functions whose DeclContext is a struct or
  similar.

This fixes assertion failures when parsing certain not-completely-valid
struct declarations.

Reported by:	ae
PR:		225862
MFC after:	3 months
X-MFC-With:	r327952
2018-02-13 17:05:50 +00:00
asomers
958bc4fbc9 Convert tools/regression/sockets/socketpair to ATF
Reviewed by:	cem
MFC after:	3 weeks
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D14305
2018-02-10 19:43:52 +00:00
dim
89a9f9b9f2 Pull in r324594 from upstream clang trunk (by Alexander Ivchenko):
Fix for #31362 - ms_abi is implemented incorrectly for values >=16
  bytes.

  Summary:
  This patch is a fix for following issue:
  https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=31362 The problem was caused by
  front end lowering C calling conventions without taking into account
  calling conventions enforced by attribute. In this case win64cc was
  no correctly lowered on targets other than Windows.

  Reviewed By: rnk (Reid Kleckner)

  Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43016

  Author: belickim <mateusz.belicki@intel.com>

This fixes clang 6.0.0 assertions when building the emulators/wine and
emulators/wine-devel ports, and should also make it use the correct
Windows calling conventions.  Bump __FreeBSD_version to make the fix
easy to detect.

PR:		224863
MFC after:	3 months
X-MFC-With:	r327952
2018-02-08 21:11:48 +00:00
jhb
8263b4edd2 Use a workaround to compile the crt init functions correctly with clang.
The MIPS assembly parser treats forward-declared local symbols as global
symbols.  This results in CALL16 relocations being used against local
(private) symbols which then fail to resolve when linking binaries.
Add .local to force the init and fini functions to be treated as local as
a workaround.

Submitted by:	sbruno
Sponsored by:	DARPA / AFRL
2018-02-06 17:01:10 +00:00
bapt
2061b410c7 Remove libreadline from the source tree, all consumers but gdb
has been switched to libedit long ago, libreadline was built as an
internallib for a while and kept only for gdbtui which was broken using
libreadline.

Since gdb has been mostly deorbitted in all arches, gdbtui was only installed
on arm and sparc64, given it has been removed, gdb has been switched to use
libedit, no consumers are left for libreadline. Thus this removal
2018-02-06 12:22:42 +00:00
bapt
a13f57f7ff Commit forgotten change in gdb allowing to use libedit 2018-02-06 12:17:03 +00:00
brooks
c5f0264e6d Fix and enable SysV IPC tests.
Don't declare some types that FreeBSD incorrectly declares.

Fix an incorrect call to open() (missing mode).

ANSIfy prototypes.

Enable SysV message queue, semaphore, and shared memory tests.

With exception of the workaround for union semun, these fixes have been
committed to NetBSD.

Reviewed by:	asomers
Approved by:	CheriBSD
Sponsored by:	DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision:	https://reviews.freebsd.org/D13471
2018-02-05 18:48:00 +00:00
lidl
0161253a5d Update blacklist-helper to not emit messages from pf during operation.
Use 'pfctl -k' when blocking a site to kill active tcp connections
from the blocked address.

Fix 'purge' operation for pf, which must dynamically determine which
filters have been created, so the filters can be flushed by name.

MFC after:	2 weeks
2018-02-04 19:43:51 +00:00
dim
eae4eb0a6c Upgrade our copies of clang, llvm, lld, lldb, compiler-rt and libc++ to
6.0.0 (branches/release_60 r324090).

This introduces retpoline support, with the -mretpoline flag.  The
upstream initial commit message (r323155 by Chandler Carruth) contains
quite a bit of explanation.  Quoting:

  Introduce the "retpoline" x86 mitigation technique for variant #2 of
  the speculative execution vulnerabilities disclosed today,
  specifically identified by CVE-2017-5715, "Branch Target Injection",
  and is one of the two halves to Spectre.

  Summary:
  First, we need to explain the core of the vulnerability. Note that
  this is a very incomplete description, please see the Project Zero
  blog post for details:
  https://googleprojectzero.blogspot.com/2018/01/reading-privileged-memory-with-side.html

  The basis for branch target injection is to direct speculative
  execution of the processor to some "gadget" of executable code by
  poisoning the prediction of indirect branches with the address of
  that gadget. The gadget in turn contains an operation that provides a
  side channel for reading data. Most commonly, this will look like a
  load of secret data followed by a branch on the loaded value and then
  a load of some predictable cache line. The attacker then uses timing
  of the processors cache to determine which direction the branch took
  *in the speculative execution*, and in turn what one bit of the
  loaded value was. Due to the nature of these timing side channels and
  the branch predictor on Intel processors, this allows an attacker to
  leak data only accessible to a privileged domain (like the kernel)
  back into an unprivileged domain.

  The goal is simple: avoid generating code which contains an indirect
  branch that could have its prediction poisoned by an attacker. In
  many cases, the compiler can simply use directed conditional branches
  and a small search tree. LLVM already has support for lowering
  switches in this way and the first step of this patch is to disable
  jump-table lowering of switches and introduce a pass to rewrite
  explicit indirectbr sequences into a switch over integers.

  However, there is no fully general alternative to indirect calls. We
  introduce a new construct we call a "retpoline" to implement indirect
  calls in a non-speculatable way. It can be thought of loosely as a
  trampoline for indirect calls which uses the RET instruction on x86.
  Further, we arrange for a specific call->ret sequence which ensures
  the processor predicts the return to go to a controlled, known
  location. The retpoline then "smashes" the return address pushed onto
  the stack by the call with the desired target of the original
  indirect call. The result is a predicted return to the next
  instruction after a call (which can be used to trap speculative
  execution within an infinite loop) and an actual indirect branch to
  an arbitrary address.

  On 64-bit x86 ABIs, this is especially easily done in the compiler by
  using a guaranteed scratch register to pass the target into this
  device.  For 32-bit ABIs there isn't a guaranteed scratch register
  and so several different retpoline variants are introduced to use a
  scratch register if one is available in the calling convention and to
  otherwise use direct stack push/pop sequences to pass the target
  address.

  This "retpoline" mitigation is fully described in the following blog
  post: https://support.google.com/faqs/answer/7625886

  We also support a target feature that disables emission of the
  retpoline thunk by the compiler to allow for custom thunks if users
  want them.  These are particularly useful in environments like
  kernels that routinely do hot-patching on boot and want to hot-patch
  their thunk to different code sequences. They can write this custom
  thunk and use `-mretpoline-external-thunk` *in addition* to
  `-mretpoline`. In this case, on x86-64 thu thunk names must be:
  ```
    __llvm_external_retpoline_r11
  ```
  or on 32-bit:
  ```
    __llvm_external_retpoline_eax
    __llvm_external_retpoline_ecx
    __llvm_external_retpoline_edx
    __llvm_external_retpoline_push
  ```
  And the target of the retpoline is passed in the named register, or in
  the case of the `push` suffix on the top of the stack via a `pushl`
  instruction.

  There is one other important source of indirect branches in x86 ELF
  binaries: the PLT. These patches also include support for LLD to
  generate PLT entries that perform a retpoline-style indirection.

  The only other indirect branches remaining that we are aware of are
  from precompiled runtimes (such as crt0.o and similar). The ones we
  have found are not really attackable, and so we have not focused on
  them here, but eventually these runtimes should also be replicated for
  retpoline-ed configurations for completeness.

  For kernels or other freestanding or fully static executables, the
  compiler switch `-mretpoline` is sufficient to fully mitigate this
  particular attack. For dynamic executables, you must compile *all*
  libraries with `-mretpoline` and additionally link the dynamic
  executable and all shared libraries with LLD and pass `-z
  retpolineplt` (or use similar functionality from some other linker).
  We strongly recommend also using `-z now` as non-lazy binding allows
  the retpoline-mitigated PLT to be substantially smaller.

  When manually apply similar transformations to `-mretpoline` to the
  Linux kernel we observed very small performance hits to applications
  running typic al workloads, and relatively minor hits (approximately
  2%) even for extremely syscall-heavy applications. This is largely
  due to the small number of indirect branches that occur in
  performance sensitive paths of the kernel.

  When using these patches on statically linked applications,
  especially C++ applications, you should expect to see a much more
  dramatic performance hit. For microbenchmarks that are switch,
  indirect-, or virtual-call heavy we have seen overheads ranging from
  10% to 50%.

  However, real-world workloads exhibit substantially lower performance
  impact. Notably, techniques such as PGO and ThinLTO dramatically
  reduce the impact of hot indirect calls (by speculatively promoting
  them to direct calls) and allow optimized search trees to be used to
  lower switches. If you need to deploy these techniques in C++
  applications, we *strongly* recommend that you ensure all hot call
  targets are statically linked (avoiding PLT indirection) and use both
  PGO and ThinLTO. Well tuned servers using all of these techniques saw
  5% - 10% overhead from the use of retpoline.

  We will add detailed documentation covering these components in
  subsequent patches, but wanted to make the core functionality
  available as soon as possible. Happy for more code review, but we'd
  really like to get these patches landed and backported ASAP for
  obvious reasons. We're planning to backport this to both 6.0 and 5.0
  release streams and get a 5.0 release with just this cherry picked
  ASAP for distros and vendors.

  This patch is the work of a number of people over the past month:
  Eric, Reid, Rui, and myself. I'm mailing it out as a single commit
  due to the time sensitive nature of landing this and the need to
  backport it. Huge thanks to everyone who helped out here, and
  everyone at Intel who helped out in discussions about how to craft
  this. Also, credit goes to Paul Turner (at Google, but not an LLVM
  contributor) for much of the underlying retpoline design.

  Reviewers: echristo, rnk, ruiu, craig.topper, DavidKreitzer

  Subscribers: sanjoy, emaste, mcrosier, mgorny, mehdi_amini, hiraditya, llvm-commits

  Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41723

MFC after:	3 months
X-MFC-With:	r327952
PR:		224669
2018-02-02 22:28:12 +00:00
dim
97d315ca19 Upgrade our copies of clang, llvm, lld, lldb, compiler-rt and libc++ to
6.0.0 (branches/release_60 r323948).

MFC after:	3 months
X-MFC-With:	r327952
PR:		224669
2018-02-01 21:41:15 +00:00
marius
f8d48bcc9e Account for the fact that jemalloc 5.0.0 dropped STATIC_PAGE_SHIFT
in favor for using LG_PAGE directly and, thus, for the fact that
host and target don't necessarily use pages of the same sizes.

Approved by:	jasone
2018-01-31 21:56:23 +00:00
jhb
a8a8cf8b38 Update limits on makecontext() arguments in the setcontext_link test.
sparc64 and riscv do not support 10 arguments, but MIPS now does.
While here, combine clauses for architectures that support the same
number of arguments to reduce duplication.

Sponsored by:	DARPA / AFRL
2018-01-31 18:03:40 +00:00
emaste
da20a161b2 Pull in r322131 from upstream llvm trunk (by Rafael Espíndola):
Use a MCExpr for the size of MCFillFragment.

  This allows the size to be found during ralaxation. This fixes
  [LLVM] pr35858.

Requested by:	royger
2018-01-30 16:43:20 +00:00
emaste
049894fe59 Pull in r322123 from upstream llvm trunk (by Rafael Espíndola):
Don't create MCFillFragment directly.

  Instead use higher level APIs that take care of most bookkeeping.
2018-01-30 16:42:08 +00:00
emaste
5784379e04 Pull in r322108 from upstream llvm trunk (by Rafael Espíndola):
Make one of the emitFill methods non virtual. NFC.

  This is just preparatory work to fix [LLVM] PR35858.
2018-01-30 16:41:38 +00:00
kevans
da9dad4a1f Remove t_grep:mmap_eof_not_eol test
The test was marked as an expected failure in r320414 after r319971's import
of a newer jemalloc removed an essential feature (opt.redzone) for
reproducing the behavior it was testing. Since then, no way has been found
or demonstrated to reliably test the behavior, so remove the test.

PR:		220309
2018-01-29 18:50:45 +00:00
emaste
717143875c lld: Put the header in the first PT_LOAD even if that PT_LOAD has a LMAExpr
The root problem is that we were creating a PT_LOAD just for the header.
That was technically valid, but inconvenient: we should not be making
the ELF discontinuous.

The solution is to allow a section with LMAExpr to be added to a PT_LOAD
if that PT_LOAD doesn't already have a LMAExpr.

LLVM PR:	36017
Obtained from:	LLVM r323625 by Rafael Espindola
2018-01-29 13:55:50 +00:00